BBC: European press review

BBC News

Monday, 25 April, 2005, 04:26 GMT 05:26 UK

European press review

[Excerpt]

Turkey’s EU woes

With Turkey’s bid for EU membership being a major EU referendum issue,
Paris’ Le Monde notes that President Jacques Chirac, for the first
time in his ten years in office, attended a ceremony held in Paris by
the Armenian community to mark the 90th anniversary of what the paper
calls the 1915 “genocide” of Armenians by Turkish troops.

President Chirac, it remarks, “was accompanied by the President of
Armenia, Robert Kocharian, who chose the symbolic date to spend a few
days in France”.

[Caption: “Turkey must admit that certain things are non-negotiable” –
Liberation]

Liberation also considers the significance of the occasion, saying
that “remembrance of this dark episode has a bearing on Europe because
the anniversary has come up during the referendum campaign”.

“In putting forward its bid for EU membership,” it argues, “Turkey
must admit that certain things are non-negotiable”.

The paper points out that in the process of building Europe other EU
members have owned up to past misdeeds, and therefore asking the Turks
to do the same towards the Armenians is merely “to treat them like
everyone else, as they themselves have demanded”.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4480095.stm

Armenia open to genocide panel proposed by Turkey; report

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
April 26, 2005, Tuesday
15:45:44 Central European Time

Armenia open to genocide panel proposed by Turkey; report

Ankara

Armenia has reacted positively to a Turkish offer that a joint
commission be established to study whether or not the massacres of
hundreds of thousands of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during and after
the First World War represented genocide, NTV television in Turkey
reported Tuesday.

Quoting Turkish diplomatic sources, NTV said Armenian Prime Minister
Robert Kocharian had replied to an offer sent by his Turkish
counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

It called for creation of an exploratory panel to study the
feasibility of “an intergovernmental commission”.

As many as 1.5 million Armenians were killed during and after the
First World War during mass deportations and massacres when Armenians
rose up against the Ottoman Empire.

Turkey disputes the numbers killed and denies that the deaths in any
way constitute genocide.

Turkey has come under a lot of pressure recently to acknowledge that
a genocide did indeed take place with a number of European countries’
parliaments, including those in France and the Netherlands, clearly
stating that the massacres did indeed constitute a genocide.

The German parliament is scheduled to soon debate a resolution
calling on Turkey to “take historic responsibility” for the massacres
but the resolution does not specifically mention the word genocide.
dpa cw jm

The sorry state of world affairs

Ottawa Citizen
April 26, 2005 Tuesday
Final Edition

The sorry state of world affairs

The cleansing, restorative words of a heartfelt apology come easier
to some than others.

Turkey, accused of massacring 1.5 million Armenians 90 years ago,
can’t bring itself to cop to the charge, even when a simple “sorry”
would grease the nation’s longed-for inclusion in the European Union.

Japan recently apologized to China for the slaughter of 300,000
Nanjing residents in 1937 — though the mea culpa scored poorly on
the heartfelt-ness meter, extracted as it was under duress. Germany
long ago apologized to European Jewry for the Holocaust; the Kremlin
has yet to beg pardon for starving as many as 20 million Ukrainians
to death in the 1930s.

No word yet on whether Pope Benedict XVI will apologize for the
Catholic church’s occasionally spotty track record: his predecessor,
John Paul II, was big on atonement, asking forgiveness for the
Inquisition and the Crusades, but leaving sexual abuse cases for
future consideration.

Canada has apologized for mistreating aboriginal peoples, especially
the grievously wrong-headed residential school system. Paul Martin
has apologized for the sponsorship scandal; Jean Chretien has not.

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman apologized for cancelling last year’s
hockey season, though saying “sorry I’m doing what I’m doing,” isn’t
the same as saying “sorry I did what I did.”

We’ve all done things we’re not proud of, things we wish we could
take back or do over. And yet the words come hard. Perhaps what the
world needs is an international day of apology. As Judaism discovered
with Yom Kippur, the “day of atonement,” it’s easier if we all do it
together.

