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  • Australia Must Acknowledge The Armenian Genocide, Banker Michael Car

    AUSTRALIA MUST ACKNOWLEDGE THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE, BANKER MICHAEL CARAPIET INSISTS

    11:34, 30 Mar 2015
    Siranush Ghazanchyan

    A banker with a stellar career and haunting family background insists
    Australia must acknowledge the Armenian genocide even if it risks
    Turkish retaliation over Gallipoli.

    By Geoff Winestock Financial Review

    Michael Carapiet had a stellar career in finance. He ran Macquarie
    Bank's infrastructure division and now, in semi-retirement, he sits on
    a dozen of the most prestigious corporate and government boards. But
    we won't be talking about any of that. I have instead invited Carapiet
    to lunch beside the glistening waters of Sydney Harbour because he
    is also one of Australia's most prominent Armenians.

    It is topical because the centenary of the Armenian genocide officially
    falls on April 24, just one day before Anzac Day. On that day in 1915,
    with the British and Australian attack on the Dardanelles imminent
    and the Russians invading from the east, the Turks launched a year
    of murder and deportations that killed about 1.5 million Christian
    Armenians, who were accused of disloyalty. More than half the Armenian
    population of the Ottoman empire perished.

    When I had called to set up the lunch, Carapiet had warned he was
    not an expert on the topic, just a finance guy who happened to be
    from the 50,000-strong Armenian community.

    But, after just half an hour of talking, the topic gets his blood
    running hot. At one point, he erupts with frustration that the
    Australian government is refusing even to use the word "genocide"
    because it is afraid Turkey might stop our dignitaries attending the
    Gallipoli centenary ceremonies.

    Foreign Minister Julie Bishop recently described what happened to
    the Armenians as an "alleged genocide".

    It drives Carapiet wild. "There is overwhelming evidence. Julie
    Bishop came out and said 'alleged'. Alleged genocide! Who wrote that
    for you?" he almost shouts at her imagined presence. "The Department
    of Foreign Affairs advises and they blindly follow and ignore the
    moral compass."

    We are dining at Graze, the outdoor restaurant just in front of the
    Museum of Contemporary Art on Circular Quay. Carapiet suggested it
    because it is close to his private office and he says it wouldn't
    "break the budget" since, as is usual in these lunches, I had offered
    to pay.

    Carapiet's sense of a good deal reminds me both that Armenians
    are renowned the world over as traders and that Carapiet is a
    rags-to-riches migrant himself, with an understanding of the value
    of money.

    The other thing about the choice of restaurant is that, at various
    points in the conversation, the contrast between the terrible events
    of 100 years ago and the bobbing ferries and delighted tourists in
    front of our table makes Carapiet laugh at how seriously Australians
    take their First World problems.

    "We have pretty much the best of everything, look at this," he exclaims
    gesturing at our surroundings.

    No wine for lunch. Carapiet orders salad but no onions or capsicum. I
    am gluten-free and go for a sirloin with nothing. We agree to have
    a coffee later.

    Survivors' Horror Stories

    Just like Gallipoli, the Armenian genocide was a long time ago,
    so only the middle-aged grandchildren of the survivors are alive.

    Carapiet, 56, retired from Macquarie in 2011 and chairs Smartgroup
    Corporation, an ASX-listed salary packaging company. He is on the
    boards of the federal government's Clean Energy Finance Corporation and
    Infrastructure Australia, and a few NSW state government businesses. He
    has two children and a granddaughter, and lives with his wife Helen.

    Carapiet's connection to the genocide is less direct than some,
    including Treasurer Joe Hockey, whose grandfather survived one of
    the forced death marches of Armenians into the Syrian desert in 1915.

    Carapiet's parents and grandparents spent the terrible year of 1915
    in the safety of the diaspora in British India and were not directly
    affected at all. Carapiet grew up there and migrated here only in
    1975. His father dropped the typical Armenian surname ending "-yan"
    or "-ian". Carapetian became Carapiet.

    Until the young Carapiet married, the genocide came up only in
    remembrance services in the Armenian Orthodox Church, which is the
    focus of the diaspora community. Then, when he was 15, his father
    gave him a copy of a classic 1930s historical novel, The Forty Days
    of Musa Dagh, which was written by an Austrian Jew and celebrates one
    small group of heroic Armenians who took up arms against the Turks
    instead of accepting slaughter.

    What brought the genocide home was marrying his wife and meeting her
    family. Helen's mother's family fled from western Turkey to Bulgaria
    with only what they could cram on a cart.

    Helen's father's family was not so lucky. From Keyseri in eastern
    Turkey, where the genocide was most fierce, her grandfather was sent
    on and survived the death march into the Syrian desert.

    Helen then experienced the dislocation that followed the genocide
    for so many Armenians. She herself was born in Yerevan, the capital
    of the Soviet Union's autonomous republic of Armenia, a sliver of
    land squeezed between Turkey and Russia. After the Second World War,
    her parents and many others emigrated to the Soviet Union as an
    alternative to the uncertainty of stateless exile in the Middle East.

    "It was a terrible decision," Carapiet says. As Josef Stalin's terror
    raged, Helen and her family fled to neighbouring Georgia, where they
    made a living making shoes, including for Stalin's daughter. From
    there they somehow emigrated to Australia in the '70s.

    It was by talking to Helen's mother and her genocide-survivor
    grandfather that Carapiet improved his basic Armenian. He listened
    as the old man bled history. But Carapiet was also repelled by the
    savagery of the politics of the Armenian exiles.

    In the 1970s and '80s, radical Armenian exiles waged a terror campaign
    and assassinated Turkish diplomats, including the consul in Sydney,
    in 1982. Carapiet says he was busy earning, stacking shelves for
    Woolworths, working as a bank teller at National Australia Bank and
    then, by 1985, was one of the first to join Macquarie Bank.

