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  • Report: An Intergenerational Approach to the Study of Genocide

    Assyrian International News Agency
    AINA (press release)
    July 10 2011


    Report: An Intergenerational Approach to the Study of Genocide


    Posted GMT 7-10-2011 5:39:1

    The workshop entitled, 'An Intergenerational Approach to the Study of
    Genocide' convened from June 10--16, 2011 in Rijssen, the Netherlands.
    Inanna Foundation organized the workshop with the aim to bring
    scholars and promising students and activists together to study the
    consequences of genocides, more specifically the genocide of the
    Assyrians during the First World War. There were about 24 participants
    from various European countries and the United States who made
    presentations, and dozens more who attended from European countries as
    observers and participants during question-and-answer sessions. The
    workshop was financed by the European Union within the framework of
    Grundtvig Lifelong Learning Programme. The organizers and participants
    were very pleased with the results of the workshop, which were a
    collective achievement of the participants. The organizers aim to
    publish an edited volume based on the contributions made during the
    workshop and on papers submitted by other scholars who have shown
    interest but could not participate to the workshop.

    The workshop was covered as a news item on SuroyoTV and will be
    broadcasted in the near future in several chapters or in a documentary
    format. SuroyoTV is available in America on the satellite Galaxy25
    11929, (V), 22000, FEC 1/2, and in Europe and Asia on the satellite
    Hotbird 13deg E 11317, (V), 27500, FEC 3/4.

    June 11

    Naures Atto of Leiden University (Religious Studies Ph.D. program) and
    Soner Önder of the Inanna Foundation welcomed the participants,
    introduced the agenda and opened the workshop. In their opening
    speech, they elaborated on the importance for later generations of
    resolving the dilemma between remembering and forgetting the
    experiences of genocide. They explained that the Inanna Foundation has
    aimed at bringing the voices of different generations together in
    order to make a first step in touching on diverse aspects of the Seyfo
    as one example of a genocide committed in the 20th Century. They
    furthermore emphasized the importance of bringing together academics
    in different fields in order to develop a network of people who can
    collaborate on efforts to study the Seyfo from an interdisciplinary
    perspective.

    Prof. David Gaunt of Södertörn University (History) and author of
    Massacres, Resistance Protectors: Muslim-Christian Relations in
    Eastern Anatolia during World War I gave the keynote lecture on The
    Place of Seyfo in Modern Genocide Research. He described a transition
    from a first generation of genocide scholarship focused on the
    Holocaust on an archetypal case and the gas chambers of Auschwitz as
    an ideal type against which to measure genocides, to second and third
    generations engaged in comparative research into other genocides
    during the world wars, European colonization, civil wars, and other
    contexts. This transition has proven to be propitious for the study of
    Assyrian genocide insofar as it adds to our knowledge of analogous
    cases, and legitimizes the study of Seyfo despite some dissimilarities
    with the Auschwitz component of the Holocaust.

    Dr. Ton Zwaan of the University of Amsterdam (Center for Holocaust and
    Genocide Studies) explored the Transgenerational Consequences of
    Genocide. He argued that genocide represents an extremely vicious
    disruption of social processes with long term effects. The state is
    typically centrally, intentionally involved, leading to the victims'
    deep sense of disorientation, loss of the social and political context
    in which their lives had meaning, loss of nearly of their property,
    and migration requiring building new lives. Victims may, generations
    later, experience a heightened awareness of vulnerability, threat, and
    impunity of their oppressors to punishment, as well as a breach of
    trust with society and the world. This breach of trust leads to weak
    institutions and leadership on the part of the victim group. Guilt and
    shame emerge as normal mourning processes are prevented by the large
    number of victims and small number of survivors. Healthy integration
    into society and coming to grips with the past can lead to recovery.
    The conditions for such recovery include truthful historical
    understanding, open public discussion, justice and compensation, and
    collective remembrance at the institutional level.