Here then, in the interest of world peace and getting the ball
rolling, is one from the heart: If this editorial has offended Turks,
Armenians, Japanese, Chinese, Russians, Germans, Catholics, Jews,
Natives, Liberals or hockey fans, we’re sorry.

Toronto: Hundreds Demand Justice on 90th Anniversary of The Genocide

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian National Committee of Toronto
45 Hallcrown Place
North York Ontario
Contact: Vahan Ajamian
Tel: 416.491.2900
Fax: 416.491.2211
E-mail: [email protected]

TORONTO, ON ? Approximately 500 people attended the commemoration of the
ninetieth anniversary of the Armenian Genocide which took place at the
Armenian Community Centre on Sunday, April 17, 2005. Also participating in
the commemoration were political dignitaries and community leaders
including:

Jack Layton ? Leader of the New Democratic Party of Canada & MP,
Toronto-Danforth
The Hon. Jim Karygiannis ? MP, Scarborough-Agincourt
Yasmin Ratansi ? MP, Don Valley East
Derek Lee ? MP, Scarborough-Rouge River
Susan Kadis ? MP, Thornhill
The Hon. Gerry Phillips ? MPP, Scarborough-Agincourt
The Hon. David Caplan ? MPP, Don Valley East
The Hon. Tony Wong ? MPP, Markham
Brad Duguid ? MPP, Scarborough Centre
Mario Racco ? MPP, Thornhill
Frank Klees ? MPP, Oak Ridges
Michael Prue ? MPP, Beaches-East York
Shelley Carol ? Toronto City Councillor, Ward 33 – Don Valley East
Mike Del Grande ? Toronto City Councillor, Ward 39 – Scarborough-Agincourt
Adam Giambrone ? Toronto City Councillor, Ward 18 – Davenport

The keynote speaker for the event was Dr. Gerald Caplan, an author of
several articles and public policy studies, including the 300-page report
?Rwanda: The Preventable Genocide?. Dr. Caplan discussed his experience in
covering the Rwandan Genocide and how it motivated him to continue covering
critical issues in Africa today ? such as the state of Africa?s children
and the AIDS epidemic.

Regarding the Armenian Genocide, Dr. Caplan said he felt outraged that ?the
central message of this anniversary remains the relentless effort to
persuade our own government in Ottawa, the government of the United States
and? the government of Israel to perform a simple act of justice.? He
explained that ?we must continue to insist that they officially recognize
that in 1915 a classic genocide, totally consistent with the definition set
down 35 years later in the United Nations Convention For The Punishment And
Prevention For The Crime of Genocide, was deliberately inflicted upon the
Armenian people living in Turkey by the Turkish government, its army and
its proxies.? Given their similar experiences with genocide, Dr. Caplan
stressed the need for the Armenian, Jewish and Rwandan communities to
create stronger ties and work together in what he termed ?the solidarity of
sorrow and the solidarity of victims.?

In his remarks to the crowd Jack Layton, Leader of the federal NDP,
discussed the work performed by the NDP in securing the recognition of the
Armenian Genocide. ?I?m proud that our party was able to support the
motion (M-380) that came before the House last year? We wanted that motion
to pass the House of Commons, and that motion has passed the House of
Commons. And it?s because of the hard work of each and every one of you
here who worked so hard to achieve that very positive result.?

The Honourable Jim Karygiannis, Member of Parliament for
Scarborough-Agincourt deeply touched the crowd when he spoke of how
genocide by the Ottoman Empire had affected him personally and his
experience being born in a refugee camp. ?We talk on a daily basis of what
happened to us. History, ladies and gentlemen, can not be changed. Those
people that want to change it, those people that deny it, they?re stealing
from us? our history? our identity? and our future.? He later stressed his
commitment to continue to support the Armenian cause.

