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ANKARA: For Armenian Students, Studying Turkey Poses A Dilemma

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  • ANKARA: For Armenian Students, Studying Turkey Poses A Dilemma

    FOR ARMENIAN STUDENTS, STUDYING TURKEY POSES A DILEMMA

    Today's Zaman
    May 20 2009
    Turkey

    It is a small class of 12 master's students in the department of
    Turkology at Yerevan State University. For almost all of the Armenian
    students, Turkey is as close as a stone's throw even though the border
    remains closed, but Turks are as far away as one can ever imagine.

    "What does the word 'Turk' tell you?" was the question asked on
    Monday by a group of Turkish journalists who are in Yerevan for
    the International Hrant Dink Foundation's Turkey-Armenia Journalist
    Dialogue Project, funded by the Heinrich Böll Stiftung Association.

    In response, only one student said "just human," in contrast with
    the others who said they remember "genocide" when they hear the word
    "Turk."

    Ashkhen Babayan said she had been to the Turkish city of Antalya and
    had interacted with Turks and found them quite personable.

    Another student, Anahit Veziryan, said she would go to Turkey one day
    to find the house where her father lived in the eastern Turkish city
    of Van.

    "My father described the house that he once lived in but was forced to
    leave by the Turks," she said, adding that she couldn't do it right
    now. When asked why, she had difficulty describing her feelings of
    fear toward Turks, but her professor helped.

    "Is it safe for an Armenian to go to Turkey?" asked Ruben Melkonyan,
    professor of Turkology at the university.

    "Our hope is with the Turkish people who are democrats and who can face
    the truth. I agree with Hrant Dink, who said Turkey can consolidate
    its democracy from within. I can't say that all Turks are bad," he
    added. And the truth, according to him, is that the Turkish belief
    that there was no "genocide" against the Armenians in 1915 is not
    right. "Your official thesis is based on lies, and ours is the truth,"
    he emphasized. "The recognition of genocide also has a legal aspect,
    as well as political. An apology is not enough; Armenians should be
    compensated financially," he said.

    The young students have been carrying the heavy baggage of another
    official thesis, the thesis of Armenia. Even though they study
    Turkology, they face a dilemma: They want to know everything about
    Turkey, but from a distance, because in their minds, the "Turk"
    is a horrible creature.

    'Telling stories, interaction will help' Melkonyan said the "trauma
    of genocide" has been handed down to generations of people in Armenia,
    as assassinated Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink put it, and the only
    way to overcome it is by "storytelling." He said there were examples
    of it in Turkish literature, as seen in the books of Fethiye Cetin,
    Yusuf Bagcı and İrfan Pala.

    Professor Melkonyan said he was from the eastern Turkish city of MuÅ~_
    and had visited his village in the province, but he was not welcomed.

    Aris Nalcı from the International Hrant Dink Foundation based in
    Ä°stanbul invited the students to Turkey for an internship at the
    Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos. He also said there were currently two
    interns from Yerevan State University at Agos.

    Addressing the students, Nalcı said: "You know how to deal with this
    trauma. You cannot learn about Turkey just by reading the books given
    to you in Armenia. You should read books from Turkey, too."

    'Turkey should stay out of Karabakh dispute' Melkonyan said Armenia
    and Azerbaijan were independent countries, so they could settle their
    disagreements over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh without
    Turkey's interference.

    "Turkey should not interfere in the Karabakh row," he told a group
    of Turkish journalists this week as he answered questions regarding
    Turkish-Armenian relations. "Azerbaijan, Armenia and Turkey are
    independent states."

    Armenian leaders have criticized Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan for making the normalization of ties with Armenia conditional
    on a settlement in Nagorno-Karabakh during a visit to Baku last week.

    He said he, his students and the department of Turkology follow the
    developments in Turkey closely. "We read Turkish newspapers every day,"
    he said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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