    "I worked out pretty early that my skill was in commerce like a lot of
    Armenians and because of my somewhat direct views and occasional lack
    of patience with people I found these debates somewhat ..." Carapiet
    waves his hand dismissively.

    We tuck in and my steak is perfect although I slightly regret not
    ordering sides. Sydney Harbour is turning on a lovely show. But we
    are quite engrossed in a very different time and place.

    Stranger in the Homeland

    The politics changed again in 1991 when the Soviet Union collapsed and,
    for the first time in 80 years, the Armenians had their own country.

    "My wife always said when the wall came down, 'I don't believe this
    is happening."'

    Carapiet visited the newly independent former Soviet republic of
    Armenia with his children but it was a confusing experience. On
    the one hand, this was the spiritual homeland where everybody on
    the street looked like a relative. Carapiet visited the well where
    StGregory the Illuminator, patron saint of the Armenia, the world's
    oldest Christian country, was imprisoned in the fourth century.

    On the other hand, Soviet Armenia had evolved very differently from
    the diaspora. It was desperately poor, less worried about the past
    and at war with neighbouring Azerbaijan. Carapiet still gives money
    to Armenian charities and still feels a certain abstract loyalty to
    the homeland but he felt rather uncomfortable during his visit.

    Even though he has the time and money to travel, he has never been
    back. "People in Armenia aren't affluent, it's a tough gig. I could
    go back but I have never got around toit," Carapiet says.

    Independent Armenia's attitude to the genocide was also subtly
    different from that of the diaspora. The tiny republic's primary
    focus was on survival in the dangerous Caucasus region and it wanted
    to end its bad relations with Turkey, which had imposed a blockade
    on its crucial land border.

    In 2009, Armenia's president tried to establish normal trade and
    diplomatic relations with Turkey. In exchange, Armenia was considering
    dropping its demand for an apology for the genocide and settling for
    a vague promise to create a working group of historians to look into
    what happened.

    As the details of this diplomatic stitch-up leaked out, one of the key
    factors that killed it was the opposition from the diaspora, including
    Carapiet. He is sympathetic to tiny Armenia's desire not to make
    enemies but equally adamant it must not sell out to Turkey. Carapiet
    happened to be at a World Bank meeting in Istanbul in 2009, when Turkey
    and Armenia were talking about this peace-for-silence deal, and was
    outraged Armenia might not extract a clear apology for the genocide.

    "I don't think they should have done a deal. There's an order to
    things. I think you have to take these things a step at a time.

    "First you have to say, 'Yes, this was a wrong,' and then you think,
    'How do you right the wrong?'

    "Look at the Aboriginal population here. Not everybody is happy with
    just an apology but there are huge swaths of people who are more
    satisfied than before [Kevin] Rudd said he was sorry."

    Apology not enough

    We have flat whites and not the thick Turkish coffee drunk in Armenia.

    In the past decade in Turkey, a new moderate Islamist government with
    no ties to the old military establishment has allowed more discussion
    about the events of 1915, so the idea of admitting a genocide might
    one day be conceivable.

    But Carapiet thinks an apology might not be enough. Like many in the
    diaspora, Carapiet still thinks an apology should be just a prelude
    to reparations to survivors' families. I suggest that, after so many
    years, Turkey will never accept this but he says Turkey has to change.

    "I have got no links to Turkey but I can recognise that for other
    people the symbolism isn't enough. There will be certain instances
    where assets were taken that can be given back and should be given
    back, and there will be cases where they cannot and they will make
    other arrangements," he says.

    I ask him if he shares the dream of many exiles that Turkey will give
    territory back to Armenia. He says only that he thinks it is funny
    that Armenia's national symbol, Mount Ararat, where Noah landed the
    biblical ark, is now across the border in Turkey and not Armenia.

    Which brings us back to Gallipoli. He is disgusted that politicians
    are refusing to talk truth to Turkey just so they can have a seat
    on the podium at Anzac Cove on April 25. Carapiet says NSW and
    South Australia have specifically acknowledged the genocide and the
    subject can be taught in their schools, but the federal government
    says nothing. Hockey made speeches in opposition about the genocide
    but now remains silent.

    Frenchmen also died in their thousands in the Dardanelles campaign
    but French President Francois Hollande will miss Turkey and travel to
    Armenia to honour the 1.5 million. Carapiet says Australia's past links
    to Turkey make it the perfect country to press the genocide issue.

    "I think friends are the best people to call out other friends. If a
    friend came and told you the truth, you would actually do something
    about it. And if [saying the truth] meant you lost their friendship,
    it was not a friendship in the first place."

    Carapiet himself has none of the visceral hatred of the Turks that
    Armenians did a generation ago. Helen grew up speaking Turkish and
    enjoys visiting Istanbul, where many of the traders are still ethnic
    Armenians or Armenians who converted to Islam in 1915.

    As we turn our gaze back to Sydney Harbour, I ask Carapiet what it will
    mean for his children to be Armenian since they will never have met
    a survivor and have almost no direct connection to the events of 1915.

    Carapiet's answer is relevant to many migrants whose cultures have
    been fundamentally changed by catastrophe. "You have to try harder
    because you don't have a safety net. There is no safety net."

    As we part, Carapiet pulls out his mobile phone. "That's him."

    He shows me a scan of a sepia photo of a man dressed in black. It is
    Helen's grandfather who survived the death march to Syria and who,
    in old age, told his story to her Australian-Armenian husband, the
    young Carapiet.

    http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/03/30/australia-must-acknowledge-the-armenian-genocide-banker-michael-carapiet-insists/

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