Turks of Europe for self-determination of Armenians in historic land

Pan Armenian News

TURKS OF EUROPE FOR SELF-DETERMINATION OF ARMENIANS IN HISTORIC HOMELAND

25.04.2005 07:26

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Ankara should not only acknowledge the Armenian Genocide
but also recompense its crime against the Armenian people, Turkish
International Federation of Cultural Exchange Yamal Arshar stated in Yerevan
today. In his words, his organization is for the return of Armenians, who
survived the Genocide, to their historic homeland. He apologized to the
Armenian people and stated that the Federation composed of Turks and Kurds
together with Armenians will press for the recognition of the Armenian
Genocide. `The Armenian Genocide can be recognized with consistent struggle
of the Turkish and Kurdish peoples’, he added. In his turn, deputy head of
the German Union against Genocide Bulent Gul stated that a memorial to the
Armenian Genocide victims should be inaugurated in Istanbul.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Tehran: Armenians commemorate massacre anniversary

Tehran Times
April 25 2005

Armenians commemorate massacre anniversary

TEHRAN (IRNA) — Members of the Armenian community in Tehran held a
rally Monday to commemorate the anniversary of alleged massacre of
Armenians by then Turkish government under Ottoman rule in 1915 in
Turkey.

The Armenians chanted slogans against the massacre, condemning the
carnage of Armenians on April 24, 1915 under Ottoman rule in Turkey,
the Public Relations Department of Iran’s Armenian Archdiocese said.

Armenia’s ambassador to Tehran, MPs representing Armenian community
and members of Armenian associations also took part in the march.

“The government of Turkey under Ottoman rule, in the aftermath of the
World War One, took advantage of chaotic situation, resulted as the
chaos of the war and adopted the policy of genocide against Armenians
to usurp their homeland,” said a statement issued by the Armenian
Archdiocese.

Armenian Archbishop Sibveh Sarkisyan called on the Armenian citizens
to make efforts for development of Iran.

He appreciated the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei for his sympathy with the Iranian Armenians, saying that
Armenians cannot forget the hospitality of the Iranian people who
sheltered the survivors of the 1915 tragic event.

The Armenian community in the central city of Isfahan also held a
similar march to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the massacre of
Armenians in 1915.

Holding placards in the Church of Vaanak in Isfahan, over 500
Armenians condemned the event in Turkey.

The Armenians living in 56 countries across the world commemorate the
anniversary of genocide of Armenians by Ottomans on April 24, 1915 in
Turkey.

The United Nations in a meeting in 1948 termed the slaughter of
Armenians as a genocide.

The central city of Isfahan and southern cities in Iran are home to
12,000 Armenians whose residence in Iran dates back to Shah Abbas of
Safavid dynasty.

Azernaijan wants homicide officer to serve prison term at home

Armenpress

AZERBAIJAN WANTS HOMICIDE OFFICER TO SERVE PRISON TERM AT HOME

BAKU, APRIL 25, ARMENPRESS: Azerbaijani justice ministry said last week
it will negotiate with Hungarian authorities to have Ramil Safarov, an
Azerbaijani officer, who had hacked to death his Armenian counterpart Gurgen
Margarian on February 19, 2004, sent to Azerbaijan to serve his prison term
after the Hungarian court issues its verdict.
Both were participants of an English language training course within the
framework of the NATO-sponsored “Partnership for Peace” program held in
Budapest, Hungary. The murder occurred at 5 o’clock in the morning, while
the victim was asleep.
The trial of Safarov is set to resume on May 10.
Zaver Gafarov, head of an Azerbaijani justice ministry department, said
the ministry will base its petition on the European Convention on
Extradition of Convicts, which Baku had joined several years ago.

Genocidio. El domingo se cumplieron 90 a os

La Prensa, Panamá,
lunes 25 de abril de 2005

GENOCIDIO. EL DOMINGO SE CUMPLIERON 90 AÑOS.

Armenia recuerda al 1.5 millón de personas asesinadas por los turcos
El 24 abril de 1915 empezó en el Imperio Otomano la expulsión masiva
y el traslado forzado de los armenios.

EREVAN, Armenia/ Servicios internacionales

Centenares de miles de personas recordaron ayer, domingo, en el
Estado caucásico de Armenia, el genocidio de 1.5 millón de armenios
hace 90 años en el Imperio Otomano.

En la capital, Erevan, los asistentes depositaron flores ante el
monumento de Zizernakaberd, que rinde homenaje a las víctimas del
genocidio. Se espera la presencia de hasta 1.5 millón de invitados
procedentes de Armenia y el extranjero.

Hace 90 años, el 24 abril de 1915, empezó en el Imperio Otomano la
expulsión masiva y el traslado forzado de los armenios, cuyo
objetivo, según muchos historiadores, era su aniquilación. Turquía,
por su parte, niega hasta hoy el genocidio.

Tampoco una nueva carta del primer ministro turco, Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, recibida antes del aniversario, deja entrever un cambio en
esta postura, afirmó en declaraciones a la televisión rusa el
presidente armenio, Robert Kocharian.

