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Cascading Toward The 91st Anniversary? The Armenian Genocide 1915

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  • Cascading Toward The 91st Anniversary? The Armenian Genocide 1915

    CASCADING TOWARD THE 91ST ANNIVERSARY? THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE 1915
    Dr Harry Hagopian www.newropeans-magazine.org

    Assyrian International News Agency
    April 24 2006

    London -- Armenians across all five continents are getting ready this
    week to commemorate the 91st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

    With the noteworthy achievements of 2005 now behind them, it is time
    to think both tactically and strategically of the 24th April events -
    not only for this week, but also for the longer-term policy of the
    years ahead. After all, Armenians are nine critical years shy of a
    century in order to break through the psychological barrier of denial.

    Image In this context, events in Turkey as of late have also been
    quite relevant. After all, this country - whose predecessor regime was
    culpable for those atrocities but which remains to date a bastion of
    rapacious denial - has taken some grudging steps toward acknowledging
    the existence of a "problem" rather than simply blotting it out of its
    collective psyche. In fact, having applied to join the European Union,
    this post-Ottoman republic should accept not only EU democratic norms
    and values, but also the requirement to guarantee the fundamental
    human rights of all its citizens.

    True, Atom Egoyan's film Ararat was shown last week on the private
    Turkish Kanalturk television station with less censorship than has been
    the case in the past. It is equally true that a Turkish court dropped
    charges against four Turkish journalists (Hasan Cemal, Ismet Berkan,
    Haluk Sahin and Erol Katircioglu) who had been charged with writing
    articles in which they criticised a judicial decision to delay a
    conference last year entitled 'Ottoman Armenians during the decline of
    the empire: Issues of scientific responsibility and democracy'. These,
    along with other small paces, have been positive although they have
    stopped short of going any further in translating them from tactical
    orientations to strategic decisions. For instance, while dropping
    charges against those four journalists, the court decided nonetheless
    to proceed with the trial of Mehmet Murat Kadri Belge, a columnist
    for the Radikal newspaper. Besides, just as with Orhan Pamuk's case,
    the Turkish government did not address itself to repealing the articles
    in the Turkish Penal Code that would allow such charges to be made in
    the first place (Amnesty International UK is presently campaigning for
    the abolition of Article 301), but applied insincere interpretations
    to try and satisfy a Western EU-friendly audience whilst at the same
    time not budging away from its own stolid political standpoints.

    Let us be clear that there is no shortage of historians, academics,
    institutes, lawyers and writers worldwide - not least the International
    Association of Genocide Scholars - who have acknowledged the genocidal
    nature of the atrocities meted out against Armenians during WWI. So
    the problems - and thereby solutions - inherent to denial cannot
    solely be traced to historical issues. On the contrary, they are
    overpoweringly political. It is self-evident that many countries -
    not least the USA or the UK - would not wish to upset Turkey as a NATO
    ally with a substantive military presence and with many bases in a
    geo-strategic but volatile region. The same applies for Israel. When
    the then Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres publicly stated in
    April 2001 to the Turkish Daily News that the Armenian experience was
    not tantamount to genocide, he was thinking of buttressing the strong
    military ties and ongoing economic interests that Israel enjoys with
    Turkey despite occasional complaints about Islamism. No wonder then
    that Yisrael Charny, director of the Jerusalem-based Institute on
    the Holocaust and Genocide, reproved publicly this wily politician
    for misrepresenting the facts.

    It is true that the recognition of the Armenian Genocide by some
    parliaments and councils indicates a painstaking but relentless
    momentum forward. But Armenians should now consider working with
    the younger Turkish academicians who have also been researching this
    chapter of Turkish history. Moreover, they should be careful not to
    be perceived as a token anti-Muslim (and by analogy anti-Turkish)
    force, or be used in the brinkmanship between Turkey and the EU as
    a convenient pretext for barring Turkish entry into the European club.

    After all, Turkey has major challenges today that make it fall foul
    of accession anyway - namely, the Kurdish issue that has recently
    flared up again in the violence-wracked southeast region that is now
    a homeland for a large Kurdish minority, as well as the refusal by
    Turkey to open its ports and airports to Cypriot-registered vessels
    despite a customs' union agreement. Turkey also has economic woes,
    one year short of parliamentary elections, with high public debt,
    high current-account deficit and tax breaks that are contrary to IMF
    recommendations - as evidenced by the recent spat over the appointment
    of the central bank governor.

    I believe Armenians should re-configure their strategic interests
    discursively, with more reason and less intuition. Would the
    acquisition by Armenians (and other long-standing minorities such
    as Assyrians) in Turkey of EU passports, for example, not help them
    in their legal and functional quests? Should those Turks who helped
    rescue Armenians during the genocide not be honoured too, in the
    same way that Israelis honour brave Gentiles who saved Jews during
    the Holocaust? After all, these too are intrepid people who upheld
    the honour of the Turkish nation when their government was destroying
    its own Armenian citizens. Focusing on such a moral issue would prove
    that many Armenians are certainly not visceral anti-Turks, and could
    also turn into an exposed embarrassment for Turkey.

    Geopolitics in the 21st century is not based on high decibels
    and angst-ridden feelings alone. Rather, it is based on strategic
    thought and vested interests. Could Armenians not invest in their
    resourcefulness to excel in this arena too?

    http://www.aina.org/news/2006042495635.htm
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