    Dr. Ugur Ümit Üngör,Assistant Professor of History at Utrecht
    University, described Eastern Turkey as a Zone of Violence and the
    Destruction of Ottoman Christians. He analyzed eastern Anatolia as a
    multi-generational zone of ethnic and religious violence. He argued
    that the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) was lost power in 1918,
    though its middle managers took leading roles in the Turkish Republic
    under Mustafa Kemal and even into the 1940s. A prominent example was
    Mustafa Renda, responsible for the destruction of the Ottoman
    Christians of Bitlis province from 1915-1918, allowed to return from
    the Malta trials established by Article 230 of the Treaty of Sčvres,
    and subsequently appointed to leading roles in the province of
    Smyrna/Izmir, the Ministry of Economy, the Ministry of Interior, the
    Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Defense, and the Turkish
    parliament. Dr. Üngör argued that the Ottoman Christian minorities
    were destroyed as a result of escalation of ethnic conflict at the
    provincial level. He argued that eastern Anatolia experienced similar
    events in areas experiencing Kurdish rebellions in 1925, 1930, and
    1937-38, in Thrace in 1934 as the Jews were targeted, in Marash in
    1921, and in Ararat in 1930. Among others, Dr. Üngör displayed a
    photograph from the Deutsche Bank archive showing Kurds being loaded
    onto railcars for their deportations in the 1930s.

    Prof. Ciano Aydin of the University of Twente and Delft University of
    Technology (Philosophy) spoke on "Collective Trauma and Cultural
    Identity." There is a complex relationship between identity and
    trauma, which can transform some individual or group identities while
    solidifying others, or creating solidarity. Collective trauma is
    distinguished from individual trauma on the mass basis and
    difficulties coping. Dr. Aydin furthermore elaborated on the effects
    of collective trauma, which cause a discontinuity and disorganization
    for the group who experience the traumatic event. Taking a departure
    from Nietzsche's concept of "active forgetting", Dr. Aydin endeavored
    to show how it is possible to overcome the experienced trauma.

    Dr. Önver Cetrez, Assistant Professor at Uppsala University (Religion)
    surveyed 'Genocide and Posttraumatic Stress in a Generational
    Perspective: Examples from Different Cases.' Psychologists have
    identified a 'complex' of processes by which post-traumatic stress can
    have transgenerational effects, impacting the identity, relationships,
    and culture of the children and grandchildren of survivors. Some
    survivors struggle with issues of isolation, overprotectiveness, and
    integration into society due to difficulties with communication and
    trust. Separation anxiety, fear, rage, and compassion are common
    issues emerging in research on second-generation survivors. Silence
    and repression as a result of a failure to share experiences and imbue
    them with meaning can lead to second-generation alienation and doubt.
    The American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical
    Manual of Mental Disorders-Fifth Edition identifies the symptoms of
    post-traumatic stress disorder as (1) exposure to a traumatic event,
    (2) involving death or a threat of death or injury and a response
    characterized by fear or horror, (3) a persistent reexperiencing of
    the event through distressing memories of the event, distressing
    dreams of the event, flashbacks or a feeling of reliving the
    experience, intense emotional distress when encountering symbols or
    things associated with the traumatic event, (4) persistent avoidance
    of symbols or things associated with the traumatic event and a feeling
    of numbness especially when accompanied by efforts to avoid thinking
    about or discussing the trauma, encountering people or places related
    to it, forgetting important aspects of it, non-participation in normal
    daily activities, estrangement from other persons, abnormally
    repressed feelings, a sense that live will be short, and (5)
    persistent new symptoms of anxiety such as difficulty sleeping, anger
    or irritability, finding it tough to concentrate, and (6) significant
    effects on one's career, social relations, or activities as a result
    of all of this.

    Aryo Makko of Stockholm University (History Ph.D. program) gave a
    presentation entitled, 'From "Forgotten Genocide" to the "Main Pillar
    of Identity": The Role of Seyfo in Contemporary Assyrian
    Historiography.' He argued that from being understood by scholars of
    Assyrian history as a mostly forgotten trauma, the perception of Seyfo
    has changed in recent years as being an important unifying event for
    Assyrians, otherwise divided on denominational and geographical
    grounds. The shared experience and knowledge of the Seyfo serve as
    common ground for the Western, Eastern, and Persian Assyrians.