Messages for the events received from politicians who could not be present
were read by representatives from the Armenian National Committee of
Toronto. Messages were received from: His Excellency Ara Babian, Armenia’s
Ambassador to Canada; Stockwell Day, Official Opposition Foreign Affairs
Critic; Dalton McGuinty, Premier of Ontario & David Miller – Mayor of
Toronto. But the largest applause came during the reading of the message
from Stephen Harper, Leader of Her Majesty?s Official Opposition & Leader
of the Conservative Party of Canada, when he declared ?On April 24th, we
honour the one and a half million victims of the Armenian Genocide whose
lives were taken from 1915 to 1922.? When it was announced that the Prime
Minister, The Right Honourable Paul Martin, had failed to provide a message
to the community on this occasion, the crowd responded with boos and cries
of ?Shame!?

A further surprise announcement during the commemoration came from Mr.
Frank Klees, Member of Provincial Parliament for Oak Ridges. ?I will, this
week, ask for unanimous consent in the provincial legislature that as a
provincial legislature we pass a resolution calling on the federal
government not only to allow a vote on this, but to ensure that the federal
government take action and recognize the genocide in the way that it is
appropriate to do.? Mr. Klees received a standing ovation from the crowd
for his pledge ? which he followed up the subsequent day at Queen?s Park.

The message from the ARF Youth Organization of Canada?s Toronto ?Simon
Zavarian? chapter was given by executive member Hovig Saraphanian. Mr.
Saraphanian explained that the youth of today, having grown up with
Canadian values of tolerance and compassion, demanded justice for the crime
of the Armenian Genocide. He concluded his speech with the words, ?As
Canadian-Armenians our demands are simple: Justice, recognition and
restitution for the one and a half million martyrs who perished during
World War I and the systematic massacres beforehand all undertaken by the
Ottoman Turks. We reaffirm our pledge that we will not rest until their
memory is rightly honoured by all.?

The Republic of Armenia as well as Armenian communities around the globe
are holding various events marking the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide. The official commemoration on April 17, 2005, was only one of
several Toronto events planned for April 2005. For a schedule of other
events contact the Armenian National Committee of Toronto at
[email protected]

-30-

Estonia’s Armenian associations issue statement in response to…

Baltic News Service
April 26, 2005

ESTONIA’S ARMENIAN ASSOCIATIONS ISSUE STATEMENT IN RESPONSE TO
WARNINGS BY AZERIS

TALLINN, Apr 26

Representatives of Estonia’s Armenian community have dismissed the
tone of a recent statement by local Azeri associations concerning the
events commemorating the 1915 massacre of Armenians in Turkey as
hostile and not fit for a democratic society.

The statement by the Armenian community organizations is addressed to
the same parties as the Azeri statement a week ago, which accused the
Armenians of spreading lies and said the commemorative events were
prone to lead to an ethnic conflict in Estonia.

Addressing the president, the parliamentary speaker, the prime
minister, the population minister and the chairs of the city councils
of Tallinn and Tartu, the ethnic Armenian organizations express
surprise at the tone of the statement by the Azeri associations at
the end of last week.

According to the Armenian organizations, the Azeri statement accused
Armenians of inciting ethnic hatred and threatened with violence. The
Armenian organizations say such behavior reveals unconcealed
hostility toward Armenians and their historic memory as well as
contempt of democratic society and its values.

The letter says that only with sick fantasy it’s possible to regard
the events dedicated to the memory of the genocide committed in the
Osman empire in 1915 as an insult to the national dignity of Azeris.

It says that similar events are being held right now, on the 90th
anniversary of the tragic events, in many countries, including in
parliaments and at conferences, and the same topic has been raised in
Turkey.

“… it is not understandable how Azeris are linked to the genocide
of Armenians committed in 1915 and why leaders of the Azerbaijani
community have assumed the unrewarding task of justifying one of the
most horrendous crimes of the last century,” the letter says.

Threats and ultimatums that are addressed by one ethnic group to
another are to be qualified as a variety of terrorism, it says.

The section of the statement by the Azeris that warns of
deterioration in Estonia’s relations with Turkey, a fellow member of
NATO, is viewed in the letter by the Armenian organizations as
blackmail that is insulting to the Estonian state.

