Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Armenian Weekly; Sept. 1, 2007; Commentary and Analysis

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Armenian Weekly; Sept. 1, 2007; Commentary and Analysis

    The Armenian Weekly On-Line
    80 Bigelow Avenue
    Watertown MA 02472 USA
    (617) 926-3974
    [email protected]
    http://www.ar menianweekly.com


    The Armenian Weekly; Volume 73, No. 35; Sept. 1, 2007


    Commentary and Analysis:

    1. Turkey: the `Pinocchio' of Anatolia (with apologies to the memory
    of Carlo Collodi)
    By Michael G. Mensoian

    2. The Armenians, the Turks and the Jews
    By Khajag Mgrdichian

    3. Never Before
    By Garen Yegparian

    4. What Earthquakes Can't Shake
    By Raffi Wartanian

    5. Letter to the Editor

    ***

    1. Turkey: the `Pinocchio' of Anatolia (with apologies to the memory
    of Carlo Collodi)
    By Michael G. Mensoian


    Turkey and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) seem to be relying on the
    same tactic from their respective playbooks. The play is called
    `parsing' the truth. Unfortunately, parsing the truth to accommodate
    spurious ends can never be a winning play. Turkey has been doing just
    that ever since the Ottoman Turkish government began what was to be
    the `Final Solution of the Armenian Question' on April 24, 1915.

    During the past several weeks, the ADL has been caught in the
    crossfire between acknowledging the truth and parsing the truth. They
    have gone from not recognizing the Armenian genocide to almost, but
    not quite recognizing the Armenian genocide, to the here and now when
    they may have to come out `four-square' and fully recognize the
    Armenian genocide. Their vacillation has been a public relations
    fiasco. Their action is remindful of the Yiddish proverb that `a half
    truth is a whole lie.' Only under pressure from responsible leaders in
    the Jewish community did the national ADL change its position. But
    even with their qualified recognition of the Armenian genocide, the
    ADL immediately sought to placate Turkey by assuring Ankara that it
    viewed the proposed House and Senate Resolutions recognizing the
    Armenian genocide as `counterproductive.'

    The ADL's almost, but not quite recognition of the Armenian genocide
    was more than sufficient to have the Turkish Foreign Ministry
    immediately condemn the ADL for attempting to rewrite history. The
    Ministry stated that `¦there is no consensus among the historians
    on how to qualify the events¦' Based on that contrived assumption,
    which has been refuted by eminent independent scholars throughout the
    world, the Turkish government maintains that the planned systematic
    killing of over 1,500,000 Armenian men, women and children by the
    Ottoman-Turkish government cannot be called genocide because it is
    `¦historically and legally baseless.'

    In light of Turkey's position, which their Foreign Ministry maintains
    is a `¦very clear' expression of Turkey's position, how can the ADL
    actually believe that its `¦efforts to bring together Turkey and
    Armenia to resolve differences over their shared history' is a
    realistic proposal? It is ridiculous on its face. How naive must the
    leadership of the ADL be to expect Turkey to reconcile the
    overwhelming evidence that the genocide occurred with the lies and
    obfuscatory statements that its government has propagated since that
    fateful day on April 24, 1915? How can Turkish leaders admit to their
    citizens and to the world that Turkey has lived a lie for all of these
    years? Turkey is in a catch 22 situation. Name a country that would
    want to acknowledge perpetrating such a horrendous crime against
    humanity.

    To further illustrate the dilemma the ADL faces in trying to serve two
    masters, they acknowledge that while `¦independent scholars may
    have reached a consensus about the genocide, in an effort to help
    accomplish the reconciliation, there is room for further dispassionate
    scholarly examination¦' If independent scholars have reached
    consensus on the genocide, who are the historians that the Turkish
    Foreign Ministry maintains have not reached consensus?

    Answer: those historians on the Turkish government's payroll. The
    ineptitude of its leadership has seriously eroded the ADL's relevance
    and credibility.