Una serie de estados, entre los que figuran Canadá, Francia, Italia,
Suecia y Rusia, reconoce de forma oficial el genocidio armenio.

“El reconocimiento y la condena no son una cuestión de Armenia sino
de toda la política internacional”, aseguró el presidente Robert
Kocharian.

“Esta es una de las tragedias más horribles que la Humanidad ha
conocido”, declaró el filósofo Alexander Manasian. “La celebración de
hoy es una muestra de que esto no debe ocurrir nunca más”, subrayó.

Muchos miembros de la diáspora armenia en el mundo también se dieron
cita en Erevan para la conmemoración junto a los cerca de 3.8
millones de habitantes de la ciudad en el minuto de silencio guardado
a las 7:00 de la tarde.

“Durante muchos años he estado viajando a Armenia en un día tal como
hoy. Debo honrar la memoria de mis antecesores que fueron torturados
y asesinados”, comentó Rubina Kirakosian, una armenia residente en
California.

Turquía reconoce la tragedia ocurrida a cientos de miles de armenios
muertos en la “guerra civil” entre 1915 y 1917, aunque niega que se
haya tratado de un plan de exterminio diseñado por el gobierno,
extremo que ha complicado los esfuerzos del país euroasiático para
sumarse a la Unión Europea.

LOS PUNTOS PRINCIPALES

MASACRE: En 1915 comenzó en el decadente Imperio Otomano las masacres
y deportaciones de la población armenia, que en tres años causó un
millón y medio de víctimas.
LA FECHA: El `genocidio’ se conmemora el 24 de abril, aniversario del
arresto de casi un millar de intelectuales y líderes de la comunidad
armenia, sospechosos de tener sentimientos hostiles hacia el gobierno
de Constantinopla.

Warsaw Gazette: Armenian Massacre – first genocide in 20th century

Gazeta Wyborcza
April 24, 2005

Armenian Massacre – the first act of genocide in the 20th century

By Aris Janigian

It is a strange feature of human psychology that in absence of
contrition a perpetrator will either demonize the victim or claim that
the victim was complicit in his own suffering. For decades such was
the way of the Turks who at the time of WWI murdered over a million
Armenians – writes Aris Janigian, American psychologist and essayist
of Armenian background.

When I was a young boy, an elderly uncle of mine said `if you
should ever meet a Turk, you must kill him.’ I knew that the Turks had
committed a terrible sin against my people, that they were the
perpetrators of Medz Yeghren, The Great Cataclysm as we Armenians
called it, but the thought of killing a man, possibly another boy,
terrified me. Did I have what it took? Couldn’t I just spit on him or
call him names? What kind of burden was this to put on the shoulders
of a young boy? This happened so long ago. Couldn’t everyone just get
on with their lives?

Luckily, we landed in a place where there were no Turks, or,
if there were, they never dared make it known with so many Armenians
surrounding them. Between the two wars, thousands of Armenians
flooded into California’s Great Central Valley with the hopes of
claiming a stake in the most productive agricultural region in the
world. They came to resurrect something of the homeland, to make
something new from the ashes of their past.

Nothing illustrates this hope better, I think, than a label for a
fruit box I came across years ago. It is for the farming family Harry
Berberian and Sons: The label, ARARAT BRAND, features a white bearded
Noah walking with a shovel over his shoulder. In the foreground there
is a bounty of fruit, peaches and cherries and grapes. In the near
background we see Mount Ararat in the heart of historical Armenia,
with Noah’s ark resting proudly at thesummit. Behind Mount Ararat
there is a lush valley that gently rolls to the horizon, where it ends
at another mountain range that is unmistakably the Sierra Nevada which
flanks the Central Valley to the East. `Produce U.S.A.’ is
matter-of-factly stamped on the label. Such were the dreams of those
refugees. The blackest page

The German and Swedes and `real Americans,’ who had settled
Fresno, however, had no use for these Armenians. `What is this flotsam
thathas washed up on our shores,’ they asked. Arabs, or worse, Jews?
Real estate developers quickly attached clauses to the property deeds
barring Armenians from entryto the newer and more fashionable
enclaves. They must have assumed for our dark eyes and dark hair and
complexion that we were neither Caucasian, nor Christian, but of
course, nothing could be further from the truth. My
forefathers’ grazed sheep in the shadows of the Caucuses, the
Armenians had converted to Christianity in 301 AD–the oldest
Christian nation. They were throwing upcrosses and erecting churches
while Swedes were still evoking the names of Thor and Oden, and the
Germans were offering animal sacrifices to the gods. Around 402 AD,
Mesrop Mashtots developed a unique alphabet, `divinely inspired’ for
the sole purpose of translating the bible into Armenian.

And, of course, the Armenians had hardly come to America by
choice. Between year 1915 and 1918, the Young Turks, as they were
called, under the cover of World War I began a mass deportation and
slaughter that would eliminate between 1 and 1.5 million. It was the
first genocide of the 20th century, and when the Turks were finished,
the Armenians, who had called that area home for nearly 3000 years,
would all but disappear.