The authors of the letter underline that all the events staged by
Estonia’s Armenian community to remember the genocide of Armenians
were held in abidance by Estonian and European laws, without
insulting anyone’s national dignity or banning anyone from the event.

The letter is signed by the Armenian National Association of Estonia,
the Armenian National Association of South Estonia, the Tallinn
Armenian National Society, and representatives from the St. George’s
congregation of the Armenian Apostolic Church in Estonia.

Ethnic Azeri associations of Estonia warned last week that
commemoration of the anniversary of genocide of Armenians may led to
a conflict between the two ethnic communities in Estonia. As the
Azeri representatives argued in the statement, with their actions
that conceal history and disseminate false information the Armenian
community representatives are provoking Azeris to take counter-action
and that Estonian officials’ participation in the events may harm
ties with Turkey, which helped Estonia become a member of NATO.

Back from Armenia

Back from Armenia

Haaretz
27 April 05

By Yossi Sarid

We returned from Jerevan, Armenia, after taking part in the
international conference marking the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
genocide. We were four Israelis there – Prof. Yehuda Bauer, Prof. Yair
Oron, Dr. Israel Charny and I. Most of those invited were researchers
and academics. Only a few were statesmen. The Israeli presence was
very important for the organizers, so they changed the schedule to
suit our needs: We all wanted to be home for the Pesach seder.

The Israeli-Jewish position on their genocide is a matter of great
worry for the Armenians, and also a source of hope. Worry, over the
ongoing alienation by official Israel toward their terrible disaster,
from which they have yet to recover; and hope, because of the signs
being shown by the international Jewish community – and even among us
– indicating strong reservations with the infamous statement made by
Shimon Peres, in effect denying there had been any genocide of the
Armenian people.

That entire debate about whether there was or wasn’t genocide is
foolish and ugly. Nobody disputes the fact that more than one million
Armenians were murdered during a two-year period, and a million people
are not murdered without planning and without organization. The Turks
can invent a thousand reasons to explain what happened, but of what
importance will that be when the important thing is that people,
women, men, children, died strange and ruthless and unnatural deaths?

After 90 years, one can of course ask what is the point of digging at
history and wounds. A bad question. Genocide has not passed from this
world, it still takes its victims and not only in Darfur in
Sudan. Dealing with the past is therefore dealing with the present and
the future, so it is forbidden to leave it only to the historians, as
Peres suggested in his day. It won’t be the historians who prevent
more cases of genocide now lurking at the doorsteps of various nations
in more than 60 different places around the world, according to the
researchers’ diagnosis. Only the politicians can prevent it, if they
want – but they don’t really want.

Those same researchers point to another horrifying fact: In the 20th
century, some 160 million civilians were murdered in gases of genocide
and “politicide,” compared to “only” some 40 million
soldiers. Fighting apparently is less dangerous than living in the
zones of abandonment, where nationalist hatred and racist incitement
are the opium for the masses.

The genocide yet to come can be prevented, if the previous cases are
not whitewashed, on condition that those responsible don’t get away
with it. The Turkish position is grave and outrageous: The murderers
themselves are long since dead. Contemporary Turks are not guilty, so
it is not entirely clear why they insist on their great denial instead
of accepting the moral and historic responsibility. They are only
harming themselves, their stature and image, just as they knock on the
doors of the international community and want to be accepted to the
European Union. They should be accepted, but not before they recognize
their responsibility.

It’s not always remembered that the Armenian genocide was the first
case of genocide in the 20th century, characterized more than previous
ones by monstrosity, reaching its satanic climax in the Holocaust of
the Jews (though Prof. Bauer always steps in with the correction that
the first genocide of the last century was conducted by the Germans in
Namibia, but it has been forgotten completely).

If already then, in the early part of the century, the international
community had dealt the way it should have with the Armenian genocide,
it is very possible that it would have been possible to prevent all
that came after it, maybe even the Holocaust. But the eyes closed to
the Armenian victims were what made it possible for all the murderers
of the world to come out of their holes and slaughter, knowing there
was no shield to protect small and weak nations, which are such easy
prey.