    In a further indication of its desperation, the Turkish Foreign
    Ministry has taken up a new tack in hopes of influencing Israel and
    the Jewish diaspora. In an appeal to the human emotion, the Foreign
    Ministry suggests that recognition of the Armenian genocide by the ADL
    would do `¦an injustice to the unique character of the Holocaust as
    well as to the memories of its victims [and] we expect it to be
    rectified.' Is Turkey implying that recognition of the Armenian
    genocide would overshadow the Holocaust? In any event, the ADL has
    only almost, but not quite recognized the Armenian genocide. One would
    hope that this Turkish appeal does not tap a valid concern for the
    ADL.

    Then to allay any fears that the ADL or the Jewish nation worldwide
    might have for their compatriots in Turkey, the Foreign Ministry
    sought to preempt any such worries. According to the Turkish Foreign
    Ministry, `[t]he Jewish community in Turkey is part of our society and
    there is no reason for them to worry.' This seems to beg the question:
    Why should the Jewish minority have any reason to be concerned about
    their well-being? Could this concern be related to the dismal record
    Turkey has in the area of human rights? In remarks to the Jerusalem
    Post, the Turkish Ambassador to Israel, Namik Tan, said that Turkey's
    relationship is not with Israel alone, but with the whole Jewish
    world. The Turkish people `¦cannot make that differentiation.' How
    does that square with the Foreign Ministry's assertion that there is
    no reason for the Jewish minority to worry?

    For the ADL or Israel or any other organization or government to
    advance the simplistic notion that Armenia and Turkey should reconcile
    their differences surely misunderstands what these differences are. As
    long as Turkey maintains its intransigent stance, its government must
    expect that its credibility will be challenged and exposed in every
    venue available for as long as it may take. The passage of time has
    not diminished the Armenian demand for justice. Unfortunately for
    Turkey, the Armenian Cause lives and only strengthens in its intensity
    as it passes from generation to generation.

    Reconciliation can only occur when Turkey realizes that the
    ever-increasing weight of global opinion will no longer tolerate its
    refusal to accept the evidence stored in government archives in
    London, Paris, Germany, Washington and Ankara itself that provides
    incontrovertible proof that the Armenian genocide was planned and
    carried out by the Ottoman-Turkish government from 1915 to 1918.

    Numerous eye-witness accounts add further evidence to support the
    Armenian position as well as an ever increasing number of independent
    scholars who continue to shed more light on this dark and tragic
    period in modern history.

    Every page, every hideous photograph, every first-hand account and
    every document supporting the Ottoman-Turkish government's plan to
    effectively and efficiently carry out the `Final Solution to the
    Armenian Question' is well known to the Turkish government and its
    paid `revisionists.' It is unfortunate that this same information is
    as well known to those governments that are pliant accomplices to a
    Turkish government that has long been morally bankrupt.

    Let us pray that the members of Congress who support House Resolution
    106 and Senate Resolution 106 will continue to let truth to be their
    only guide as they work to pass these nonbinding resolutions
    recognizing the Armenian genocide. Their passage will represent a
    symbolic affirmation by the United States Congress in recognizing the
    Armenian genocide that will create seismic reverberations within the
    Turkish government. It is time for the United States to realize that
    Turkey is not the keystone to a world order as perceived in
    Washington. Passage of these resolutions would be one more step toward
    achieving the justice that will allow the martyrs of the Armenian
    genocide to finally rest in peace.
    ------------------------------------------- --------------------------

    2. The Armenians, the Turks and the Jews
    By Khajag Mgrdichian


    My intention is not to plagiarize a title. On Aug. 21, the Jerusalem
    Post published an article with this same title, written by the
    executive head of the American Jewish Committee (AJC), David
    Harris. The article examined the outrage created after the head of the
    Anti-Defamation League (ADL), Abraham Foxman, denied the Armenian
    genocide'an issue that has received much attention from the American
    media.

    The ADL, headed by Abraham Foxman, officially changed its position on
    Aug. 21 and recognized the genocide. But the organization still
    insists that the current Armenian Genocide Resolution, which has
    garnered the support of 226 Congressmen and Congresswomen, is not
    constructive or needed, and harms U.S.-Turkey-Israel relations.

