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  • Reconciliation And Recriminations

    RECONCILIATION AND RECRIMINATIONS
    Barbara Frye

    Transitions On Line
    http://www.tol.cz/look/TOL/article.tpl?IdLang uage=1&IdPublication=4&NrIssue=319&NrS ection=3&NrArticle=20538
    April 28 2009
    Czech Republic

    As their government makes overtures to an old foe, many Armenians
    still wait for an apology.

    YEREVAN | Standing in a threadbare tweed blazer on a sunny day in late
    April, Zohrab Shahbazyan brushed a tear from his cheek as he watched
    goose-stepping soldiers carry a large wreath across a plaza. Their
    destination was Yerevan's hilltop memorial to 1.5 million Armenians
    killed or driven from their homes in Turkey nearly 100 years ago.

    Shahbazyan, 75, had come here on 24 April, the day in 1915 that the
    Ottoman government arrested more than 200 Armenian intellectuals. Most
    were killed in the beginning of a campaign to drive Armenians out of
    eastern Turkey during World War I. Many who survived the massacres
    were marched into the deserts of Mesopotamia and Syria without food
    or water.

    Like most Armenians in the homeland and throughout the country's vast
    diaspora, Shahbazyan said he lost ancestors - 31 of 48 - in what his
    government and nearly two dozen others have termed a genocide. And
    like much of Yerevan, he had walked slowly up the hill today holding
    a single flower, which he would place on a ring around a flame at
    the center of the memorial.

    President Serzh Sargsyan (left) and other dignitaries attend a
    commemoration ceremony on 24 April in Yerevan. Photo by Barbara Frye.

    "Genocide is not just killing people. They exterminated the whole
    nation," he said. "One and a half million Armenians were not buried
    on their land."

    In its rituals - prayers by golden-robed leaders of the Armenian
    Apostolic Church, a visit from the president, an endless procession
    of flower-bearing pilgrims - the day was like nearly every 24 April
    since the memorial opened in 1967.

    But it was also different. This year it took place days after the
    governments of Turkey and Armenia had announced plans to open the
    border between the two countries, which has been closed since 1993. It
    was the latest in a series of remarkable events over the past two
    years that have included an invitation from Armenian President Serzh
    Sargsyan to Turkish President Abdullah Gul to attend a soccer match
    between the two countries in Yerevan and a public apology from a
    group of Turkish intellectuals to the people of Armenia.

    But Shahbazyan was ready to forgive only on condition that Turkey give
    up the territory that many Armenians (and Armenia's now-superseded
    1990 declaration of independence) refer to as "western Armenia."

    Michael Gulyar had also come to pay his respects. At 19, he is more
    than 50 years Shahbazyan's junior. His grandfather escaped the pogroms
    in Turkey, and of his family, he said, "They don't want to find terms
    with the Turks."

    But he has a different view. "Turkey has changed," he said. "Many
    Turkish have a European mentality."

    And while he condemns the killings and expulsions, he said he
    understands how complicated the idea of apologizing can be for
    Turkey. "Now it is difficult because when Turkey recognizes the
    genocide, they must give back land." The question of reparations
    lingers, despite many officials' efforts to discourage such
    expectations. The Armenian Revolutionary Federation, a political party
    that just left the governing coalition over the deal with Turkey,
    still calls for land and property in Turkey to be returned to the
    descendants of its Armenian owners.

    Outside Armenia, many analysts and diplomats have welcomed the
    Turkish-Armenian thaw, but inside the country, it's clear that some
    are more ready than others.

    "We're coming to the stage when we must speak more openly to the
    public about their neighbors," Edward Nalbandian, the Armenian foreign
    minister, said. "If you live somewhere and all your neighbors will
    not be [your] friends, how could you live?"

    Armenia is largely isolated in its southern Caucasus neighborhood. In
    addition to the closed border with Turkey, movement and trade between
    it and its eastern neighbor, Azerbaijan, are frozen due to the conflict
    between the two countries over Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave within
    Azerbaijan that is occupied by ethnic Armenians. The two sides fought a
    war over the land in the early 1990s and a sporadically broken cease
    fire is in place.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993, in solidarity with its
    ally Azerbaijan after an advance by Armenian troops into Azerbaijani
    territory.

    For years, Armenian officials have insisted that the border closures
    have not hampered progress, and there is some evidence for that. For
    more than a decade before the financial crisis hit last year, the
    country's economy grew annually by double digits and its poverty
    rate dropped. But, although Nalbandian said the diplomatic overtures
    began in May 2008, the August war between Georgia and Russia crimped
    Armenia's trade flows and lent some urgency to a rapprochement with
    its western neighbor.

    Public opinion on the issue is difficult to gauge comprehensively. Some
    Armenian analysts caution against relying on opinion polls, but they
    note that Rule of Law, the political party most strongly against
    reconciliation, took just 7 percent of the votes in the most recent
    parliamentary elections.

    But those numbers don't tell the whole story. The Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation took 13 percent of the vote. "Fifteen years of
    blockade have not produced the intended result," said Kiro Manoyan,
    an ARF official, saying that there have been neither deaths from
    starvation nor economic disaster and that Armenia does not urgently
    need trade with Turkey. "It hasn't been the end of us. We have managed
    to survive."

    Manoyan said his party favors an open border, but without
    preconditions. Turkey has long demanded the withdrawal of Armenian
    forces from Azerbaijani territories ringing Nagorno-Karabakh, which
    Armenia deems a security zone for the enclave. Because Turkey has
    sent recent signals that it would not lift this condition, and because
    the governments have not released details of their agreement, Manoyan
    said he can only assume that the Armenian government is acceding to
    Istanbul's demands.

    Like Manoyan, Stepan Safaryan, a member of parliament from the
    opposition Heritage Party, said, "The point is not whether we open
    the border. The point is how and at what price."

    WHAT THE FUTURE HOLDS

    With deep-seated enmities, the passage of time and the emergence
    of a new generation typically helps to heal wounds. But in Yerevan,
    not all the signs point in one direction.

    Adjacent to the genocide memorial sits a museum, opened in 1995. On
    commemoration day, parents led their children, some as young as 3 or
    4, past old photos, enlarged to about 6 square meters, of Turkish
    soldiers posing proudly behind the decapitated heads of Armenian
    religious leaders, of an Armenian woman and her two young children
    who had starved to death and whose emaciated bodies had been left to
    bake in the desert sun, of white-coated Armenian doctors hanging from
    a gallows.

    Suren Manukyan, the museum's deputy director, said, "We understand
    that it is very difficult for Turks to accept that their grandfathers
    were murderers. This museum is part of Turkish history, too. The
    recognition of the Armenian genocide is not just a problem for Armenian
    society. It's a problem for Turkish society, too."

    Manukyan said he sees a change in Turkey. "The first step is a
    discussion. I think in Turkey now we have this discussion."

    The 2007 murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in Istanbul
    by a Turkish nationalist provoked an outcry in Turkey, with tens of
    thousands of Turks attending his funeral. In December a group of
    Turkish intellectuals posted an online apology for the events of
    1915-1917 in the form of a petition. It has been signed by nearly
    30,000 people around the world.

    "Who could envision, just one year ago, two years ago, that 30,000
    Turks could sign a petition to ask for [forgiveness] from the Armenian
    people?" Foreign Minister Nalbandian said.

    Whether they will get it is an open question. Takoulte Moutoufian, 42,
    was among those parents bringing their children to the museum that
    day. Asked what she and her husband were teaching their two sons,
    ages 14 and 9, about Turks, she said, "That they are our enemy."
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