The alliance between the victims is very important for the Armenians,
and important for us; the main importance is meant for the entire
human race. Knowing our species, its impulses and talent for
destruction, we cannot accept victims without murderers, genocide
without the responsible. An orphaned genocide is the father of the
next genocide.

Festive Fireworks Observed in Cyprus on Day of Commemoration

FESTIVE FIREWORKS OBSERVED IN CYPRUS ON DAY OF COMMEMORATION OF VICTIMS OF
ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

YEREVAN, APRIL 26. ARMINFO. In the Northern part of Cyprus occupied by
Turkey in 1974 April 24, the Day of the Armenian genocide, was
accompanied by acts of vandalism, representatives of the community of
Pontian Greeks inform ARMINFO’s correspondent in Yerevan. In
particular, Zoya Kotanova residing in Cyprus reports that the tombs of
Armenians were dug up and fireworks were lighting the evening air.

Pace won’t discuss amendments to RA constitution

AZG Armenian Daily #075, 27/04/2005

Armenia-PACE

PACE WON’T DISCUSS AMENDMENTS TO RA CONSTITUTION

The issue of the amendments to RA Constitution was not included on the
agenda of the spring session at PACE. Tigran Torosian, deputy chairman of RA
National Assembly, said that the PACE bureau discussed the issue and decided
not to include that on the agenda.

“The common sense won. They understood that there is no necessity to touch
upon the amendments to RA Constitution. The issue is not that urgent,”
Tigran Torosian commented on the situation.

Recently, Shavarsh Kocharian, head of RA delegation to PACE, said in the
interview to the Liberty Radio that “As there are other urgent issues, one
can’t say that the issue of the amendments to RA Constitution will be
included in the agenda for sure.”

By Nana Petrosian

Another clash at the Dalma orchards

AZG Armenian Daily #075, 27/04/2005

Home

ANOTHER CLASH AT DALMA ORCHARDS

Prime Minister Is the Only Hope for Owners of Orchards

Recently another clash took place between the new and the old owners of
Dalma orchards. The new owners of the orchards brought tractors and tried to
ruin the orchards, while the old owners didn’t allow them. When the clash
ended they met with RA prime minister Andranik Margarian.

By the decree of the PM a conference was called up at Yerevan Municipality
to give a sensible solution to the issue.

After the Artsakh war, Vahan Zatikian, head of “Malatsia” Yerkrapah
detachment, allocated small lots to the families of perished freedom
fighters of the war. The lots were at their disposal for 10 years. The
people planted fruit and vegetables orchards here. The term of lease was to
expire in June, 2004. The owners failed to prolong the rent of the orchards.
While in 2003, the orchards were sold to new owners without informing the
old ones.

The former owners of Dalma orchards told in the interview to “Azg” that they
had been frequently threatened by the representatives of the new owners. The
families of the freedom fighters applied to RA President, RA ombudswoman,
general Manvel Grigorian, but they received encouraging response only from
RA prime minister.

When they visited him two weeks ago he ordered the Yerevan Municipality to
settle the issue, then he ordered the community representatives and the
police to protect the 27 owners lest someone hurts them.

The people that ear their living by cultivating fruits and vegetables do not
want any financial compensation for the land the new owners offer them

1,5 hectares of the lots were sold to an Edik Simonian, from Vanadzor, that
currently lives in Moscow.

At present, negotiations are being held for allocating new lands for him in
another place. Notwithstanding this last factor, the tension doesn’t relax.

The spring agricultural works have begun already, while the people not
knowing anything are doomed to uncertain expectations.

By Karine Danielian
RoBST1hSRjI7vynV/rKOw)–

Common ground

Common ground
A group of historians wants to reconsider the 1915 Armenian genocide – and
prove that Turkish and Armenian scholars really can get along

By Meline Toumani
The Boston Globe
April 24, 2005

FIVE YEARS AGO, Ronald Grigor Suny, a professor of political science at the
University of Chicago, sat in a tiny room on campus and waited nervously for
a group of colleagues to arrive. ”What have we done?” he asked his wife.
”What if these people choke each other to death?”

