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Obama, Turkey Must Bear Witness To History Of Genocide

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  • Obama, Turkey Must Bear Witness To History Of Genocide

    OBAMA, TURKEY MUST BEAR WITNESS TO HISTORY OF GENOCIDE
    Robert Fullam

    UConn Daily Campus
    http://www.dailycampus.com/commentary/obama-turke y-must-bear-witness-to-history-of-genocide-1.14320 06
    April 27 2010
    CT

    On April 24 of every year, it has been tradition that the President
    of the United States speaks on the Armenian genocide. This Saturday,
    President Barack Obama kept up with another tradition by speaking
    about the incident while omitting the word "genocide."

    This year marks the 95th anniversary of the Armenian genocide,
    committed during WorldWar I by the Committee for Union and Progress,
    ruling party of the Ottoman Empire. Today, its modern heir, the
    Republic of Turkey, prides itself on being a Western nation-state based
    on democracy and secularism. This painful process of creating a new
    national identity in the ruins of a multi-ethnic and multi-religious
    empire includes keeping parts of Turkey's history in the past.

    American presidents have been reluctant to speak on the Armenian
    genocide due to Turkey's sensitivity on the subject. Turkey is a
    NATO ally and is one out of only two majority-Muslim nations in NATO,
    the other being Albania. Turkey is secular, with a pro-Western tilt,
    and has the second-largest standing army in NATO.

    It's the United States' only ally in the Middle East beside Israel,
    and is used as a base for the movement of troops and equipment to
    Iraq and Afghanistan. So, when they threaten to cut our access to
    their airbases for troops, we cave. They are indispensable, and they
    know it - they use it as leverage.

    Turkey calls any recognition of the events that took place in 1915
    genocide defamation of the Turkish nation and slander. Most would
    find it problematic that we invest so much into a country that acts
    like a child who does not get the toy he or she wants.

    I think Obama should call their bluff and refer to the Armenian
    genocide as what the vast majority of scholars worldwide see it as:
    a genocide. For a country that prizes itself on modernity, Turkey
    seems to cling to its past. In Turkey itself, there is a law,
    Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code, which makes it a crime to
    insult "Turkishness." Writers and journalists have been charged for
    mentioning the continuing conflicts with Kurdish nationalists and
    the Armenian genocide. Turkey seems to think that recognizing the
    genocide counts as an insult to "Turkishness."

    Obama should speak about the issue and make it clear that this is not
    meant to slander the Republic of Turkey, but rather bear witness to
    the crimes of the Ottoman Empire. The sins of the parents should not
    be passed on to the child, but the child should be able to understand
    what their parents did wrong. Turkey fears that any recognition of the
    Armenian genocide will result in demands for land and reparations from
    genocide survivors and their families. Turkey should be comforted to
    know that it is virtually impossible in Armenia to take back lands
    in previous treaties, ones that were superseded by many more, and
    reparations would be a logistical nightmare.

    We do not have to agree on everything and our interpretations of
    history may differ. It's as if Turkey feels like we are the only
    country that "legislates history" by mentioning the word genocide, but
    every day when we commemorate something or have a memorial somewhere,
    we put our own spin and opinion into it. Not every country will have
    the same feelings.

    The Armenian genocide should be brought into the open. By forcing the
    opinions of Armenians and Turks on each other, it stifles the public's
    ability to move toward a healthier understanding of what happened in
    1915. Obama is entitled to his opinion that it was genocide, as he
    affirmed on the campaign trail but not in the Oval Office. Turkey,
    if so confident in its position, should let people decide. The facts
    will speak for themselves.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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