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Turkish Scholar At U Pushes His Homeland For Truth In Persecution Of

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  • Turkish Scholar At U Pushes His Homeland For Truth In Persecution Of

    TURKISH SCHOLAR AT U PUSHES HIS HOMELAND FOR TRUTH IN PERSECUTION OF ARMENIANS

    Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN)
    February 19, 2007 Monday
    Metro Edition

    "A Shameful Act" has been described as a work of historical
    "excavation." The term fits. What Taner Akcam has done in his book is
    dig out the truth on the persecution of Turkey's Armenian minority
    from under a slag heap of government obfuscation in Ankara and
    enervating apathy in the West. He's done so at considerable personal
    risk. Akcam, a Turk and a Muslim, has defied any number of laws and
    social strictures in his homeland to remind the world of the tragedy
    that unfolded in 1915. He views it as his moral duty, a matter of
    honor. The Star Tribune's Michael J. Bonafield talked with him in
    his office at the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the
    University of Minnesota. Q&A, A14

    AT A GLANCE

    What happened? During the height of World War I, between 1915 and 1918,
    the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire was forcibly removed
    and sent into exile. Those who refused to go were executed on the
    spot. Those who left were sent into the Syrian and Iraqi deserts
    without food and water.

    How many died? Estimates vary. The Armenian National Institute in
    Washington says as many as 1.5 million were killed. The Turkish
    government, successor to the Ottoman regime, says between 300,000
    and 600,000 died. Eyewitnesses described mass murders with guns,
    clubs and knives, mass drownings, crucifixions, and girls and women
    who were raped to death.

    War of words

    Point: Armenians cite the 1948 U.N. Convention on the Prevention and
    Punishment of Genocide, which defines genocide as "acts committed
    with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical,
    racial or religious group."

    Counterpoint: Turkey vehemently denies the charge of genocide, saying
    the Armenians died as a result of overzealous military units and the
    depredations of unauthorized nationalist groups.
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