The conflict that Suny feared was no arcane ivory tower dispute. It was the
first meeting of the Workshop for Armenian-Turkish Scholarship, and most of
the participants were of Armenian or Turkish descent. In other words, in
addition to being historians, sociologists, and political scientists, they
were members of ethnic groups that – particularly in the diaspora – view one
another as sworn enemies.
Animosity between the groups stems from events in 1915 in Ottoman Turkey
that Armenians – along with most prominent historians worldwide – call the
”Armenian genocide,” and that many Turks call the ”so-called genocide”
or the ”Armenian allegations,” if they don’t use the phrase employed by
Turkey’s foreign minister, Abdullah Gul, at a press conference last month:
”unacceptable claims by the [Armenian] diaspora to continue its
existence.” The Turkish government promulgates a view that the number of
Armenians who died is much lower than Armenians claim – around 500,000
instead of 1.5 million – and that their deaths were the consequence of their
collusion with Russian forces in World War I, not preplanned extermination.
A revision to the Turkish penal code proposed last year would impose a
prison sentence of up to 10 years for use of the term ”genocide” to
describe the events of 1915.
For decades, Armenian groups, particularly those in the diaspora, have
lobbied governments, news organizations, and academic institutions to
officially label the events of 1915 as genocide, observing April 24 as the
date the massacres began. (The Boston area is home to one of the largest
communities of Armenian-Americans whose families were dispersed from Turkey
following the genocide.) And while Turkey is a long way from such
recognition, public discussion of the issue has reached unprecedented levels
there in recent months, following recommendations from many European Union
leaders that Turkey take steps to resolve the issue before becoming an EU
member.
When the Workshop for Armenian-Turkish Scholarship held its fourth meeting
last weekend in Salzburg, Austria, Turkish journalists were invited for the
first time. Workshop members would like to see their work influence
Armenian-Turkish relations, but they are adamant that scholarship and
politics are separate enterprises. They also know from personal experience
just how psychologically difficult it is for either side to take a neutral
look at either history or current developments.
. .
For Suny, an Armenian-American, the idea of working with Turkish scholars
was inspired by a visit to Istanbul’s Koç University in 1998. Suny lectured
about the genocide, and although several people walked out during his talk,
others received him with curiosity and respect.

But following his visit, the New Jersey-based newspaper Armenian Reporter
published a series of articles that accused Suny of being an agent of the
Turkish state and questioned the intentions of Turkish and Armenian scholars
who chose to work together. Suny replied with a blistering letter to the
editor. ”What a colossal intellectual and political mistake it would be,”
he wrote, ”for Armenians to slam the door in the face of those Turks who
want to open a dialogue, who are prepared to take risks and suffer the
consequences from their own government by proposing a fresh discussion of
the events of 1915.”

