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Armenian victims: Dark past for Turkey by Peter Balakian

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  • Armenian victims: Dark past for Turkey by Peter Balakian

    The Monitor (McAllen, Texas)
    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune News Service
    July 10, 2009 Friday



    Armenian victims: Dark past for Turkey

    By Peter Balakian, Fredericksburg (Va.) Free Lance-Star
    COMMENTARY
    HAMILTON, N.Y.


    HAMILTON, N.Y. _ The Armenian Genocide continues to hover over
    international politics 94 years later. Its ethical force in memory
    haunts not only the legacy of the perpetrator, Turkey, but the legacy
    of the victims, the Armenian people and the diaspora.

    The political intensity surrounding U.S. recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide surfaced this past April in President Obama's engagement with
    the issue. Having promised as a presidential candidate to acknowledge
    as genocide the events that befell the Armenians of Ottoman Turkey in
    1915, on visiting Turkey in April, President Obama stopped short of
    using the word "genocide" but spoke powerfully to the Turkish
    Parliament about the importance of acknowledging dark chapters of
    one's past.

    "History is often tragic but, unresolved, can be a heavy weight. Each
    country must work through its past. And reckoning with the past can
    help us seize a better future. I know there are strong views in this
    chamber about the terrible events of 1915. While there has been a good
    deal of commentary about my views the best way forward for the Turkish
    and Armenian people is a process that works through the past in a way
    that is honest, open, and constructive."

    THE 'G' WORD

    Armenians, Turks and the human-rights community awaited April 24, the
    date of the president's annual Armenian Genocide commemorative
    address, as the international press speculated whether he would use
    the word "genocide." When he did not, most Armenians were
    disappointed, some bitterly so. Yet Obama's statement was the most
    ethically serious, probing statement on the subject ever made by a
    U.S. president: "I have consistently stated my own view of what
    occurred in 1915, and my view of that history has not changed. My
    interest remains the achievement of a full, frank and just
    acknowledgment of the facts," and he remembered "the 1.5 million
    Armenians" who were "massacred or marched to their death."

    To get a sense of how seriously the president acknowledged the
    Armenian Genocide, albeit by syllogism, one need only note what he
    said on the campaign trail in September 2008: "As a U.S. senator, I
    have stood with the Armenianâ??American community in calling
    for Turkey's acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide." In April he
    said: "It is imperative that we recognize the horrific acts carried
    out against the Armenian people as genocide, and I will continue to
    stand with the Armenian-American community in calling for the
    government of Turkey to acknowledge it as such."

    However, what ensued between the April 6 visit to Turkey and the April
    24 address was some secret diplomacy, brokered _ some believe
    coercively _ by Turkey with Armenia to create a "road map" to
    normalizing relations between the two countries (their common border
    has been closed since the founding of the Armenian Republic in
    1991). This new diplomacy involves Armenia agreeing to Turkey's
    persistent request that there be a historical commission to "decide"
    what happened to the Armenians in 1915. To many, and especially those
    in the human-rights community, this is an obvious gimmick, by which
    Turkey hopes to cast doubt on the scholarly consensus about the events
    of 1915 for the purpose of continuing to deny its responsibility for
    the genocide.

    OWNING UP TO THE PAST

    The irony spills into absurdity. The Turkish government spends
    millions of dollars a year on PR firms and lobbyists in a campaign to
    rewrite the history of the Armenian extermination. Turkey's courts
    have prosecuted writers and intellectuals who acknowledge the Armenian
    Genocide, most notably Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk, who not only stood
    trial for it but has been a target of death threats. Most tragically,
    the assassination of Armenian Turkish journalist Hrant Dink in 2007
    made it clear that dealing openly with the Armenian Genocide in Turkey
    was dangerous business.

    Turkey has shown no inclination to own up to the truth of its past. In
    2004, it agreed to be part of a Turkish Armenian Reconciliation
    Commission, but after the arbitrator, the International Center for
    Transitional Justice, rendered an assessment that the events of 1915
    were genocide, the Turkish government angrily pulled out of the
    commission.

    Would we allow President Ahmadinejad's government to be part of a
    commission on the Holocaust? When countries such as France, Canada,
    Poland, Greece, Russia and 15 others (as well as 41 U.S. states)
    passed resolutions affirming the Armenian Genocide over the past
    decades, they were not attempting to determine history, but rather to
    affirm an existing historical record and, in large part, to redress
    Turkey's continued aggressive denial campaign.

    When Congress once again entertains an Armenian Genocide resolution,
    many genocide scholars and the human-rights community hope it will
    have the courage to stand up to Turkish pressure. Turkish historian
    Taner Akcam has said U.S. acknowledgment of the Armenian genocide
    would give the United States "self-respect" in this arena, and "It
    would liberate Turks, Armenians, and itself in the process."

    It is important that we not confuse the exigencies of diplomacy with
    the need to stand firm about the moral reality of genocide and reject
    any nation's attempts to cover up a genocidal crime. The history of
    genocide is not a poker chip. While Armenia and Turkey must of course
    look to the future and normalize relations so that the status of
    Nagorno Karabagh and other political and economic issues can be
    resolved, Armenia's President Sarkissian has stated that the road to
    the future of Turkishâ??Armenian relations should not be
    brokered with preconditions.

    If Turkey believes in its future leadership in the region, then it
    must, in President Obama's words, reckon with its past. Speaking as he
    did on Turkish soil, Obama has already done some important work in
    helping Turkey understand why acknowledging its past will only aid its
    future.

    The acknowledgement of the genocide that became a template for Hitler
    is not just a Turkish-Armenian affair, but a universal moral issue:
    The world's most powerful country can summon the courage to help
    resolve it with a congressional resolution in the coming year.

    ___

    ABOUT THE WRITER

    Peter Balakian teaches at Colgate University and is the co-translator
    of the recently published "American Golgotha: A Memoir of the Armenian
    Genocide, 1915-1918" by Girgoris Balakian. Readers may send him e-mail
    at [email protected] He wrote this for the Fredericksburg
    (Va.) Free Lance-Star.
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