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ANKARA: Sarafian: Focus On The Diaspora

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  • ANKARA: Sarafian: Focus On The Diaspora

    SARAFIAN: FOCUS ON THE DIASPORA

    Hurriyet
    Nov 24 2008
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL - Multilateral efforts to improve relations between Armenia
    and Turkey is the wrong way to resolve the Armenian issue, says
    respected historian Ara Sarafian, arguing that the solution lies in
    the huge and influential diaspora.

    Sarafian, the head of the London-based Gomidas Institute, said Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's offer to Armenia to establish a
    commission of historians to resolve the Armenian issue was positive,
    but Armenia was the wrong address.

    Armenians argue that the death of hundreds of thousands of Armenians
    in 1915 constituted genocide while Turkey says many Turks also died
    in the wartime circumstances and denies there was a state-enforced
    policy to kill Armenians.

    Sarafian was invited to Turkey by the Bogazici, Bilkent and Sabancı
    Universities and the Hrant Dink Foundation to attend a history
    conference in the Mediterranean province of Adana.

    Sarafian said there were two problems that would arise out of any
    effort to improve relations with Armenians through closer ties with
    Armenia. "Freedom of expression for historians in Armenia is limited
    and the genocide issue has become a political tool," he said.

    He said Turkey should continue with its plan to form a commission
    of historians who would discuss the matter, but suggested Turkish
    historians to meet with moderate Armenian historians in the diaspora
    rather than Armenia. "The solution should start from the diaspora,"
    he said.

    "The members of the diaspora who still have Anatolia in their hearts
    should not be ignored," he said, adding that the diaspora was not
    part of Armenia but part of Anatolia. He also said Turkey needed to
    fund the commission of independent historians. "I believe Turkey is
    not how it used to be. It has a modern perception and wants solutions
    to the problems," said Sarafian.

    Armenian archives Prime Minister Erdogan's suggestion to form a
    commission also involves the opening of the state archives of both
    Armenia and Turkey. Sarafian said the archives in Armenia were
    inadequate. "The real documents on the genocide are in the Zoryan
    archives in Boston and the Armenian Patriarchy archives in Jerusalem,"
    he said.

    He said the most important question was whether Armenians wanted
    to overcome this chronic problem. He asked, "Will we be able to free
    ourselves from this instinct of revenge and share our grief?" Armenians
    should stop seeing themselves as the victims, said the historian.

    "We cannot compare the Armenian genocide with the Holocaust. Those who
    were banished from their land suffered a lot but survived," he said.

    He also said Turkish society could not be blamed for what happened in
    the past. "No one can deny the genocide but the entire Turkish nation
    cannot be held responsible. Moreover, many Turks rescued Armenians
    from death," he said.

    The lobbies had turned the issue into a political tool, said
    Sarafian. "They want to control everything and fear historians opening
    a brand new page," he said. He said a language of peace should be
    created between Turks and Armenians.

    He still had to be careful when he undertook research in Turkey and
    added, "I, as a historian, try not to display a wrong stance and
    create tension. I know I need to be objective. Additionally, Turkey
    is being constructive and it would be wrong to miss this chance."

    He said the restoration of the Armenian Akdamar Church in the recent
    past could have created an environment of dialogue but had become a
    missed chance. "Armenians did not want to take that chance because
    it did not suit their interests," he said.

    The Armenian response, both from the diaspora and Armenia, to Turkish
    calls to work together was complete silence, he said. "The diaspora
    boycotted any cooperation with Turkey because it only wants to blame
    and lay accusations against Turkey. Unfortunately, radical groups
    within the diaspora have turned a sensitive issue, like genocide,
    into a political tool.

    He said it was important for future generations to free themselves
    from the victim psychology, concluding his remarks by saying, "We
    need to ensure our children live in peace. The revenge instinct will
    do no one any good."

    --Boundary_(ID_3E/91H+Y69fbL3a7qeqODg )--
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