    After this change of heart by Foxman, and keeping in mind Harris'
    article, it is clear that these two powerful Jewish-American
    organizations share the same position'one that is agreeable to the
    current authorities in the U.S. and Ankara.

    For Armenians, Turkey's position is at least understandable. For
    decades, the inheritors of the genocide legacy in Turkey have used
    political, economic and diplomatic means to wash the blood off their
    hands and to deny Armenians their fair and just compensation.

    The stance of the American government is closely linked to that of the
    aforementioned Jewish organizations.

    What angers Armenians is the position of some Jewish organizations and
    the Israeli government. Harris seems to understand this when he
    writes, `The Armenian position has been straightforward. As victims of
    the Holocaust, who can better understand the Armenian ordeal and
    anguish than the Jews? Fearful of the danger of Holocaust denial,
    aren't the Jews most aware of the slippery slope of distorting
    historical truth? And wasn't it Adolf Hitler who reportedly asked `Who
    still talks nowadays of the Armenians?' In effect, paving the way for
    the Final Solution?'

    He further analyzes Turkey's approach and sensitivities. He mentions
    that the Ottoman Empire, in the 15th century, accepted Jews that were
    expelled from Spain. `Moreover, Turkish leaders have also at times
    taken a tougher line, suggesting, in barely veiled language, that a
    Jewish acceptance of the Armenian version of history could have
    negative consequences for other Jewish interests, whether in Turkey or
    beyond.'

    `And it is in this vise that many Jews have lived for years,
    essentially pitting principle against pragmatism. For armchair
    observers, that may look like an easy choice, but, in the world of
    policy, where actions can have real-life consequences, it's anything
    but,' he writes.

    `Look at successive governments of the United States, whether under
    Democratic or Republican leaders. All have reached the same
    conclusion: Turkey is of vital importance to U.S. geo-strategic
    interests, straddling as it does two continents, Europe and Asia,
    bordering key countries'from the former Soviet Union to Iran, Iraq and
    Syria'and serving as the southeastern flank of NATO. Each
    administration has essentially punted when asked about the Armenian
    question, seeking to discourage the United States Congress from
    recognizing the events of 1915 as genocide, while arguing that a
    third-party parliamentary body isn't the right venue to settle a
    heated historical dispute.'

    Despite the fact that Harris asserts that the events of 1915 were
    `genocide, which occurred 30 years prior to the invention of the
    term,' he also seems to rank pragmatism above principle when he adds:
    `I have a strong connection to Turkey, a country I have visited on
    numerous occasions and to which I feel very close. Few countries have
    a more critically important role to play in the sphere of
    international relations. I remain grateful to this day for the refuge
    that the Ottoman Empire gave to Jews fleeing the inquisition. I am
    intimately connected to the Turkish Jewish community and admire their
    patriotism and enormous contribution to their homeland. I deeply
    appreciate the link between Turkey and Israel, which served the best
    interests of both democratic nations in a tough region. And I value
    Turkey's role as an anchor of NATO and friend of the United States.'

    He then echoes the Turkish line that says Armenian historians must sit
    down and discuss the issue with other historians. Yet, Harris greatly
    contradicts himself when he quotes from a book published by the AJC,
    offering this as the official line of the organization: `To say that
    the Armenian Genocide is an issue up for debate, or that it belongs to
    ancient history, is not congruent with attempts to put an end to
    Holocaust Denial.'

    We completely agree, and over the last few days have witnessed the
    truth behind those words as Jewish intellectuals, political and
    religious leaders, and even many members of the ADL and AJC expressed
    their passionate opposition to statements made by a leadership that
    ranks pragmatism above principle.

    On Aug. 21, David Cohen, the Jewish mayor of Newton, Mass., which has
    a large Jewish population, convened a meeting in the town hall. He
    welcomed the latest changes in the ADL's position, saying they were `a
    start, but not enough.' As an example of this dissatisfaction, the
    mayor claimed that by substituting the words Armenian and Genocide
    with Jews and Holocaust, the statement would not have been acceptable
    to him or presumably to other Jewish activists.

