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VOX POPULI: Don't allow genocide denial at McGill

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  • VOX POPULI: Don't allow genocide denial at McGill

    McGill Tribune, Quebec, Canada
    March 10 2009


    VOX POPULI: Don't allow genocide denial at McGill


    McGill Armenian Students' Association

    On February 20, McGill University decided that its campus was an
    appropriate stage from which the Turkish professor and known genocide
    denier Türkkaya Ataöv could spread the fabrications, omissions, and
    factoids of the Ankara government that aim to question the veracity of
    the Armenian Genocide of 1915, during which 1.5 million Armenians were
    massacred by premeditated measures taken by the Turkish Ittihadist
    government.

    This has set the precedent for other historical revisionists and
    genocide deniers to find a podium in academia under the name of
    "freedom of speech." Apparently, this principle outweighed the lost
    lives of millions of innocent victims and their unspeakable suffering
    in the minds of the decision-makers at McGill.

    Ataöv said, "It is only when all nations come to terms with their past
    that the Turks can be asked to come to terms with their past. And if
    they do, we will consider every part of the historical record, and the
    Turks will be among those with the whitest records."

    Did he forget about the mass killings of 1.5 million Armenians in
    1915, the expulsion of 1.5 million Greeks from Anatolia in 1923, the
    special property tax on minorities in 1940, the Istanbul Pogrom of
    1955, and the 378,000 Kurds displaced by the army?

    Ataöv also said that in Turkey, second opinion is respected. What
    about Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code, which makes it illegal to
    insult the Turkish people and government? We still remember the trials
    of the famous novelist Orhan Pamuk and the journalists Hrant and Arat
    Dink. Hrant Dink was even gunned down in front of his office in
    2007. By Western standards, murder is not considered to be a form of
    respect.

    Investigations concerning Turkey's secret Ergenekon network showed
    that hundreds of people were blacklisted by Turkish intelligence
    agencies, which categorized people according to political and
    religious affiliation, as well as sexual orientation. There seems to
    be quite a deal of hypocrisy on the part of Ataöv, who openly blames
    the Western world of being racist when there is such a thing as
    Ergenekon in Turkey. Does he not see that the Turkish Nationalist
    Movement Party has an important presence in the parliament, while its
    youth branch has ultranationalist and neo-fascist orientations?

    Most shockingly, Ataöv even said that the Nuremberg Trials were
    unfair. Was he sent to McGill to defend the Nazi leaders responsible
    for the Holocaust?

    The falsification of history, denial of the Holocaust, or of any crime
    against humanity recognized as genocide by the international academic
    community can't be protected by a false label of "freedom of speech."
    The directors of McGill and the Turkish Students' Society of McGill
    University should formally apologize to the Armenian community and
    other victims of atrocities.



    Mardig Taslakian is the vice president external of the McGill Armenian
    Students' Association.

    http://media.www.mcgilltribune.com/m edia/storage/paper234/news/2009/03/10/Opinion/Vox- Populi.Dont.Allow.Genocide.Denial.At.Mcgill-366659 5.shtml
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