Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Eternal Damnation Of The Spotless Mind: In Remembrance Of Hrant Dink

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

  • Eternal Damnation Of The Spotless Mind: In Remembrance Of Hrant Dink

    ETERNAL DAMNATION OF THE SPOTLESS MIND: IN REMEMBRANCE OF HRANT DINK
    by Bernard-Henri Levy

    New Republic
    http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id =6224df6f-137e-4e80-a2b4-8a074537ffe2
    Jan 7 2009
    DC

    I write this in remembrance of the renowned Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink, murdered two years ago, on Jan. 19, 2007,
    for his comments on the slaughter of up to 1.5 million Armenians
    by Ottoman forces during WWI ... in horror that the police officers
    guarding the 17-year-old murder suspect, Ogun Samast, saw fit to take
    a video in which he proudly held the Turkish flag as they recorded
    their brief association with him for posterity ... in solidarity
    with the brave group of 200 Turkish writers and intellectuals who
    recently signed an online petition apologizing for the massacre,
    risking their freedom to keep pressure on the Turkish government.

    Outrages like Dink's murder will continue. They will continue as
    long as Turkey, fearing the loss of prestige and alarmed by the
    possibility that it will be obliged to pay reparations to survivors
    and their descendants, continues to deny that the Armenian genocide
    took place. This struggle will continue as long as there are no laws
    in place penalizing genocide denial -- and these laws are needed not
    only in Turkey, but around the world.

    Critics may say, "It is not for the law to write history." That is
    absurd. History has been written a hundred times over. The facts have
    been established, and new laws will protect them from being altered.

    In 1929, the British statesman and author Winston Churchill wrote
    that the Armenians were victims of genocide, an organized enterprise
    of systematic annihilation. The Turks themselves have admitted it. In
    1918, in the aftermath of WWI, Mustafa Kemal -- soon to be granted
    the honorific "Ataturk" -- recognized the massacres perpetrated by
    the Young Turk government.

    The laws already in place in many countries regarding Holocaust
    denial do not touch historians -- for them the question of whether
    the slaughter of the Jews was or was not genocide is no longer at
    issue. What is at stake is preventing the erasure of such crimes from
    our society's memory.

    Take France's Gayssot law, which criminalized the denial of crimes
    against humanity, and which as yet has been applied only to denial
    of the Jewish Holocaust. This is a law that reins in the fringe and
    extremist politicians who engage in lightly cloaked anti-Semitism and
    who may be tempted to advocate Holocaust denial. This is a law that
    prevents masquerades like that of historian David Irving's trial in
    London in 2000.

    Irving brought a libel case against Deborah Lipstadt, author of
    "Denying the Holocaust," who had labeled him a spokesman for Holocaust
    deniers. Though the judge ruled in notably strong language that Irving
    was indeed a Holocaust denier, in the absence of laws penalizing this
    offense, Irving walked free. Meanwhile, the tabloid journalists and
    talking heads muddied the issues and ultimately drew more attention
    to Irving's work, which may well have been his intention all along.

    Critics will say, "Where will the law stop?" since technically we
    could also extend this law to include the denial of the crimes that
    took place during the colonial era, the publication of the Danish
    cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, even the sin of blasphemy. Must we
    forbid the expression of opinions that do not mirror our own? This
    is a trap, for two reasons.

    First, the law would be focused specifically on genocide, a
    large-scale criminal enterprise in which, as Hannah Arendt said,
    someone gets to decide who has the right and who does not to inhabit
    this earth. Second, the deniers don't just have conflicting or
    nonconformist opinions. They categorically deny that this horrific
    crime took place at all.

    The logic and pattern of the crime of genocide was clarified and
    refined over the 20th century, with the massacre of Armenians as
    a seminal event. Hitler was impressed, nay, inspired by the scope
    of the Armenian genocide. In August 1939, days before he invaded
    Poland, he said to his generals, "Who still talks nowadays about the
    extermination of the Armenians?"

    It was a genocidal test firing. It was the basis for the Allies'
    use of the phrase "crimes against humanity" in their May 24, 1915
    statement regarding the massacre of Armenians "with the connivance
    and help of the Ottoman authorities." It was a reference for the
    Polish jurist Raphael Lemkin -- who coined the term "genocide" and
    is responsible for developing our understanding of this crime --
    when he was incorporating the definition of "genocide" into the 1948
    Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.

    I have spent some time perusing the Armenian genocide deniers'
    literature, which is remarkably similar to the literature on the
    destruction of the Jews. The same arguments minimizing the number
    of deaths ("sure, there were some, but not as many as they say") and
    the same reversing of roles -- just as Holocaust deniers render the
    Jews responsible for the war and their own martyrdom, their Turkish
    counterparts claim the Armenians betrayed the Ottomans by allying
    with the Russians, thus sealing their own fate.

    Some may ask, "Can't the truth defend itself?" No, I am afraid
    not. Consider that in 1942, Heinrich Himmler, the head of the SS,
    ordered the formation of Sonderkommando 1005, whose mission it was to
    dig up the dead, to burn their bodies and dispose of the ashes. In
    one of his memoirs of the camps, Primo Levi recalled that the SS
    militiamen enjoyed admonishing their prisoners that when the war
    was over, there would not be a single Jew left to testify and if by
    chance one did survive, they would do whatever was necessary to make
    sure his testimony would not be believed.

    A similar logic drives those who proclaim to Armenians, "No,
    your brothers and sisters are not dead. Your parents, grandparents
    and great-great-grandparents are not dead, as you're so foolishly
    claiming." Such statements betray the absolute, insane hatred they
    harbor, against which factual evidence and debate are useless and
    the truth is impotent.

    Laws prohibiting Holocaust denial are expressions of the fact that
    genocide, a perfect crime, leaves no traces. In fact, the obliteration
    of those traces is genocide's final phase. Holocaust deniers are not
    merely expressing an opinion; they are perpetrating a crime.

    Bernard-Henri Levy's new book, Left in Dark Times: A Stand Against
    The New Barbarism, was published in September by Random House. This
    article was translated from the French by Sara Sugihara.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X