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AMSTERDAM: Can there be reconciliation without recognition?

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  • AMSTERDAM: Can there be reconciliation without recognition?

    Radio Netherlands
    June 9 2010


    Can there be reconciliation without recognition?


    Published on : 9 June 2010 - 2:48pm | By Robin van Wechem (RNW)

    Almost a hundred years after the mass killing of over a million
    Armenians by the Ottoman Empire, the subject is still an open wound
    for both Armenians and Turks.

    While most scholars agree that what happened in 1915 constitutes a
    genocide, Turkey refuses to accept the term, in part, says sociologist
    Samantha Power, because they "don't want to be put in the same company
    as Hitler." For Armenians, though, acknowledgment is a necessary first
    step towards coming to terms with the past.

    The fourth instalment of "The Circle of Genocide" film and debate
    series was about reconciliation and coming to terms in the aftermath
    of mass violence. The controversial case of the Armenian genocide
    served as the starting point for the evening's discussion, organised
    by Radio Netherlands Worldwide and the Centre for Holocaust and
    Genocide Studies.

    The evening began with a screening of the 2006 PBS documentary "The
    Armenian Genocide" - which laid out the events of 1915 and strongly
    criticised Turkey for failing to recognize the events as a genocide.

    And we'd like to know what you think. Is it ever possible for victims
    and perpetrators to reconcile after a genocide or mass killing? If so,
    what conditions need to be met before a society can start to heal its
    wounds?

    http://www.rnw.nl/international-justice/article/can-there-be-reconciliation-without-recognition




    From: A. Papazian
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