Henry Morgenthau, the United States ambassador to Turkey
during those tumultuous years said `Among the blackest pages in modern
history this is the blackest of them all.’ There was a vast
outcry. The US press covered the slaughters so careful and up to the
moment that their later coverage of the Jewish, Cambodians, or Rwandan
genocides would dim by comparison. Multiple millions of dollars poured
in through charitable organizations to feed and support` the starving
Armenians,’ as every school kid of the time had come to know them.

When Turkey was defeated, the allied powers, appalled at the
violence unleashed toward the Armenians, found a tribunal which
included member of the new Turkish government. Though the leaders of
the Young Turk government had fled by then, they were found guilty of
the massacres and sentenced to death in abstentia. Roosevelt and the
allied powers carved up Turkey and in 1918 Armenians were granted a
small independent state. Although Kemel Ataturk, the father of modern
Turkey, was keen to distance himself from the decrepit Ottomans, some
of the old ways remained `in the blood’ so to speak. Determined to
keep his transformed Turkey territorially intact, he finished the job
that the Young Turks began, mopping up what Armenians were
left. Within two years the Republic of Armenia vanished. But, this
time, the Western Powers turned a blind eye to the Armenians’
suffering: Russian Communism was one the rise, and Turkey would be a
strategic partner against its advance. There was hardly anyone left to
protest and safeguard the Armenians memory. Certainly not a few
Armenians scattered like stray seeds across the globe.

Rewriting history

Under the cover of this `strategic partnership’ the Turks began
a campaign to rewrite history. It is a strange but incontrovertible
fact of human psychology that in the absence of contrition a
perpetrator will either demonize the victim or concoct an explanation
that shows that the victim was complicit in his own suffering. This
captures the psychology of the Turks between the wars and the rhetoric
which they promulgate to this day. The Armenians, according to
Turkish history books, are alternately portrayed as villains who
betrayed their homeland (some had aided the Russian Army in an attempt
to forestall their own deaths), or, worse, as perpetrators of a
genocide against the Turks themselves. The most charitable
characterization would have Armenians as regrettable bystanders to a
terrible war-torn time, as though what had hit them was a natural
phenomenon, not a precisely planned extermination.

But it was not all psychology. The threat of Armenians
someday seeking territorial restitution for their loss lurked in the
background. The Turks calculated retorted amounted to: `If we did
nothing to them, we owethem nothing.’ In any case, in the great chess
game of world events, theArmenians were sacrificed from the board like
a pawn, and they were left to take, piecemeal, justice into their own
hands. In 1924 in Berlin, a survivor of the genocide, Sagomon
Tehrilian, assassinated Talat Pasha, the chief architect of the
genocide. There was no question that he pulled the trigger, and
revenge washis only defense. He was acquitted.

But if the France, and Britain, and American had turned their
eyes from the Armenian Issue, others were keenly interested in
studying it. The Nazi Party, similar in their rhetoric and
nationalistic fervor to the young Turks, was encouraged by how
efficiently memory was swept from out of sight just twenty years
before. On the eve of invading Poland, when asked by his commanding
officers what made him think he could get away with this, Hitler,
argued`Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the
Armenians?’

After the tumult and atrocities of World War II, Raphael
Lempkin, drafted and prompted the United Nations to adopt a resolution
against genocide. The Armenian Genocide-and especially the Tehrelian
case, was utmostin Lempkin’ s mind when he first confronted the
paradox that laws abounded for holding individuals accountable for
murder, but that no law existed for holding states accountable for
mass murder. Turkey signed on to the convention, and continued its
revisionist rhetoric.

In the mid-1970, an underground Armenian revolutionary group
begana series of assassination of Turkish diplomats and spectacular
bombings to bring attention to the Armenian claims. While they
succeeded in assassinating several Turkish officials, many innocents
were killed as well. This was useful fodder for the Turks, who began
to ratchet up the rhetoric against the `Armenians Nationalist
terrorists.’

They issued clumsy compilations of `documents’ selectively
culled from the Ottoman Archives, they threatened severing ties with
countries that recognized the genocide, and attempted to buy chairs in
Turkish History at American Universities.

`Genocide’ – the forbidden word

But history has an uncanny way of raising its head even after
it has been seemingly guillotined. In its bid to join the European
Union, Turkey has been advised to reconcile itself with its
history. French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier said flatly `Turkey
needs to face up to its history.’ In theface of such pressure from the
Europeans, some press reports have detected a ` softening’ of
the Turkish position. On April 14, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah
Gul told a special session of the Turkish parliament `Turkey is ready
to face its history, Turkey has no problem with its history.” But
anyone who has cared to track recent events in Turkey can easily
conclude the opposite, that a hardening is occurring as nationalist
sentiments rise to the surface.

