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Geography Lesson Needed

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  • Geography Lesson Needed

    Geography Lesson Needed

    BY GAREN YEGPARIAN

    The organizers of the Anatolian Cultures and Food Festival put on
    their fourth show two weeks ago in Orange County. These seem to be
    occurring roughly once every year-and-a-half. You may recall I'd
    written about this in `Occupation, Liberation.' The organizers still
    don't seem to have learned geography since then.

    While the `cultures' represented cover all of Asia Minor, Anatolia is
    only part of that area. The eastern part is the `Armenian Plateau' or
    `Armenian highlands' which I suppose is inconvenient for the
    organizers since using such a term means they'd have to account for
    the absence of Armenians on the land, and for the most part, in their
    festival, too, though their website refers to `The Urartu State
    (Armenians),' in the information provided about the festival.

    The set-up was much as in October of 2011. A few cities were added and
    some removed. But Akhtamar was showcased again, complete with its name
    being rendered as `Akdamar' as well. Armenians had rented booths and
    were present as participants as well (based on overhearing
    conversation in Armenian).

    The main reason I went this year was to observe what the reaction
    would be to the lecture titled `Roadmap to a Meaningful Armeno-Turkish
    Reconciliation' being presented by Levon Marashlian. I knew that he
    wouldn't be pulling punches, and he didn't.

    The audience was very mixed. Perhaps a dozen Armenians were present,
    but the remainder of the 100 or so listeners were not overwhelmingly
    Turkish. Quite surprisingly, the questions were not antagonistic. In
    fact, only one was somewhat so. A young Turkish man asked why the
    Ottomans would all of a sudden kill their subjects. I spoke to him
    afterwards, and he did seem to be sincerely looking into figuring out
    for himself what really happened. The sense I got is that he, as we
    hear about many Turks, is having difficulty believing his ancestors
    could have committed such a heinous crime. Interestingly, he was also
    not offended when I told him his origins were probably Armenian, given
    his appearance. He looked like some Armenian friends of mine. I also
    checked with the person (who was also there), whose lecture on an
    Armenian topic was featured at the previous event, about attendance
    and learned that the numbers were similar, but a little lower.

    Afterwards, I took a quick tour of the festival grounds and met some
    of the organizers. The lead person was a Kurd. Another gentleman whom
    I met was from Marash. I even exchanged contact information with a
    reporter from Turkey, though what will become of that contact, I
    really can't say. Everyone was very polite and conversations were calm
    with references to the Genocide not engendering harsh responses.

    What makes all this particularly intriguing is that the festival is
    organized by the Pacifica Institute, one of the Gulen organizations in
    the U.S. You'll remember Gulen is the very prolific Turkish cleric who
    is holed up in a huge estate in the Poconos (mountains in
    Pennsylvania) whose following is quite large and at least tenuously
    associated with the current Islam-based party that governs Turkey.
    I've heard it argued that the path to Genocide recognition by Turkish
    society and government may be found in this segment of Turkey's
    population. Conversely, these are also the people who, through various
    non-profit entities, have succeeded in establishing some 120 charter
    schools throughout the U.S. (and many more schools of respectable
    caliber throughout the world, especially in developing countries) that
    serve, among other things, the cause of Turkish propaganda. This makes
    for an interesting dilemma as Armenians proceed in our struggle for
    justice.

    Be alert to such powerful image-building events organized by the
    growing Turkish community in the U.S. They constitute one of the
    arenas we will be vying in over the coming decades, and may provide an
    avenue to just resolution of the long-standing Armenian Question in
    its current form.

    http://asbarez.com/110372/geography-lesson-needed/

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