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Father sues Turkish Education Ministry over Armenian 'genocide' DVD

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  • Father sues Turkish Education Ministry over Armenian 'genocide' DVD

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe /article5818155.ece

    February 28, 2009

    Father sues Turkish Education Ministry over Armenian 'genocide' DVD

    Suna Erdem in Istanbul

    A father is suing the Turkish Education Ministry for forcing his
    11-year-old daughter to watch a `racist' and `disturbing' film
    countering claims that Ottoman Turks committed genocide against
    Armenians in 1915 with graphic allegations of Armenian atrocities
    against Turks.

    The landmark case takes on what human rights activists have called the
    State's militarist policy of brainwashing Turkey's schoolchildren to
    the point of racist paranoia, aiming to preserve a nationalist status
    quo criticised by the European Union, which Turkey is keen to join.

    `My daughter was very disturbed and frightened by the documentary and
    kept asking me if the Armenians had cut us up,' said Serdar Kaya, an
    ethnic Turkish doctor, who is suing the ministry and the child's
    school for inciting racial hatred.

    `There are many mass graves, bones and skulls in the DVD. They have
    interviewed old grandads who inspire confidence and compassion. When
    they say things like 'They cut off his head' and 'They used it instead
    of firewood', that is bound to stay with the children,' Serdar
    Degirmencioglu, a psychologist, told the Armenian newspaper Agos when
    news first broke that the documentary was being shown to primary
    school children - including ethnic Armenian Turks.
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    The Education Ministry says that it has stopped the distribution of
    the documentary, Sari Gelin (Blonde Bride), named after an Armenian
    folk song. But it has apparently not recalled it and critics say that
    it remains part of the curriculum.

    Some MPs are bringing up the case in Parliament. The education union
    Egitim-Sen has condemned the film, and the History Foundation has
    dismissed it as baseless propaganda.

    Another lawsuit has been filed by a foundation set up in honour of the
    murdered Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink. The former editor of
    Agos was murdered in 2007 by a young nationalist whose links to a
    group of ultra-nationalists, codenamed Ergenekon, operating within the
    security forces and state bureaucracy are now being investigated. `In
    the whole of the documentary the word 'Armenian' has been used
    thousands of times and only with negative connotations,' the
    Foundation said.

    Mr Dink had been one of several high-profile intellectuals, also
    including Orhan Pamuk, the Nobel literature laureate, and Elif Shafak,
    the bestselling author, who had been sued by nationalist lawyers over
    comments and writings alluding to the mass Armenian deaths. `You can
    see that all those cases were part of a project of manipulation ...
    There is a sick, abnormal tissue of Turkish society that is poisoned
    by a nationalist, racist virus,' said Ufuk Uras, an independent MP who
    backs Mr Kaya's case.

    Many historians class the 1915 events as genocide, but even those who
    reject the term accept that hundreds of thousands of Armenians died
    when the Ottoman Turks deported them from eastern Anatolia. According
    to the International Association of Genocide Scholars, the death toll
    was `more than a million'.

    `You go and kill more than a million Armenians, wipe the traces of
    Armenians from Anatolia, grab their property, and then show children
    videos about 'What the Armenians did to us' ... We are cutting these
    children off from the rest of the world,' said Ahmet Altan, editor of
    the independent newspaper Taraf.
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