As the April 24 Day of Armenians Remembrance approaches,
nearly every issue of the top Turkish dailies carries a story about
yet another`uncovered ‘ document exonerating the Turks, and
reproaching the Armenians. Amnesty International has condemned Article
305 of the new Turkish Penal Code. It criminalizes “acts against the
fundamental national interest,’ and includes the Armenian Genocide as
a prime example of a crime that is `contrary to historical truths.
Orhan Pamuk, Turkey most celebrated novelist has had death threat and
citations for arrest issued against him for a admitting to a Swiss
audiencelast month that there was a genocide. Just a week ago, in
order to enlighten itself, the Turkish Parliament invited one of the
most vociferous revisionists, Justin McCarthy, to lecture that
body. One Australian newspaper that covered this incredible spectacle
found foreign diplomats shaking their heads. `It would have been more
fruitful to invite people of differing opinions on the subject to the
parliament,’ one diplomat was quoted as saying, but `they are still
very timid.’ Last week, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip purportedly sent a
letter to the Armenian President Robert Kocharian calling for a
dialogue between the two countries on the genocide, as though the
hundreds of books and articles on the subject, and the opinion of the
most learned scholars in the field of genocide studies did not
exist. Armenian Foreign minister Oskanian replied that that there was
nothing to debate.

Many countries, including France, Italy, Russia, Switzerland,
as well as the European Parliament, agree with this position, and have
taken steps to formally recognize the genocide. America, where more
Armenians live thanany place outside of Armenian, has not. At my
daughter’s school in Los Angeles, many children, for the entire month
of April, have chosen to wear a T-shirt which says on front `90 Years
of Denial,’ and on the back,`remember the Armenian genocide.’ They are
hoping to appeal to the conscience of the US Congress and the US
President. But every year on April 24 the president remarks on those
events with a strange mix of evasive and scorching language: `On this
day we pause in remembrance of one of the most horrible tragedies of
the 20th century, the annihilation of as many as of 1.5 Armenians
through forced exile and murder at the end of the Ottoman Empire.’
Every April 25 or so, theTurkish Press glows that the American
President refrained from using word Turks most fear, ` genocide,’ and
made no mention that the Turkish Republic is responsible for
perpetuating the crime through denial.

The Turkish revisionists have also been comforted by some
ironical bedfellows. It has also been well documented (and publicly
flaunted by Turkish Opinion makers), that the Israelis and several of
the most powerful American Jewish political organizations have fought
`hand in hand’ with the Turks against Armenian genocide Recognition in
the United States. In April 2001, the Nobel Laureate and Israeli
Foreign Defense minister Shimon Peres made many Turks giddy when in an
interview with the Turkish press he affirmed the state’s
position that the genocide had never occurred. The next year the
Ambassador of Israel to Armenia repeated this assertion in
Yerevan. This sad reversal of the historical reality reached perverse
proportions, rarely seen outside of Turkey itself, when in 2003 an
Israeli citizen of Armenian descent was asked to light a candle and
say a few words about herself in celebration of Israel’s 55
Independence Day Celebration. When the government got wind from the
advanced text for the occasion that she described herself as a
`survivor of the Armenian Genocide of 1915,’ they demanded she change
it so as to not insult the Turks. Professor Yaur Auron of Hebrew
University, who has documented the Jewish response in great detail,
recently summed it up thus: `To my sorrow, Israel has become Turkey’s
principal partner in helping it deny the Armenian Claims.’ A hall of
mirrors

I’d like to apologize to the reader, if this essay should
soundlike a point by point recital of the evidence. One of the saddest
consequences of being a victim is that until the perpetrator of the
crime comes clean one becomes stuck in reciting the past. Perhaps this
is even more so the case you are left to defend that actual victim
after he is gone.

I believe that Turkey has stunted its own maturity as a
country in denying the Armenian Genocide. But it is also true that
Armenians have been stunted. A few of my friends privately wonder if
the genocide has not ransomed the energy and imagination of our
people, driving other aspects of our long history and, more
importantly, our future work to the peripheries. At times, it is as
though we were standing in a hall of mirrors, where we repeat
ourselves and disappear at the same time.

I should like to end with an answer to my Uncle’s question:
Should I kill a Turk if I ever met one? The answer is, of course,
no. And unlike when I was a child, the opportunity has arisen many
times. In my 20 years as a professor, I have had several Turkish
students. When I ask them what they know of those events, they shake
and occasionally drop their heads in shame. One student told me,
`that area, and that time—it is like a dark holein our history.’

This April 24, the world should stop and recall, however
briefly, that an ancient people, just 90 years ago, were nearly wiped
from the face of the earth. For more than one reason, more than even
revenge or restitution,it is my hope that light will shine on the
Turkish republic, and that this darkness will be obliterated for once
and for all, and for us both.