    As we see, the statements by Foxman and Harris surprised mostly those
    who are not familiar with placing pragmatism above principle. These
    organizations, which run programs with humanistic names such as `No
    Place for Hate,' clearly don't inform their members of this policy'one
    created and fostered on the basis of Harris' good friend Turkey and
    Ottoman hospitality for six centuries. Of course, ignored is the fact
    that Turkey's threats are not only addressed to outsiders but to the
    20,000 Jews still living in Turkey.

    On thing should be clear: The Armenian-American community and its
    leaders will not be blinded by pragmatism, and with the help of those
    who oppose the denial of the Holocaust, will show the ugly pragmatism
    of individuals and groups hiding behind presumably anti-hate projects.

    Translated by Simon Beugekian.
    --------------------------------------- -----------------------------------

    3. Never Before
    By Garen Yegparian


    `1915 Never Again,' we chant at our genocide-related actions. It's my
    recollection that the Jewish community had invented that notion
    regarding genocide. We've lifted it and used it extensively and
    appropriately. But it looks like we've been scooped again, at least by
    some sectors of the Jewish community who seem to have adopted the
    concept of `Never Before.' They appear to suffer from a `the Holocaust
    is unique' complex. After all, no one but the Germans and Jews could
    have been locked in such a murderous relationship, right?

    I'm convinced this foolishness is partially driving the show that's
    now playing. It began with the scrutiny given to Watertown's
    affiliation with the Anti-Defamation League's (ADL) No Place for Hate
    (NPFH) program. In fact, if the ADL, its national director Abraham
    Foxman and `uniquists' within the U.S.-Jewish community keep up their
    unconscionable mindset and actions, they're in line for a SpitRain
    Award.

    Not only the Watertown Tab, but the Boston Globe and even the Los
    Angeles Times have reported on this mess. The Globe has even
    editorialized and run op-ed pieces about it. We now have a scandal of
    countrywide proportions. Besides the obvious benefits to our cause,
    this case is an excellent example of why it's important to have
    Armenians with a committed, activist bent in places and positions that
    matter.

    In April, Foxman had been quoted in the LA Times article covering the
    Genocide Resolution in Congress, essentially toeing Turkey's
    denialist line. (Remember, this was the same `replacement article'
    which filled in for the Mark Arax piece killed by the Turkophile
    editor Doug Frantz.) The ANC in Watertown noticed the disconnect
    between Foxman's shenanigans and that city's partnering with the
    ADL's NPFH program. Watertown pulled out of the program, but not
    before the ADL's New England regional director Andrew H. Tarsy first
    defended the national ADL's position. However, Tarsy's conscience
    prevailed and he spoke out in favor of the ADL adopting an
    unequivocal recognition of the Armenian genocide. That cost him his
    job. In response to Tarsy's firing by Foxman, two ADL regional board
    members resigned in protest. Finally, Foxman `after consulting' with
    people he trusts, as if that's what it ought to take to do something
    this basic and decent, has put the ADL on record recognizing the
    genocide. But¦

    Of course, in politics nothing is that clear cut, simple and
    decent. Foxman still opposes passage of a Congressional resolution on
    the Armenian genocide, deeming it counterproductive to improved
    relations between Armenians and Turks. He fears for the well being of
    Turkey's Jewish community. Here, he's joined by David Harris,
    executive director of the American Jewish Committee (AJC). Harris
    issued a lengthy statement about this situation and Armeno-Turkish
    relations, even offering to mediate. Along with Foxman, he sheds
    crocodile tears over the state of relations between the two
    nations. Both note the importance of Israel's relationship with
    Turkey. Clearly, these two factors'Jews in Turkey and Israeli-Turkish
    relations'are what's driving this mess, since a broad spectrum of
    Jews, be they elected officials, organizational representatives or
    average people, support Armenian concerns. They do so from a place of
    conscience and a place of realism, recognizing that Holocaust denial
    is but a generation away should Turkish efforts at erasing history
    succeed.

