Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Open Letter Rekindles Turkish Debate On Armenian Massacre

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Open Letter Rekindles Turkish Debate On Armenian Massacre

    OPEN LETTER REKINDLES TURKISH DEBATE ON ARMENIAN MASSACRE

    The Irish Times
    December 24, 2008

    ANGRY DEBATES fuelled by an online initiative inviting individual
    Turks to apologise for the ethnic cleansing of Armenians during the
    first World War showed no signs of fading this week, as Turkey's
    president took an opposition deputy to court for an alleged racial
    slur, writes NICHOLAS BIRCH in Istanbul.

    Lawyers for Abdullah Gul announced on Monday that he was seeking
    symbolic compensation from Canan Aritman after she hinted his mother
    had Armenian roots.

    "Gul should be president of the entire Turkish nation, not just of
    those sharing his ethnicity," Ms Aritman said on December 17th. "Look
    into Gul's roots on his mother's side, and you'll see."

    Her outburst followed Mr Gul's description of the initiative, which
    has attracted 20,000 signatures since it was launched on December 15th,
    as compatible with a democratic society.

    "My conscience does not accept the denial of the Great Catastrophe
    that the Ottoman Armenians were subjected to in 1915," the open letter
    reads. "I reject this injustice . . . and empathise with the feelings
    and pain of my Armenian brothers. I apologise to them."

    Mr Gul's doveish tone was characteristic of a man who, in September,
    became the first Turkish statesman to visit Armenia, triggering hopes
    of a rapprochement between the two countries after nearly a century
    of enmity.

    Turkey and Armenia remain at loggerheads over what exactly happened
    in 1915.

    Turkey accepts that many Armenians were killed during the collapse
    of the Ottoman Empire, but insists they were victims of interethnic
    conflicts that claimed more Muslim victims.

    For Armenians, and most western historians, the ethnic cleansing that
    killed at least 600,000 Armenians amounted to genocide.

    Ten years ago, openly debating 1915 in Turkey was all but
    impossible. Today, universities organise conferences on the issue,
    and bookshops sell books by western and Armenian historians, alongside
    texts defending the official Turkish thesis.

    Journalist Semin Gumusel ascribes the new openness to a general change
    in attitudes in Turkey. "In the past, Turks used to listen to the
    big men and nod their heads obediently," she says.

    "But the days of blind obedience are over. People ask questions now."

    Others attribute the initiative to the shock that followed the murder
    of the Armenian-Turkish editor Hrant Dink. A leading advocate of a
    more humane debate on the Armenian issue, Dink was gunned down by a
    nationalist teenager in January 2007.

    "When he died, it was as if a veil had been torn from the eyes of
    the democratic-minded citizens of this country," says Nil Mutluer,
    a feminist activist who signed the letter. "People realised there
    was no time to be lost."

    The road ahead looks hard. The chief organisers of the 1915 massacres
    continue to be commemorated in street names across the country.

    Ms Aritman has not been the only public figure to criticise the
    open letter.

    Senior generals said it damaged the country. Prime minister Tayyip
    Erdogan was contemptuous: "[The signatories] must have committed
    genocide themselves since they are apologising," he said last
    Friday. "The Turkish Republic does not have such a problem."

    Met with nothing worse than a mild slap on the wrist from her party,
    meanwhile, Ms Aritman upped the ante on Monday.

    "These days, scientists use DNA tests, not family trees, to identify
    ethnic identity," she said, referring to Mr Gul's insistence he was
    of Turkish stock.

    "My slogan is 'happy is he who says I am a Turk'," she added, using
    a well-known slogan of the founder of modern Turkey, Kemal Ataturk.

    Managing editor of Radikal , a liberal daily, Erdal Guven describes
    Ms Aritman's party's failure to sack her as "a disgrace".

    "It is a pity too that Gul didn't make it more clear that it would
    have made no difference if his granny had been an Armenian."
Working...
X