Editor’s note: Armenian Genocide

In 1914 Turkey joined the world war siding with Germany and
Austro-Hungarian Empire. The leaders of the Young Turks accused –
unfoundedly – the Armenian minority of supporting Russia. On April
24, 1915 they issued an edict aboutthe arrest of Armenian political
leaders. In Istanbul itself 2345 people were arrested of whom the
majority was murdered. On May 27, 1915 another deportation temporary
measure was issued, on the basis of which all the way to 1917 several
provinces of the empire were ethnically cleansed. The arrested
Armenians- men, women and children – were formed into marching columns
and exterminated mercilessly. The German writer Franz Werfel called
them `the marching concentration camps.’ The Armenians were drowned,
pushed into the mountain chasms; people had horse shoes nailed to
their feet; priests were burnt alive or buried alive in the
ground. Towards the end of 195 half a million victims were hoarded
into a Syrian Desert where they perished of heat and thirst.

The intentions of the Turkish government were plainly stated by the
Minister Talaat Passza in the telegram of September 1915: `As it had
been declared earlier, the government made the decision regarding
extermination of all Armenians residing in Turkey. (¦) Regardless
whether women, children or the sick, and regardless of how tragic the
means of this extermination might be, without listening to the voice
of conscience they have to be annihilated.’

The Turks dealt in a particularly vicious way with the Armenian
Church. The authorities publicly announced that the only way to avoid
repressions was a` plea’ to accept the faith of Allah. (In 2001 John
Paul II beatifiedthe Bishop Ignacy Maloian who, together with 12
priests, was murdered for rejecting the conversion to Islam).

The Armenians made several desperate attempts to revolt. Starting on
April 20, 1915 the inhabitants of an Armenian quarter in the city of
Wan fought bravely for a month – they were saved by the Russian
offensive. At the hill of Musa Dagh five thousand Armenians of the
region of Musa fought for over 50 days.

Armenian Genocide Plagues Ankara 90 Years On

Spiegel Online, Germany
April 25 2005

Armenian Genocide Plagues Ankara 90 Years On

By Bernhard Zand

This weekend, Armenians commemorated the 90th anniversary of the
genocide of 1915. But Turkey has yet to recognize the crime — the
first genocide of the 20th century. By refusing to use the word
“genocide,” Turkey could complicate its efforts to join the European
Union.

AFP photo:
Genocide in Armenia: Many Turks view the perpetrators as their
fathers.

Typhoid, the Russians, imperialism and Kaiser Wilhelm II in far away
Berlin — all were responsible for the mass deaths of Anatolian
Armenians. At least that’s the case if you read the official Turkish
history books. According to the Turkish version, the only group that
didn’t bear any responsibility were the Ottomans, the
great-grandfathers of modern-day Turkey, which is now on the cusp of
joining the European Union.

On Sunday, Armenians all around the world remembered the 90th
anniversary of the start of the genocide. This year brought the last
decennial memorial in which survivors of the crime, one of the worst
of the past century, will still be alive to attend. Never before has
the international pressure on Turkey as stronger as it is now for
Turkey to address its own history. And Ankara’s political elites have
never been more steadfast in their efforts to defend the myths Turkey
has used to explain the crime or to stamp critics as traitors.

The assertion that what happened to the Armenians was genocide is
“categorically unacceptable,” said Yüksel Söylemez, the chairman of a
group of former Turkish ambassadors who are seeking to promote the
official Turkish version of events abroad. Turkish president Ahmet
Necdet Sezer said the accusations are baseless and “upset and hurt
the feelings of the Turkish nation.” It is wrong, he added, for our
European friends to press Turkey on this issue.”

At least one of the arguments of the modern apologists evokes the
same motives of those which led to the order to deport the Armenians:
the leaders of the declining Ottomon Empire saw themselves in 1915 as
surrounded by enemies on all sides and created a case for the
self-defense of the state. It’s an argument that is still used by
modern Turkish defenders today. Be it the Kurds, the Armenians,
Greece, Europe or even the US — inside, like outside, the country
has nothing but opponents, they claim. “From the first day of its
existence,” Ankara Chamber of Commerce chief Sinan Aygün said, time
and time again people have tried to “unsettle and destroy” Turkey.

The fact that Ankara as an EU candidate won’t be able to use this
line of argumentation for much longer is only gradually dawning on
representatives of the Turkish government.

AP/ Armenian National Archives
Victims of the 1915 massacre: Finding out the truth about the
Armenian genocide is an uphill battle.”
Confronted with more and more Armenia resolutions in European
parliaments, opinion is growing among some that Ankara’s position on
the Armenian issue could ultimately endanger its prospects for EU
membership. Although there is no formal requirement that Ankara
recognize the murder of the Armenians as “genocide,” politicians
including French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier have made clear
comments in that direction. “I believe that when the time comes,
Turkey should come to terms with its past, be reconciled with its own
history and recognize this tragedy,” he said. “This is an issue that
we will raise during the negotiation process. We will have about 10
years to do so and the Turks will have about 10 years to ponder their
answer.” Recently, Germany’s conservative Christian Democratic Union,
filed a resolution on the Turkey-Armenia issue in its own parliament,
the Bundestag, where it will be discussed this week and voted on in
June.

