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Critical Interventions: Kurdish Intellectuals Confronting The Armeni

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  • Critical Interventions: Kurdish Intellectuals Confronting The Armeni

    CRITICAL INTERVENTIONS: KURDISH INTELLECTUALS CONFRONTING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    Bilgin Ayata

    The Armenian Weekly
    www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/04/29/kurdish- intellectuals-confronting-the-armenian-genocide/
    A pril 2009 Magazine

    In my contribution to last year's special issue, I had argued that an
    intensified Armenian-Kurdish dialogue carries the promising potential
    to become an alternative approach to the ongoing Armenian-Turkish
    discourse on reconciliation, which has traversed dialogue into a form
    of domination and containment.

    I also argued that the compartmentalization of the Armenian and
    Kurdish issues into separate discussions represents a continuation
    of a divide-and-rule mentality that only serves the interests of
    the Turkish state and weakens the position of Armenian and Kurdish
    intellectuals in these isolated debates. In order to overcome this
    compartmentalization, I called for an intensified Armenian-Kurdish
    dialogue, and the cultivation of an empowering alliance to confront
    the atrocities of the past and engage with them as a challenge of and
    for the present. One year after that last issue, I believe that such
    an Armenian-Kurdish dialogue is ever more important, especially in
    light of the following three developments: At the intergovernmental
    level, the diplomatic traffic regarding Armenian-Turkish relations
    has intensified with the election of President Obama who had pledged
    during his campaign to address the Armenian Genocide as a genocide.

    Second, at the domestic level, the recent municipal elections in
    Turkey on March 29 paved the way for a new political beginning
    in Armenian-Kurdish relations that I will discuss at the end of
    this article. Third, at the societal level, I believe that the
    general trend in the activities of some Turkish intellectuals and
    members of civil society has further degraded the reconciliation
    process from "reconciliation without recognition' to an agenda of
    "reconciliation instead of recognition." The "We apologize" petition
    initiated online in December 2008 illustrates such an attempt in
    its timing and content, and the subsequent statements made by the
    initiators of the campaign. [2] As other articles in this issue
    already critically engage with aspects of the campaign, it shall
    suffice to state here that the use of the term "Great Catastrophe"
    (or Medz Yeghern, in Armenian) in the apology statement allows one to
    talk about the genocide without acknowledging responsibility for it. I
    argue that this shows a striking resemblance with the Turkish state's
    strategy to deal with those issues that can no longer be denied.

    In recent years, the Turkish government has proved very adept in
    shifting its policy of denial to a policy of regulation in response
    to international and domestic challenges, thus enabling it to
    circumvent the issues at hand by introducing half-hearted formulas
    to ward off further pressure and demands. [3] The recent example of
    Kurdish broadcasting illustrates these insincere attempts: After many
    decades of denying the very existence of the Kurds, Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan himself uttered a sentence in Kurdish during
    his inaugural speech of the Kurdish channel 6 on state television
    (TRT) in January 2009.Notwithstanding that a 24-hour broadcast in
    Kurdish on state television constitutes a historic moment indeed for
    Turkey, court cases against privately owned channels that broadcast in
    Kurdish continue as usual. More strikingly, the speech by Ahmet Turk,
    the chairman of the pro-Kurdish party DTP, that he gave in Kurdish
    during a parliamentary session only a few weeks later was cut off
    and censored. Rather than a promising paradigm shift in the state's
    approach to the issue, initiatives such as the TRT 6 channel and other
    steps [4] appear as unwilling concessions that are only tolerated as
    long as the terms are set by the Turkish state.

    What seems like a step forward becomes in fact two steps backwards when
    the state claims ownership of a long-contested political claim (e.g.,
    Kurdish broadcasting and education, for example) to merely regulate and
    deplete it instead of truly fulfilling and realizing it. Unfortunately,
    such a regulatory approach was also replicated in the apology
    campaign initiated by a group of Turkish intellectuals. While on
    the one hand, the campaign appears as a step forward, the use of the
    term Great Catastrophe instead of genocide in the apology statement
    takes the discussion in Turkey and elsewhere two steps back. Some
    human rights activists and organizations within Turkey have already
    employed the term genocide, and hence not to use the term means a
    step backwards for their courageous efforts. More significantly,
    the choice of Great Catastrophe reveals a great ignorance towards
    those to whom the apology is expressed; after all, what was the one
    political claim that united Armenians around the world if not the
    recognition of the genocide? To me, the campaign looks like an act of
    appeasement rather than an apology, that has taken the sensitivities
    of the Turkish state into account rather than the sensitivities of
    the genocide survivors. My criticism refers, of course, only to the
    initiators of the campaign and not the 30,000 signatories who have
    signed the petition with good intentions. The positive aspects of
    raising the issue in Turkey notwithstanding, one has yet to see how
    the campaign will affect Armenian-Turkish dialogue. As a contrast to
    this regulatory approach, I will give examples from select actions
    by Kurdish intellectuals and activists who have sought to confront
    the Armenian Genocide rather differently from the current apology
    campaign, in order to show how an alternative apology or confrontation
    with the genocide is also possible.