    At this point, it's tempting to ooze sarcasm directed at these
    American-Jewish-realpolitik players, but that would be
    counterproductive. More appropriate might be an example from Armenia's
    international relations. It is on good terms with both the U.S. and
    Iran, something that is no mean feat considering the levels of
    antipathy and distrust that poison Iranian-American relations. Armenia
    could easily have found itself stuck in the middle. But both the
    U.S. and Iran are reasonably mature, civilized states, unlike
    Turkey. So the folks in the U.S.-Jewish community and Israel's
    political elites who have been cowering and kowtowing to Turkey's
    whims and tantrums must come to realize that they're playing the role
    of Neville Chamberlain appeasing the Nazis.

    The double standard being applied by the Foxmans of the Jewish
    community is unsustainable, immoral and ultimately dangerous even to
    Jewish interests. This scandal provides an opportunity for the Jewish
    community to rid itself of the notions of exclusiveness some apply to
    the Holocaust. Once and for all the stain that sullies the moral high
    ground Jews can otherwise claim as survivors will be consolidated. The
    same applies to the concern about the fate of Jews in Turkey. Once the
    Turks see that threatening their own Jewish community gets no results,
    and in fact backfires, they will stop. Remember, Turkey's behavior is
    much akin to that of a schoolyard bully. Once challenged, confronted,
    meekness prevails.

    It may be a more difficult step for Israel and its most ardent
    D.C. lobbyists to shed their double standard since the relationship
    with Turkey is what drives their policy and actions. But this very
    relationship is what provides the opportunity to shake the moral
    blemishes that have begun to accrue to Israel's reputation. Pushing
    Turkey in the right direction will only enhance Israel's stature and
    undercut criticism directed at it.

    The NPFH/ADL scandal must not be allowed to fade into oblivion. We
    must push until Jewish organizations in the U.S. unreservedly do the
    right thing. The time is right and attention is focused. If it takes
    advocating more cities' withdrawal from the NPFH program, so be it,
    whether Philadelphia or Santa Barabara is next. Let's do what it takes
    to get Foxman and his ilk to stop fighting the Genocide Resolution and
    start supporting it. Perhaps we should be advocating Foxman's
    dismissal. This is an excellent opportunity to consolidate our
    position in the U.S. and deny Turkey its occasional ally in
    denial. And, it all started with someone in our community being
    politically alert and of an activist mindset.
    ----------------------------------------- -----------------------

    4. What Earthquakes Can't Shake
    By Raffi Wartanian


    Hope lives here. These kids have a chance. The Gyumri Social Childcare
    Centre (GSCC) offers a haven for the children of Gyumri. They share an
    unfortunate similarity: They are classified as `at-risk youth' mainly
    because of exposure to their parent's hobbies, namely, alcoholism,
    drug abuse, prostitution, unemployment and begging. In very hard
    conditions, the children ask for food or money. For some, school is
    not an option since getting an education requires time and resources
    (shoes, school supplies, warm clothing) the family cannot provide.

    But who can blame the parents? On Dec. 7, 1988, an earthquake rocked
    Gyumri, Armenia's second largest city. Unspeakable change. An
    unimaginable mission: rebuild a city once flourishing and
    prospering. Things look different now. Unemployment, potholes and
    stray dogs run rampant here. It rains almost every night. You can
    still feel the earthquake. It's a tough life in Gyumri, and one can
    see why parents here search for easy ways out of a hard life, exposing
    their kids to their mistakes.

    Fortunately, the GSCC fights to counter these trends, both with the
    children and the parents. The GSCC's activities display a
    comprehensive approach to reversing the social issues plaguing
    Gyumri's struggling families.

    First, they find the kids. Every month, GSCC social workers search
    sections of the city for youth and families showing clear signs of
    need. These workers have encountered many symptoms of social struggle:
    begging, child labor and families searching trash cans for bottles
    they can sell for five drams a piece (roughly a penny).