In an effort to counter the pressure coming from Europe on the 90th
anniversary, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and
opposition leader Deniz Baykal agreed to a common position at the
beginning of March. Turkey is prepared, Erdogan said, to address its
past. He added that the state archives in Ankara and Istanbul are
open to everyone and that he could imagine an independent entity —
like UNESCO — participating in an historical fact-finding mission.

Two opposition members of the Republican People’s Party, former
ambassadors Onur Öymen and Sükrü Elekdagi, conceived the idea. The
fact that the action originated from the pair has created its own set
of problems, since they are both outspoken hardliners on the Armenian
issue. Their aim is to prove that the deportation and massacre during
World War I can in no way be compared to a genocide, that the number
of victims was considerably lower than the Armenians claim, and that
Anatolya’s Muslims were actually the ones who suffered the most from
the tragic events.

Why is it so hard for modern Turks to deal with this part of their
history? The crimes of 1915 were committed by the then-government of
the Ottoman Empire — a government from whose leading members Mustafa
Kemel clearly distanced himself from when he became the founding
father of the Turkish Republic.

Kemal, who later became known as Atatürk, broke with all of the
traditions of the Ottoman times when he took power in the 1920s. He
did away with the sultanate, the caliphate and sharia law. He added
the Latin alphabet, a European legal system and introduced the
Christian Sunday as one of the weekly public holidays. In addition,
he had a very tense relationship with the three young Turkish leaders
of the Ottoman Empire — Talaat, Cemel and Enver Pasha. He didn’t
want to include a single one of the three, who were considered the
primary culprits of the deportation of the Armenians, as part of the
Turkish national movement after the war. He considered Envers to be
especially dangerous because he saw in his pan-Turkish expansionist
agenda a suicide adventure.

AFP
Decapitated heads of Armenians: Why is it so difficult for modern
Turkey to deal with its past?
Many of the accomplices to the Ottoman war crimes nevertheless fared
well in the Turkish Republic, founded in 1923. Surprisingly, Atatürk
himself, spoke with such openness about the crimes that his comments
could be enough to land him behind bars today. In 1920, in
parliament, he condemned the genocide of the Armenians as an
“abomination of the past” and pledged to dole out severe punishments
to the culprits.

Repeatedly, representatives of Armenia have offered to accept the
version of events as told by Atatürk. In vain. When historian Halil
Berktay of Istanbul made similar statements earlier this month, he
was attacked. It was not unlike the way the nation’s best-known
author Orhan Pamuk was vilified after he told a Swiss newspaper in
February that, “one million Armenians were killed in Turkey.” Since
then, Berktay has refused to make any statements about the Armenian
issue.

Historians like Berktay are unfit to participate in the process of
historical fact-finding, said Onur Öymen, who was Turkey’s ambassador
to Germany and is now the deputy opposition chief and one of the two
initiators of the Turkish parliamentary offensive. They claim the
historians have been susceptible to prejudices spread by the
“Armenian propaganda machine.” However, the two do endorse the
version of events proffered by the American historian Justin
McCarthy, who spoke in March before the Turkish National Assembly and
later in a round with scientists and foreign diplomats.

Diplomats viewed McCarthy’s presentation skeptically, but Turks
welcomed it jubilantly. First, he said, the number of victims claimed
by the Armenians (1.5 million) is based on falsified census figures:
Only 1.1 million people could have lived in the Eastern provinces of
the Ottoman Empire affected by the deportations, he said. Of these,
close to 40 percent died and of those deaths, 80 percent were from
natural causes.

The Turks are fighting a tough battle, says McCarthy, who teaches in
Louisville, Kentucky, and has been largely unknown in his field until
now. “They’re fighting against prejudice, and their opponents are
politically strong, but the truth is on their side,” he told the
crowd.

“Would you admit to the crimes of your grandfathers, if these crimes
didn’t really happen?” asked ambassador Öymen. But the problem lies
precisely in this question, says Hirant Dink, publisher and
editor-in-chief of the Istanbul-based Armenian weekly Agos. Turkey’s
bureaucratic elite have never really shed themselves of the Ottoman
tradition — in the perpetrators, they see their fathers, whose honor
they seek to defend.

AFP
Turkish soldiers stand next to Armenians who have been hanged: Today
Atatürk would wind up behind bars for his criticism of the crimes
against the Armenians.
This tradition instils a sense of identity in Turkish nationalists —
both from the left and the right, and it is passed on from generation
to generation through the school system. This tradition also requires
an antipole against which it could define itself. Since the times of
the Ottoman Empire, religious minorities have been pushed into this
role.

At the beginning of April, Dink was invited along with other
representatives of the approximately 60,000 members of the Armenian
minority in Turkey to appear before the parliament’s EU Committee. He
came with a passionate appeal for reconciliation. He also had some
sharp-tongued words for Germany’s main opposition, which recently
took up the issue of the Armenian genocide in parliament. “Ms.
(Angela) Merkel (of the Christian Democratic Union), isn’t bringing
this instance up in the German parliament because she likes black
eyebrowed Armenians,” he said. “She’s playing this card because she’s
against EU membership for Turkey.”

