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Turkey must loosen the grip of its founding myths

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  • Turkey must loosen the grip of its founding myths

    The Financial Times , UK
    31 January 2007 Wednesday 10:18:04 PM GMT

    Turkey must loosen the grip of its founding myths

    by Mark Mazower


    The banners read "We are all Armenians" at the funeral in Istanbul
    last week for Hrant Dink, the Turkish-Armenian journalist shot in
    January by a young nationalist assassin. "We are Turkish. We are all
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk," nationalist football fans chanted in reply
    from terraces across the country, referring to modern Turkey's
    founder.

    As Dink's tragic death and the polarised reactions to it demonstrate
    in the most graphic way, the ongoing reckoning with events now nearly
    a century old remains a huge factor in Turkey itself. It is not
    merely that, fairly or unfairly, its pursuit of European Union
    membership is generating international pressure on the government to
    recognise the Armenian genocide. The issue polarises the country
    internally as well and raises more acutely than any other issue the
    question of how tightly it remains within the ideological grip of its
    founding fathers.

    In many ways, the government of Tayyip Erdogan has moved further on
    this issue than any of its predecessors. While still publicly
    insisting the point has acquired an almost theological quality that
    the mass murders of 1915-16 were not genocide, it has opened up the
    Ottoman archives and even proposed to the Armenian government that
    they jointly sponsor an international commission to settle the issue
    once and for all. That the Armenians showed little interest may have
    been just as well. States generally need to get out of the business
    of adjudicating on history, not deeper into it.

    Just as French parliamentarians would have done much better recently
    to avoid laying down the law on a whole range of past (non-French)
    crimes and (French) achievements, so the Turkish government should
    not imagine that a bilateral commission of official appointees will
    do anything more than continue politicking in another form.
    Government committees, parliamentary resolutions and even
    state-sponsored anniversaries often possess a powerful
    headline-grabbing symbolic charge but, precisely for this reason,
    they are a crude means of getting at truth.

    The process of coming to historical understanding does not work
    through officialdom. It is essentially uncontrollable, often
    acrimonious and cannot be wrapped up fast to meet a ministerial
    deadline. After 1945, Holocaust scholars enjoyed uniquely favourable
    access to documents, survivors and perpetrators. Sixty years on, they
    are still debating some fundamental matters of interpretation.
    Serious discussion of the events of 1915-16 is at a much earlier
    stage. Right now, it seems fairly clear that much of the killing was
    centrally organised, and genocidal in scope; denial of this point
    simply flies in the face of the evidence. Yet how the killing was
    organised is poorly understood. Moreover, most Turkish nationalists
    do not so much deny the killings themselves as claim they need to be
    seen in the context of an all-out assault on what was left of the
    Ottoman empire itself. It is certainly true though Europe still
    ignores the unpalatable fact that the expansion of national states,
    mostly Christian, was accompanied by the killing and expulsion of
    Muslims from the Balkans and Russia. To explain is not to justify.
    Yet the escalation of violence in Anatolia after 1914 was certainly
    linked to the upheavals that had preceded it. Franker discussion of
    the Armenian genocide thus has the potential to open up an entirely
    different perspective on Europe's modern history as a whole.

    There are many ways the Turkish government can help this along. Its
    key responsibility lies in fostering better conditions for such
    discussions to flourish. Repealing the now infamous article 301 of
    the penal code, under which Dink among many others was convicted,
    would be an important step towards ending the legal intimidation of
    writers: the government's talk of reforming it is not really enough.
    It could do more to support the dissemination of the exciting
    research that is emerging from Turkey's flourishing universities.

    Above all, it should take a hard look at how the country's history is
    taught in schools. Right now, the Kemalist old guard still talks and
    acts as though any discussion of the republic's founding myths will
    jeopardise the security of the state. This is absurd: Turkey is not
    going to crumble if its leaders finally acknowledge the Armenian
    genocide. The Turkish army is not suddenly going to be weakened by a
    more critical look at what happened 90-odd years ago. The
    alternatives right now look pretty stark. On the one hand, an opening
    to Europe. On the other, continuing to live in a world where the work
    of defining patriotism and historical truth is placed in the hands of
    trigger-happy 17-year-olds.

    The writer teaches history at Columbia University
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