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ISTANBUL: April 24 and Turkish worries

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  • ISTANBUL: April 24 and Turkish worries

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 27 2015

    April 24 and Turkish worries

    DOÄ?U ERGÄ°L
    January 27, 2015, Tuesday


    April 24, 1915 is the date when the Ottoman (Young Turk) government
    arrested 250 Armenian intellectuals in Ä°stanbul and banished them to
    Çankırı and AyaÅ?, both close to Ankara, on the grounds that they had
    participated in subversive activities against the state. One-hundred
    seventy-four of them never came back. This date has been acknowledged
    as the beginning of the `genocide' of the Armenians and an official
    reflex of defensive nationalism by the Turks.

    Differences in opinion and historiography that subsequently ensued
    have shaped the psyches of both nations. For Armenians, the fatal
    measures of the Ottoman government against them have ended in the
    destruction of the Armenian presence in Anatolia. They were left
    bereft of a homeland and a history. Families were destroyed either by
    extermination or deportation. Children were separated from their
    families. Those who remained had to convert and change their ethnic
    identities. The remaining Armenians hid themselves within other
    collective identities (Sunni Muslim, Kurdish or Alevi). Altogether,
    this havoc was named Medz Yeghern, or the "Great Calamity."

    Armenians believe this painful past is further rendered unbearable
    because the Turks have not acknowledged what happened 100 years ago
    and instead have systematically denied any responsibility. They could
    have at least condemned the government of the time and those who took
    part in the execution of orders that put an end to the presence of
    Armenians in Anatolia. Their expectations were never satisfied
    formally.

    World War I descended on the Ottoman Empire as an impoverished polity
    fighting to hold onto its disintegrating periphery composed of
    conquered lands and peoples. The choice of the Young Turk leaders to
    participate in the war was not out of expected spectacular triumphs,
    but was aimed at preserving what was left of the empire with the help
    and support of the shining German war machine and its imperial
    ambitions in the East.

    The Russians and the British were obstacles to Germany's expansion
    toward the East. Rising Turkish nationalism idealized an all-Turkish
    union with Turkic peoples of Asia (the Turan utopia). This made
    removing Russia as an obstacle all the more important.

    Enver PaÅ?a, the strongman of the Young Turk triumvirate, decided to
    conduct a surprise attack on the Russian Caucasian army in January
    1915 to open the way to Central Asia. The attack ended in disaster,
    and a whole army was defeated by cold, frost and bad judgment.

    While imposing an air-tight news ban on the disaster in the eastern
    front, Enver PaÅ?a and his accomplices wanted to cover up their flop by
    accusing the Armenians of siding with the enemy and engaging in
    fifth-column activities. The rest was a human disaster.

    Halil PaÅ?a, the uncle of Enver PaÅ?a and the man in charge of Ottoman
    forces in Persia, is on record saying, `The Armenian nation, which I
    had tried to annihilate to the last member of it, because it tried to
    erase my country ¦ in the most horrible and painful days of my
    homeland ¦' This became the official view of Turkey and later
    generations have been greatly affected by it.

    While Turkish officials acknowledge that many Armenians died during
    World War I, they present this misfortune as part of a wider war and
    say massacres were committed by both sides.

    The argument is as follows: The campaign of Gallipoli in 1915
    coincides with the time of the Armenian debacle in Anatolia. Faced
    with the Western onslaught, both the Ottoman Turks and the Armenians
    suffered the dire consequences of war.

    Some commentators call this strategy `comparing and/or racing pain.'
    In accordance with this strategy, the government is organizing an
    ostentatious commemoration of the Gallipoli campaign on the same day
    of the accepted date of the Armenian Genocide (April 24).

    What is odd is that there are two important dates in the
    aforementioned battle: March 18 is the day of the naval battle when
    the passage of the Allied fleet was aborted. The other is the landing
    of ANZAC forces on the peninsula on the April 25, 1915.

    Starting the commemorations on April 24 is a totally arbitrary move to
    associate Armenian losses with that of the whole country. The focus of
    attention is to be put on the fallen soldiers, among whom there were
    Armenians.

    The invitation of Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan to Çanakkale on
    the same day he is expected to pay homage to the victims of Medz
    Yeghern at the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan may reflect an
    amateurish evasion of empathy with a suffering nation.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/columnist/dogu-ergil/april-24-and-turkish-worries_370969.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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