Turkish-Armenian journalist and sociologist Etyen Mahcupyan also
wants to see the rhetoric toned down in this war of words. Whatever
the historical truth, he said, “The term genocide is only of use to
extremists. I would have nothing against it if this word wasn’t
used.” Rarely in recent decades, says Hirant Dink, have the
opportunities for an improvement in Turkish-Armenian relations been
as good as they are today. Erdogan’s government, dominated by
Muslims, is far less a product of the nationalist spirit of the
Turkish bureaucracy than its predecessors. And that’s something
Europe should seek to exploit.

Germany, especially, which as a former ally of the Ottoman Empire
also carries its share of blame in the tragedy, would be well advised
against writing any resolutions. Instead, it should make concrete
proposals: “Why don’t the Germans challenge Eriwan to make the old
nuclear reactor in Metsarot safer or put pressure on Ankara to reopen
its borders to Armenia?” Berlin could help economically and
diplomatically and support the moderates who exist on both sides,
Dink said. “Truly, the possibilities are endless.”

,1518,353274,00.html

http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/0

NY: Armenians mark 1915 Genocide

New York Post
April 25 2005

ARMENIANS MARK 1915 GENOCIDE

April 25, 2005 — Hundreds of Armenian-Americans gathered in Times
Square yesterday to observe the 90th anniversary of the 1915 Armenian
Genocide, in which 1.5 million people died at the hands of the
Ottoman Turkish empire.
They demanded that the mass extermination, which they say served as a
model for Hitler’s “final solution,” finally be acknowledged by
Turkey.

Tatiana Deligiannakis

BAKU: Armenians concerned over strengthening Azeri disapora

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
April 25 2005

Armenians concerned over strengthening Azeri disapora

Baku, April 22, AssA-Irada

The number of Azeri Diaspora organizations in foreign countries has
exceeded 300 since the establishment of the state committee on
Azerbaijanis living abroad, says the Committee chairman Nazim
Ibrahimov. He said in a meeting with students at the Baku State
University that the number of Armenian communities abroad is
alarming, as it has exceeded 1,300 in the United States alone. Their
number in Russia is 230.
Ibrahimov continued that Armenians are growing perturbed with the
strengthening of the Azerbaijani community and voiced their concerns
over this at a recent meeting of Armenian communities in Yerevan.
They indicated that if the Armenian government does not step its
support to Armenian Diaspora organizations, the strengthening Azeri
Diaspora will soon nullify the success they accomplished over past
100 years.*

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Jordan: Burden of memory

Jordan Times, Jordan
April 25 2005

Burden of memory
By Charles Tannock

All wars end, eventually. But memories of atrocity never seem to
fade, as the government-fanned anti-Japanese riots now taking place
in China remind us. The 90th anniversary of the Armenian massacres of
1915, ordered by the ruling Young Turks of the Ottoman Empire and
carried out by the Kurds, is another wound that will not heal, but
one that must be treated if Turkey’s progress towards European Union
membership is to proceed smoothly.
It is believed that the Armenian genocide inspired the Nazis in their
plans for the extermination of Jews. However, in comparison with the
Holocaust, most people still know little about this dark episode.

Indeed, it is hard for most of us to imagine the scale of suffering
and devastation inflicted on the Armenian people and their ancestral
homelands. But many members of today’s thriving global Armenian
diaspora have direct ancestors who perished, and carry an oral
historical tradition that keeps the memories burning.

It is particularly ironic that many Kurds from Turkey’s southeastern
provinces, having been promised Armenian property and a guaranteed
place in heaven for killing infidels, were willingly complicit in the
genocide. They later found themselves on the losing end of a long
history of violence between their own separatist forces and the
Turkish army, as well as being subjected to an ongoing policy of
discrimination and forced assimilation.

Historically, the ancient Christian Armenians were amongst the most
progressive people in the East, but in the 19th century Armenia was
divided between the Ottoman Empire and Russia. Sultan Abdulhamit II
organised the massacres of 1895-97 but it was not until the spring of
1915, under the cover of World War I, that the Young Turks’
nationalistic government found the political will to execute a true
genocide.

Initially, Armenian intellectuals were arrested and executed in
public hangings in groups of 50 to 100. Ordinary Armenians were thus
deprived of their leaders, and soon after were massacred, with many
burned alive. Approximately 500,000 were killed in the last seven
months of 1915, with the majority of the survivors deported to desert
areas in Syria, where they died from either starvation or disease. It
is estimated that 1.5 million people perished.

Recently, the Armenian diaspora has been calling on Turkey to face up
to its past and recognise its historic crime. Turkey’s official line
remains that the allegation is based on unfounded or exaggerated
claims, and that the deaths that occurred resulted from combat
against Armenians collaborating with invading Russian forces during
World War I, or as a result of disease and hunger during the forced
deportations. Moreover, the local Turkish population allegedly
suffered similar casualties.