    The GSCC's approach is unique. They don't separate the child from
    their family like many social services in the U.S. They help
    both. Seminars for adults teach better parenting, sculpting an
    understanding of how to care for a child. They also suggest ways to
    better listen to, speak with, and motivate one's child, and when the
    opportunity arises, the GSCC provides families with warm clothes,
    boots for the punishing winters, school supplies, and help with
    medical and dental care.

    The GSCC doesn't neglect the families, but they focus on the kids. The
    center's staff works to establish a sense of normalcy in the
    children's lives. Teachers, cooks, a doctor and nurse, social workers,
    psychologists, lawyers and volunteers comprise its staff. The teachers
    play an invaluable role for a portion of the kids'some as old as
    12'who have never attended school. Other kids lack the parental
    encouragement and discipline that the teachers instill into the kids
    to edify, consolidate, and accelerate their education. In the summers,
    the kids get snacks and one meal per day. The doctor heals bumps and
    burns and teaches them the fundamental principles in health: exercise,
    nutrition, first aid, washing hands, brushing teeth and what to do
    during an earthquake. In her daily examinations, the doctor checks the
    children's hair, skin and clothes. If she finds a problem, she speaks
    with the children and their families about proper hygiene, and the
    next day the kids come in sparkling. Talent teems from these children
    who could become the next Aram Khatchadourian, Arshile Gorky, or
    William Saroyan. They need a chance. The center's gifted staff does
    its best to facilitate a child's development, but its financial
    limitations hinder the scope and impact of their help. The staff helps
    to the best of its ability, but cannot solve every problem facing
    these kids and their families.

    While the GSCC makes a big impact, Gyumri's social problems multiply
    and the center struggles to keep up with the growing need. Several
    poor families tied to the center still live in temporary housing
    intended to provide short-term relief for those who lost their homes
    in the earthquake. Today, those homes are almost 20 years old and are
    in desperate need of repair. When I asked one grandmother what she did
    to fix the hole in the roof over her bed when it rained late at night,
    she said that she just covered herself with plastic bags to stay dry.

    I have seen the sections of Gyumri where these kids come from. When
    one walks into the GSCC and sees these kids, it's hard to believe the
    severe conditions that they must endure on a daily basis. Growing up
    in America, I expected food, a warm bed and someone to love me. That's
    not always the case here. Nothing is guaranteed. Without the GSCC,
    these kids wouldn't have a chance. Yet, the chance they have now is
    limited to what the center can provide.

    The GSCC has huge potential. They occupy a plot of land 35x28
    sq. kilometers, and the actual center only covers half that space;
    shrubs cover the rest. Visions for the center accumulate as the shrubs
    keep growing'a playground, youth center, sports complex, a wall to
    protect the center. For the new school year, the center wants its kids
    to have all the necessary school supplies, from pencils to boots.

    To learn more about the center or to make a donation, e-mail Hripsime
    Mouradian, coordinator of external affairs, at [email protected].
    ------------------------------ -----------------------------------

    5. Letter to the Editor


    Dear Editor,

    In the past couple of weeks we have all witnessed the ADL/genocide
    controversy both locally in our town halls and in the national and
    local medias. When the dust finally settled all sides came out with
    official statements, most notably the ADL and the Turkish government.

    After consulting with historians and experts, the ADL changed its
    policy of genocide denial to the recognition of the Armenian genocide,
    yet urged others not to do so; their reasoning, the threat of security
    to the Jewish minority in Turkey.

    The official statement of the Turkish government given by Burak
    Akcapar, first counselor of the Turkish Embassy in Washington, D.C.,
    was quick to dismiss the threat of security reasons by pointing out
    that the ADL's statement was `an injustice to the unique character of
    the Holocaust, as well as the memories of its victims.'

    Just as it is legitimate for Armenians to ask the ADL, `How can my
    misery sustain your security?' it is equally appropriate for the
    Jewish community to ask the Turkish government, `How dare you question
    the validity of the Holocaust?'

    RGZ
    Boston, Mass.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X