One of those Turks was Fatma Muge Gocek, a sociologist at the University of
Michigan who co-founded the workshop with Suny in 2000. When Gocek came to
the United States from Turkey in 1981, she quickly learned that to be a Turk
among Armenian-Americans was to stand accused of crimes committed almost a
century ago.
In 1998, at a Michigan conference marking the 75th anniversary of the
Turkish Republic, an audience filled with Armenians drilled her and other
speakers with questions about genocide denial. An elderly Armenian woman
stood up and said, with great emotion, that her parents died in the
massacres. Gocek was deeply moved. ”I don’t have to be Armenian to feel
terrible for you,” she recalls saying. ”I can see that you’re a person in
pain, and I’m in pain with you.”
Her reply left the woman speechless. ”I had never realized, until that
moment, the trauma that is created by a lack of acknowledgment,” Gocek
says.
Taner Akcam, another Turkish-born scholar in the workshop, is more
accustomed to speaking out against mainstream Turkish views. Now an
associate professor at the University of Minnesota, Akcam was imprisoned in
Ankara in 1976 for publishing an article stating that there were Kurds
living in Turkey. (The legal term was ”mountain Turks,” and even today the
government does not recognize Kurds as an official minority, though they
constitute 20 percent of the population.) Instead of serving his 10-year
sentence, AkÁam dug his way out of jail – literally – and escaped to
Germany. There, he became a researcher at the Hamburg Institute for Social
Research, working alongside German scholars who were studying the Holocaust.
Akcam is often credited with being the first Turkish historian to label the
events of 1915 as ”genocide,” but even he admits this did not come easily.
”It was a certain psychological process to use the word genocide,”’ he
says. ”That’s why I can understand my Turkish scholar friends who are ready
to talk about it openly, but never use that word.”
Suny welcomed colleagues to that first workshop at the University of Chicago
by calling it ”a small, humble, and historic meeting” inspired by
”tolerance of difference on the basis of equality and respect, rather than
exclusivist and insular nationalism.” The meeting was not without tension.
Many Armenian scholars refused to attend, and some insisted (unsuccessfully)
that participants sign a document stating that they recognized the genocide.

In the end, some used ”the G-word,” others didn’t. But the goal, Suny
says, was no longer to decide whether it did or it didn’t happen. ”We say,
It happened,”’ he explains. ”Now we have to find out: Why did it happen?
How did it happen?”’ADVERTISEMENT

Simply asking these questions challenges not just Turkish orthodoxies but
the mainstream Armenian attitude, which has been defined for many years by
the quest for acknowledgment – for ”the G-word” – above all. Suny says
this is not enough. ”If you don’t seek an explanation of why it occurred,
it becomes a kind of racism,” he says. ”Then the explanation implied is
that Turks are a pathological group of people who simply do these things.”
Suny, whose great-grandparents died in the 1915 massacres in Yozgat and
Diyarbakir, says he himself didn’t use the term genocide until he’d done
enough research on the subject. And he has questioned the view, held by many
Armenian scholars, that the genocide was planned well in advance, arguing
instead that even the deliberate massacre of a specific ethnic group could
have been an emergency strategy, not a long-term plot. The point does not
sit well with those who fear it bolsters Turkey’s claim that the massacres
were not genocide at all, but consequences of war.
. .
In Turkey, meanwhile, discussion of this once-taboo subject continues to
develop. Last week, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, backed by
opposition leader Deniz Baykal, called for an international investigation
into the events of 1915. (Armenian president Robert Kocharian rejected the
proposal, pointing out that many such efforts have already been completed.)
And last Sunday the Turkish state archives released a list of more than
523,000 Turks allegedly killed by Armenians in Turkey between 1910 and
1922 – a move that added to suspicion that Erdogan’s initiative was a bid to
appease EU pressure, not a sincere reconsideration.
Yet some who would like to see Turkey officially recognize the genocide
believe that it should not be tied to EU membership. If genocide recognition
is imposed from the top down – just as genocide denial was – it may please
Armenians in the short term, but it could be counterproductive by creating
more hostility among Turks. Better, they say, to allow open discussion and
study of the genocide to percolate from the bottom up.
Perhaps members of the Workshop for Armenian-Turkish Scholarship will get a
warmer reception from their own communities. In a near-comic example of
mistrust, both sides have accused Gocek of being an Armenian posing as a
Turk. Never one to rest easy on assumptions, Gocek reconstructed generations
of family history to confirm that her ancestors were, in fact, ”Sunni
Muslims to the core.”
But what, after all, does ethnic identity mean for someone who spends so
much energy resisting the lure of nationalism?
A lot, it turns out. ”I love my country!” declares Akcam, quoting the
climactic line from a poem that Nazim Hikmet, Turkey’s most famous
dissident, wrote in an Istanbul prison in 1939.
Suny, too, is unequivocal. ”No one can take being Armenian away from me,”
he says. ”My grandmother always told me that I am Armenian and we are the
most wonderful people in the world.”
Meline Toumani is a writer living in Brooklyn.