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Turkey-Armenia: Turkish Historians seek the truth

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  • Turkey-Armenia: Turkish Historians seek the truth

    ANSAmed, Italy
    June 11 2010


    TURKEY-ARMENIA: TURKISH HISTORIANS SEEK THE TRUTH


    (ANSAmed) - ANKARA - The aim of an ambitious project launched by
    Turkey's Historical Society is to finally shed some light on almost a
    century of tense and often stormy relations between Turks and
    Armenians, but also to try and understand what really happened to
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians massacred under the Ottoman Empire.
    The Society has started a vast research operation which is expected to
    involve around 300 historians and experts from dozens of countries.
    The dispute between Armenia and Turkey has been ongoing for almost 100
    years as a result of the massacres of Armenians (over a million,
    according to Yerevan, a much lower figure for Ankara) between 1915 and
    1916, during the Ottoman Empire, which Armenians believe constitutes
    genocide. This definition has always been dismissed by Turkey, which
    says that the dead were victims of a bloody civil war in which
    thousands of Turks also died. The project, according to Anadolu news
    agency, is entitled 'Turkish-Armenian relations in history and the
    Armenian issue' and will feature over 500 research documents and
    articles. Participants in the painstaking initiative are hoping to
    complete the most complete research work ever undertaken on the
    Armenian question, which could turn out to be a reference milestone
    for the historians of today and tomorrow. Professor Enis Sahin, head
    of the Department of Armenian Studies at the Turkish Historical
    Society and director of the research team, said that the project
    (which was announced last year) would involve experts from dozens of
    countries including Italy, Chile, Azerbaijan, France, the United
    States, Brazil, Argentina and Armenia itself. ''When we started this
    project, we thought that it would all be contained within 5,000-6,000
    pages. But it now looks as though, by the time it is finished, there
    will be a series of about 20 volumes of 600-700 pages each. It will be
    a sort of encyclopedia,'' said Sahin. The study will include a bulk of
    information starting at the beginning of the Armenian saga, crossing
    all periods of history, including the Byzantines (610-1453), the
    Seljuqs (1030-1157) and the Ottomans (1299-1923). The work will also
    feature a number of chapters on migration by Armenians across the
    centuries, their diaspora and the modern Armenian lobbies around the
    world. This sort of encyclopedia on Armenia, Sahin said, will be
    published next year ahead of preparations that have already begun in
    Yerevan to commemorate the 100th anninversary of the Armenian massacre
    in 2015. (ANSAmed).

    http://www.ansamed.info/en/top/ME13.XAM18053.html




    From: A. Papazian
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