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East Vs. West? Moving Away From Polemics And Taking A Stand For Dial

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  • East Vs. West? Moving Away From Polemics And Taking A Stand For Dial

    EAST VS. WEST? MOVING AWAY FROM POLEMICS AND TAKING A STAND FOR DIALOGUE - THE PHOENIX SOUNDS OFF

    Loyola Phoenix, IL
    Staff Editorial
    Phoenix Discourse
    Oct 17 2007

    The U.S. House of Representatives foreign committee was presented
    with a bill this past week that would recognize the killing and
    deportation of 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks - 90 years
    ago - as genocide. It's common knowledge that genocide is not a word
    to be used lightly, and yet the U.S. is practically on the brink of
    pulling what France did just this past year: adopting a bill that would
    literally make it a crime to deny the Turkish massacre of Armenians as
    "genocide."

    While passing this bill would encourage respect and recognition of
    those killed by Ottoman Turks, there is a much larger issue at hand.

    Understandably, Turkey is less than thrilled to be targeted as the
    "slaughterers from the East" that the "humane Western" (U.S. and
    France, as well as Greece and Russia) have indirectly asserted with
    similar bills. No one denies that thousands of Armenians - and Turks
    alike - were killed in the Ottoman Turkish Empire. Why must the
    U.S. government be stepping in, thereby continuing power divisions
    and discontinuing any discourse on the issue? Following through with
    this bill only more strongly builds a rigid wall in the center of
    an arena where dialogue is desperately needed; it further detriments
    relations and, henceforth, communication between Americans and Turks,
    Armenians and Turks, French and Turks. In short, Turkey is being pushed
    down in the greater scheme of global power relations that divide the
    "East" and "West."

    The very use of "East-West" language is the result of European
    cultural history, which initially developed it as a way to denote the
    separation between the "Christendom" - the notion of Christianity as
    a geographical phenomenon - of Europe and the exotic, alien cultures
    beyond it. Drawing a direct parallel to the concept of Orientalism
    - Westerners looking at the Eastern "other" as alien, borne from
    the view of imperialism - this behavior is increasingly feeding the
    Eurocentric ideology and hegemony of global debate. It seems ironic
    that the U.S. of all places is so concerned with considering this, a
    horrible act carried out by Eastern forces, as genocide, while still
    so quick to avoid the discussion of, say, nigh genocide committed by
    its own precious government against American Indians.

    C'mon, humanity: Aren't we over this already? We preach equality and
    freedom as if we actually mean it, and then we repeatedly reinforce
    and accept the notion of the "other" by refusing any balanced dialogue
    on topics such as these.

    Of course, the whole world isn't out of its collective mind. Take,
    interestingly, the progressive work among cultural and ethnic clubs
    at Loyola: Hillel and Muslim Students Association work closely
    together to co-sponsor events throughout the year, including regular
    discussions on the Palestinian debate; Turkish Intercultural Club's
    motto begins with "Come, come, whoever you are," a clear sign of their
    openness; the S.T.A.R.S. (Stars Together Are Reaching for Success)
    mentoring program on campus aims "to foster cross-cultural learning
    and identity development" to its participants. (And this is just
    to name a few.) Academic programs such as Islamic World Studies,
    Latin American Studies, Peace Studies, Asian Studies and Black World
    Studies actively incite open debate and further understanding with
    classes and events year-round.

    While we're not so na've as to ask for world peace, we do want
    to move away from polemics and toward dialogue in the interest of
    better understanding. In an effort to kick start that understanding,
    all of the columnists this week have dedicated themselves to Middle
    East issues and the relations and various relationships between the
    U.S. and countries of the region.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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