Turkey thus argues that the charge of genocide is designed to
besmirch Turkey’s honour and impede its progress towards EU
accession. There are also understandable fears that diverging from
the official line would trigger a flood of compensation claims, as
occurred against Germany.

For many politicians, particularly in America, there is an
unwillingness to upset Turkey without strong justification, given its
record as a loyal NATO ally and putative EU candidate country. But,
despite almost half a century of membership in the Council of Europe
– ostensibly a guardian of human rights, including freedom of speech
and conscience – Turkey still punishes as a crime against national
honour any suggestion that the Armenian genocide is an historic
truth. Fortunately, this article of Turkey’s penal code is now due
for review and possible repeal.

Indeed, broader changes are afoot in Turkey. The press and
government, mindful of the requirements of EU membership, are finally
opening the sensitive Armenian issue to debate. Even Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, under increasing EU pressure as accession
negotiations are due to begin this October, has agreed to an
impartial study by academic historians, although he has reiterated
his belief that the genocide never occurred.

In France, the historical occurrence of the Armenian genocide is
enshrined in law, and denial of its occurrence is regarded in the
same way as Holocaust denial.

The European Parliament is pressing for Turkish recognition of the
Armenian genocide. It is also calling for an end to the trade embargo
by Turkey and its close ally Azerbaijan against the Republic of
Armenia, a reopening of frontiers, and a land-for-peace deal to
resolve the territorial dispute over Nagorno Karabakh in Azerbaijan
and safeguard its Armenian identity.

Armenia, an independent country since 1991, remains dependent on
continued Russian protection, as was the case in 1920 when it joined
the Soviet Union rather than suffer further Turkish invasion. This is
not healthy for the development of Armenia’s democracy and weak
economy. Nor does Armenia’s continued dependence on Russia bode well
for regional cooperation, given deep resentment of Russian meddling
in neighbouring Georgia and Azerbaijan.

There is only one way forward for Turkey, Armenia and the region. The
future will begin only when Turkey – like Germany in the past and
Serbia and Croatia now – repudiates its policy of denial and faces up
to its terrible crimes of 1915. Only then can the past truly be past.

The writer is chairman of the European Parliament’s Human Rights
Committee. ©Project Syndicate, 2005.

http://www.jordantimes.com/Mon/opinion/opinion4.htm
www.project-syndicate.org

Athens: Events of Remembrance

The Hellenic Radio (ERA)
April 24 2005

Events of Remembrance

By Betty Savourdou

Ninety years today, Sunday, since the genocide of Armenians living
within the borders of the then Ottoman Empire, and on Sunday night
10,000 people took to the streets of Yerevan holding lit candles and
calling Turkey to recognize the massacres as genocide. Wreaths will
be laid at the monument of the fallen men on Sunday afternoon, while
at the end of the day Mass will be held in Yerevan and a one-minute
silence will be observed around the country. In a televised
interview, Armenian President Robert Kocharian excluded the
possibility of asking Ankara for financial compensation in exchange
to recognize the killings as genocide. He also added: “Today
Armenians marched not only in commemoration and in mourning. They
also marched to voice their demand for the restoration of human
rights infringed by Turkey too many years ago, and are calling this
country to admit the mass killings amounted to genocide.”

Turkey: “Merely WWI Casualties”

Ninety years after the massacres, the anniversary unites the
Armenians of the Diaspora, who exceed 9,000,000, that is three times
more than the actual population of Armenia.

On this day in 1915 Ottoman Turkey started executing Armenians. Over
the next two years nearly 1.5 million Armenians were reportedly
killed or died during deportations from Turkey and now Armenia urges
the European Union to take the past into consideration, before
opening negotiation talks with Turkey.

Ankara continues to refer to the 1915 victims as mere casualties of
WWI. The only indication of retreat is the suggestion to form a
common Armenian-Turkish committee to look into the past.

Events in Athens Too

Events to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide
were held in Athens too.

A central cinema of the Greek capital showed archive material issued
by the Armenian national committee, while government and other
political representatives addressed salutations.

After the event, there was a march towards Syntagma Square and
wreaths were laid at the monument of the unknown soldier.

Minister for the Interior Prokopis Pavlopoulos represented the
government and underlined in his speech that “the matter in the
troubled world we are living in, is that we cannot be certain there
will never be such incidents again, if we don’t decide not to ever
tolerate those who actually triggered them, since they haven’t taken
their responsibilities and haven’t evaluated relevant experiences
based on the past.”

“Such anniversaries concern us all. They concern all counties, they
concern all nations. Because the establishment of human value, the
implementation of International Law in its total, the establishment
of the principles that correspond to our times, are lessons that we
all need to always remember,” stressed the minister.

Regarding the recognition of the Genocide, which is the main demand
of this year’s events, all speakers referred to the fact that an
increasing number of governments are already doing so, most recent
among them being Poland and Germany.

Translated by Sofia Soulioti