    A number of Kurdish intellectuals and activists articulated their
    objections to the use of the term Great Catastrophe in the apology
    campaign with a joint declaration that was circulated among the
    Kurdish virtual community on the web. In the declaration "It's not
    a catastrophe, but genocide-this is the entire matter at heart,"
    [5] a dozen Kurdish intellectuals and activists sharply criticize
    the failure of not calling the events genocide.While acknowledging
    that the intention of the campaign contains positive goals-such
    as enabling a discussion of the problem and opening up a taboo-the
    failure of stating the problem by its rightful name, and the failure
    to mention other communities that also fell victim to a genocide,
    such as the Assyrians, Yezidis or Greeks, led them to ask:

    "With such a content, are we really apologizing to our Armenian
    brothers and sisters, to the victims of the genocide? Is it really then
    an apology?" [6] Linking the apology campaign with the recent history
    of the Kurds, the declaration states that "in fact, it is quite sad
    to see that Turkish academics still upheld their regulatory attitude
    when it comes to calling phenomena by their names. For instance, for
    several decades they have either ignored or refrained from calling
    the Kurds 'Kurds.' Instead, they have managed to use other words when
    there was no way around it." The declaration calls for an open and
    honest confrontation with past atrocities instead of merely circling
    the issue.

    Some of the signatories of the declaration had initiated a campaign
    entitled "Dialogue and Solidarity with the Victims of Genocide" back
    in 2004. [7] In a longer statement of this initiative, the initiators
    addressed not only the role of the CUP, but also the role of Kurdish
    gangs in the genocide, and called upon everybody in the region where
    the genocide occurred to take an active part in confronting the past,
    and to take responsibility for one's own history. The signatories
    declared that they are ready for such an open and critical engagement
    and expressed their apology to all victims of the genocide. Both in its
    tone and content, the statement was remarkable for its self-critical
    and courageous take on the issue. It was mainly circulated on the
    internet, and did not reach a wide audience even among the Kurdish
    community, as the initiators were all exiled Kurdish intellectuals
    and activists critical of the PKK. The initiative faded away soon
    thereafter without much effect. Yet, even if it did not receive much
    attention, the quality of the arguments in the apology statement
    serves as a reminder that for an honest confrontation and engagement,
    courage may be a better source of strength than cleverness.

    One key figure behind both the Dialogue and Solidarity with the Victims
    of Genocide initiative of 2004 and the declaration "Great Catastrophe
    or Genocide?" is the Kurdish publisher Recep Marasli. A leader of the
    Kurdish organization Rizgari, he was detained during the 1980's in
    the Diyarbekir prison, infamous for the brutal torture of political
    prisoners. Upon his release, he began running a publishing house,
    and was yet again detained for publishing books. Today, he lives as
    a political refugee in Germany and has recently completed his book,
    The Armenian National Democratic Movement and the 1915 Genocide,
    which was published in November 2008 in Turkey. [8] In the book, he
    forcefully argues that "genocide is not a matter of documentation
    forgery" (evrak sahtekarligi), and criticizes the ongoing debate
    about archives and documents in order to find "proof."When I met this
    soft-spoken, pensive man, who still carries the physical signs of
    torture and several hunger strikes, he pointed to the cover of the
    book, which features a black and white photograph of an Armenian
    school in Vartan (Varto) from 1913. About 100 children posed with
    their teachers in front of their school building. "Neither the school,
    nor the children have survived." he said. "This is what genocide is."9
    The book begins with an outline of his framework for an approach to
    the history of the region, which takes the pre-genocide plurality
    as its main reference point. He then traces the emergence of the
    Armenian National Democratic movement, explores the 1915 genocide
    and analyzes the effects of Kemalist rule on Armenians, Kurds, and
    other communities in the region. The book, which he began to write
    in 1990 when he was in prison, is a remarkable effort by a Kurdish
    intellectual to confront the Armenian Genocide and represents an
    important contribution for a sincere Armenian-Kurdish dialogue.

