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Overcoming the Past: How can a people overcome history of genocide?

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  • Overcoming the Past: How can a people overcome history of genocide?

    Epoch Times, NY
    April 6 2008


    Armenia: Overcoming the Past
    How can a people overcome a history of genocide?

    By Cesar Chelala
    Special to The Epoch Times Apr 06, 2008


    Photo: A view of a placard showing the picture of the
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was murdered in Jan. 2007
    by a Turkish nationalist. The placard is part of a demonstration
    calling on the EU to require Turkey to acknowledge the Armenian
    genocide. (John Thys/AFP/Getty Images)

    During a recent trip to Armenia, I was once again reminded of man's
    inhumanity to man, his brutality to fellow human beings. I also found
    myself face-to-face once again with the power of memory and of hate,
    and asked myself if there is any way to overcome the lingering and
    pernicious effects of murderous acts.

    In 1915, as the Ottoman Empire was in its death throes, over a
    million Armenians were massacred, and many others were forced into
    exile from the land that had been theirs for centuries.

    More recently, in the 1970s in my own country, Argentina, the
    military conducted what has become known as the "dirty war" against
    those who opposed its dictatorship. In the process, the military made
    "to disappear" thousands of people - as many as 30,000 - never to be seen
    again or accounted for.

    In the Argentine case, many years later, military officers - including
    members of the former ruling junta - were tried and imprisoned. While
    this action couldn't bring back the "disappeared," it was a necessary
    act of justice for their families and partial closure for their
    losses.

    But what about the Armenian hatred for the Turks, almost a century
    after the devastating events of 1915? Can the antagonism be overcome
    so that a civilized relationship between the two countries can be
    brought about? It is obviously too late to bring those responsible to
    justice. However, it should be possible to reach a level of
    understanding between the two societies.

    While in Yerevan, I spoke with Professor Mira Antonyan, director of
    the Fund for Armenian Relief, about the effects of those events on
    Armenians today. "The only thing that unites us now is our resentment
    against the Turks for the events of the past. Being Armenian means
    having sad memories," she told me. That feeling was shared by her
    husband and a friend of both, who regularly trade with Turkish
    businessmen.

    I told them that I felt Armenians were in a quagmire, unable to move
    forward because of the tremendous weight of history. "Perhaps you are
    right," Mira's husband answered, "but genocide is a very heavy burden
    on our shoulders. We cannot just forget what happened. We cannot
    erase our memory."

    Broadly speaking, I believe that there is a generational divide on
    the question. The older generation - those over 50 - insist on the need
    for an apology from the Turkish government. The younger generations,
    without rejecting the facts of history, feel the need to overcome
    those memories. They believe that such visceral attachment to the
    past is self-defeating.

    Kamilla Petrosyan, a psychiatrist in her late 30s, told me how her
    4-year-old son arrived home one day from kindergarten frightened to
    death on learning that day about the 1915 massacres. "We have to stop
    this culture of victimization," she said, "otherwise we will never be
    able to move forward."

    Recent events have shown that the Turks too are beginning to show
    signs of the need to move forward. A number of Turkish intellectuals,
    including last year's winner of the Noble Prize for literature, Orhan
    Pamuk, have made public statements to that effect. And, following the
    assassination last year of the Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink, some 50,000 people marched through the streets of Istanbul in
    solidarity, and leading members of the present Turkish government
    attended the funeral ceremonies at the Armenian Patriarchal Church.

    What we now desperately need is a change of paradigm, to move from a
    culture of violence to one of peace. Recent times have been
    characterized by the use of violence over dialogue, and of aggression
    over diplomacy. Very little has been done to build effective bridges
    for peace.

    Even limited initiatives, such as the one carried out by volunteers
    from the American Peace Corps in Armenia for summer camps for
    children from both Turkey and Armenia, are valid undertakings. In
    talks with several Armenian schoolteachers, I found them eager for
    contact with Turkish schoolchildren.

    It is only by constructing bridges of understanding - particularly
    working with young people, still untainted by the weight of the
    past - that we will be able to change the present paradigm of violence
    and war for one of collaboration and peace.

    Dr. Cesar Chelala is the co-author of "Missing or Dead in Argentina:
    The Desperate Search for Thousands of Abducted Victims," a New York
    Times Magazine cover story, for which he shared an Overseas Press
    Club of America award.

    http://en.epochtimes.com/news/8-4-6/68681.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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