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It's About Time Turks Come To Terms With Their Past And Present

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  • It's About Time Turks Come To Terms With Their Past And Present

    IT'S ABOUT TIME TURKS COME TO TERMS WITH THEIR PAST AND PRESENT
    Rauf Naqishbendi, a software engineer in San Francisco Bay Area.

    American Chronicle, CA
    http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/viewA rticle.asp?articleID=40953
    Oct 23 2007

    Recently, two major issues have haunted Turkey. First, their impatience
    to intrude militarily into Kurdistan in northern Iraq, and second,
    the passing of two nonbinding resolutions by the United States Senate:
    one in support of partitioning Iraq into three autonomous states,
    and the other an acknowledgment that the World War I-era killings of
    Armenians by Turks were genocide. The confluence of these has resulted
    in widespread irrationality on the part of the Turks.

    Sensible nations support their neighbors in the spirit of economic
    cooperation and to promote national security in their region; they know
    that turmoil in neighboring countries can drive waves of refugees over
    their borders, and chaos could spill over into their country. But this
    guiding principle clashed with the insensible Turkish government. The
    case in point is the Kurds in Iraq, a young democratic nation that
    has proven to the world that they are by far more democratic than
    any other nation in the Muslim world. Turks begrudge this and make
    every attempt to dampen this achievement by inciting chaos; Turkish
    authorities daily threaten military intrusion into Iraqi Kurdistan. The
    crazy thing is they are pursuing their arrogant aims at the cost of
    alienation from the world community, their own self-destruction and
    a major catastrophe for Mesopotamia.

    For nearly a century, the Turks' have shown extreme intolerance of
    Kurds, not only the twenty million Kurds in their country (one-third
    of Turkey's population), but also Kurds in neighboring countries.

    They are determined to liquidate the Kurds or at a minimum
    disenfranchise them of their national and human rights.

    For more than a century, Turks denied the existence of Kurds in
    Turkey and instead labeled them "mountainous Turks". This went on
    until the birth of the Kurdish Workers' Party (known as the P.K.K)
    and the recent rise of the Iraqi Kurds as an undisputed democratic
    nation. Turks then changed their tune and claimed that an autonomous
    or independent Kurdish state in Northern Iraq would entice their
    Kurdish population (that they had always previously denied existed)
    to demand the same. These circumstances forced Turks to admit the
    existence of Kurds in Turkey. Did it ever cross the Turks' mind that
    they should apologize for their past and present atrocities against
    Kurds? The answer is nay for Turks have no sense of humility; instead
    they exonerate themselves, presenting poor and ugly justifications.

    They only deceive themselves; the rest of the world knows the truth.

    The aforementioned bigotry has been incorporated into Turkey's law
    through a constitutional declaration stating that every citizen
    of Turkey is a Turk, robbing over twenty million Kurds of their
    natural identity, and justifying their deprivation from the rights
    of citizens. They have abandoned their language in public, official
    and media sectors, and further hindered their rights to practice
    their culture.

    For every act of suppression and human rights abuse a sense of
    indignation arises, sometimes in a peaceful manner and in extreme
    cases, when civilized dialogue fails, with bloody resistance
    to equalize the violent crimes committed. This is exactly the
    situation for the Kurds in Turkey. First they pled for an equitable
    system of social and economic justice in Turkey and their innocent,
    peaceful demands were rebuked by a violent wave of mass arrests and
    incarcerations by the Turkish authorities. They then had no choice
    but to resign themselves to an armed struggle led by the P.K.K. Now
    Turks are calling the P.K.K terrorists as if they were the ones who
    started the conflict and ignore the fact that the P.K.K would never
    have born if it weren't for the terrorist system of government and
    people of Turkey.

    History shows us that when nations carried their bigotry to extremes,
    they brought ruin to others and self-destruction on themselves.

    Violence breeds revenge and revenge brings about a deep-seated
    resentment. In most instances bigotry is engendered by a vigorous
    self-pride and so often is unsubstantiated, as is the case with the
    Turks. Their bigotry is not limited to Kurds - Armenians, Assyrian
    Bulgarians, Serbs and Greeks all lament their bitter experiences at
    the hands of Turkish rulers. Is the whole world wrong except for the
    Turks? They killed one and a half million Armenians and Assyrians
    because they didn't resemble Turks and were Christians.

    Unfortunately, the problem is not only the Turks who have engaged
    in human rights violations for so long and against so many nations,
    but also the other nations of the world who have remained aloof and
    let the Turks go as far as they have gone. It is time for the world
    to act on behalf of humanity and hinder further Turkish human abuses.

    So often so little can be given and so much can be achieved if
    obstinacy is overcome. Recognizing the rights of the Kurdish minority
    in Turkey will bring peace, more security to Turkey, and will enhance
    the public image of Turkey. If Turks were to confess their past wrongs
    toward Armenians, it would make them by far more respectable than their
    current precarious stand. Turks could elevate themselves from their low
    standing to a higher ground of respectability if they desired. Do they?

    It is well understood that no nation can destroy another without
    going down with them. Turks would do much better if they didn't let
    their self-pride blind them to reality. However, if they continue in
    their current path, they will burn themselves in the flames of their
    own anger and hatred, and thus have no one to blame but themselves.

    Rauf Naqishbendi is a contributing columnist for Kurdishmedia.com
    and the American Chronicle and has written Op/Ed pages for the Los
    Angeles Times. He has just completed his memoirs entitled "The Garden
    Of The Poets" which reads as a novel depicting his experience and the
    subsequent 1988 bombing of his hometown with chemical and biological
    weapons by Saddam Hussein. It is the story of his people's suffering.
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