    Another Kurdish writer deserves particular attention in this
    context. Berzan Boti, a Kurd from Siirt who spent 11 years in prison
    for political offenses and still lives in Turkey, approached the Seyfo
    Center in Sweden in 2007 after he found out that his forefathers had
    unlawfully confiscated land from Assyrians in their village

    who had been killed during the genocide. In an unprecedented act,
    Boti declared that he wanted to return this property. As he could not
    return the property to the original owners, he returned the land to
    the Seyfo Center in a legal process that was concluded in December
    2008. Details of this honorable act will be made public in April 2009
    during a press conference in Sweden; yet Boti expressed earlier this
    year in a statement that "When I found out that the properties I and
    my brothers inherited from our father wasn't our own, but properties
    taken from the murdered Assyrians in 1915, I felt an indescribable
    feeling of guilt and shame. I've been thinking long and hard before I
    have come to this decision. I tried to put myself in their position. I
    have personally apologized to every Assyrian and Armenian I've met. But
    this does not get rid of the crime our ancestors committed. Even if I
    am personally not responsible for what happened in 1915, I felt as I
    had to do more than just to apologize. Finally, I came to the decision
    to give back all properties that I inherited from my forefathers to
    Seyfo Center, who struggles for a confession of the Seyfo Genocide in
    1915."10 In light of the fact that issues of justice and reparation are
    excluded and treated as anachronistic in the dominant Armenian-Turkish
    dialogue, this act by Berzan Boti not only stands out as an honorable
    individual act, but shows what an apology can or should entail.

    Certainly, these brief examples of critical interventions by Kurdish
    intellectuals are not representative of all Kurds, nor do they stand
    for a pressing urge in the Kurdish community to engage with the
    Armenian Genocide. These are rare but very important examples that
    deserve attention in the current debates on reconciliation. In stark
    contrast to the attempt of "reconciliation instead of recognition"
    in Turkish politics, those Kurdish intellectuals and activists
    who call for reconciliation take the demands and sensitivities and
    voices of the genocide survivors as their starting point for action,
    and not the sensitivities of the Turkish state. This gives hope for
    an alternative dialogue and reconciliation process that is grounded
    in justice and acknowledgment.

    Let me conclude with a political opportunity that may open a new page
    in Armenian-Kurdish relations and foster a sincere dialogue.

    News reports in early March 2009 suggested that the Armenian-Turkish
    border that was closed upon Turkey's initiative in 1993 may be
    reopened in April of this year. While this has not been officially
    confirmed, the possibility of reopening the border gained a different
    dimension with the recent regional elections on March 29, in which
    the Pro-Kurdish Party DTP firmly established itself as the key
    regional party in the Kurdish-populated areas in southeast Turkey,
    and took over the municipality of Igdir that had been governed by
    the ultra-nationalist party MHP for the past decade. Igdir is the
    province that borders Armenia, with Yerevan only 40 kilometers
    away from the province capital, where the population consists
    of mainly Kurds and Azeris. The political atmosphere there until
    recently had been extremely nationalistic and hostile toward its
    Armenian neighbor, which is sadly symbolized in the 45 meter-high
    Igdir "Genocide Memorial"-the highest monument in Turkey-that was
    opened in the attendance of then-president Suleyman Demirel, chief
    of staff Kivrikoglu, and other high-ranking officials in 1999,
    with its stated aim to commemorate the Armenian massacres against
    the Turks in Igdir. The monument replicates five large swords, with
    their ends meeting at the top and forming the star of the Turkish
    national flag when seen from above. The sharp edges of the swords are
    turned outwards, to symbolize the readiness against any intrusions
    from the outside. It is an aggressive, nationalistic, and outright
    hostile monument that is strategically located on the road from
    Igdir to the Armenian border. In light of this political atmosphere,
    it will certainly not be easy for the new mayor Mehmet Nuri Gunes of
    the DTP to make a new beginning in the region. However, irrespective
    of whether or not the border reopens, the DTP's victory in Igdir is
    a positive and hopeful development for better neighbor relations.

    It is time to replace the disgraceful monument with peaceful visions
    for the future
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