    June 12

    Prof. Efrem Yildiz of Salamanca University (Faculty Philology, Hebrew
    and Aramaic studies) detailed The Armenian and Assyrian Eyewitness
    Report Through the Eyewitness Testimony of Israel Audo and Jacques
    Rhétoré. Israel Audo was the bishop of Mardin at the time of Seyfo.
    Jacques Rhétoré was a French Dominican monk from Mosul who was
    deported to Mardin, where 75,000 Assyrians lived. Rhétoré wrote that
    hundreds of Assyrian clerics were captured, and virtually all killed.
    Prof. Yildiz explained that Israel Odo gives much of the same
    information as Rhétoré. They both discussed the death of Addai Sher,
    the Chaldean Archbishop of Siirt, at some length. Rhétoré's text 'Les
    chrétiens aux bętes/Christians to the Beasts: Souvenirs de la guerre
    sainte proclamée par les Turcs contre les chrétiens en 1915' is
    available in a Spanish edition.

    Prof. David Gaunt of Södertörn University (History) described 'The
    Sources for the History of Seyfo '. The sources include British,
    American, French, German, and Russian diplomatic and other official
    documents, the Vatican archives, memoirs such as those of Jacques
    Rhétoré, Hyac in the Simon, Jean Naayem, Lady Surma d'Bait Mar Shimun,
    and academic studies by Gabrielle Yonan and other authors. The
    submissions of the Assyro-Chaldean delegation to the Paris Peace
    Conference are also important. Prof. Gaunt discussed an extensive
    bibliography put together by himself, Jan Bet-Sawoce, and Racho Donef.
    These same individuals are working to translate the journal L'Action
    assyro-chaldéenne from French to English.

    Jan Bet-Sawoce of Södertörn University (Mesopotamian Library) gave 'A
    Short Study of the Sayfo Issue in the Vatican Archives.' The Vatican
    archives are important because three French Dominican monks were
    eyewitnesses to Seyfo in Mardin. In addition, a special papal delegate
    created reports on each province of the Ottoman Empire, and the
    condition of the Christians therein, for the Vatican foreign affairs
    department. The Vatican documents contain first-hand reports of how
    the town criers (tallals) disseminated the call for holy war against
    Christians throughout the empire, resulting in massacres. Local
    reports of massacres in Urhoy, Kharput, Mardin, Siirt, Bitlis, and
    other places were sent in 1915. Massacres in Urmi and Salamas in 1918
    are the subject of further reports sent in 1918.

    Prof. Hannibal Travis of Florida International University (Law) and
    author of the book "Genocide in the Middle East: The Ottoman Empire,
    Iraq, and Sudan" explored: Constructing "The Armenian Genocide": How
    Genocide Scholars Unremembered the Ottoman Assyrians. He argued that
    although genocide scholars have tended since the 1960s to describe the
    late Ottoman Empire's genocidal policies as solely an "Armenian
    Genocide," a growing consensus describes these events as a general
    Ottoman Christian genocide. Several books and articles were published
    from 1966 through 2010 detailing an Armenian genocide that claimed 1.2
    to 1.5 million lives, but failing to mention or even minimizing the
    death toll among Assyrians and Greeks. Scholars of the Armenian
    genocide often state that there were more than two million Armenians
    in 1914, and virtually none remaining in Turkey by 1923. They often
    neglect to state, however, that there were more than 500,000 Assyrians
    in 1914, and that in Turkey in 1919, the Assyrian population was
    actually smaller than the Armenian population. In addition, the
    Assyrian population of Persia was much more dramatically affected by
    the Ottoman occupation of northern Persia than was the Armenian
    population, which actually grew from the 1850s to the 1950s, in
    contrast to the Assyrian population which fell dramatically. The
    reasons why Armenian genocide scholars neglect the Assyrian genocide
    include ignorance, statistical questions, and pure politics. The
    sources most often used by Armenian genocide scholars describe the
    same methods being employed to kill and expel Assyrian communities
    living in close proximity to Armenian communities.

    Dr. Andrew Palmer of Münster University spoke on U-gubo da-qTiloye --
    The Cistern of the Slaughtered Christians and Muslims in M'arre. His
    topic was the village of M'aare, which he identified with the Castra
    Maurorum or Castle of Maure, and the fourth-century fortress of
    M'arrin. M'aare sits on the former Persian/Byzantine Roman border, and
    was the site of conflict between Syrian Orthodox and Church of the
    East Christians. Tur Abdin and M'arre jutted into Persian territory,
    dividing the Church of the East believers in Batman and Nisibis from
    one another to some extent. The Assyrians of M'arre were massacred
    during World War I, many of their bodies dumped down the cistern or
    town well.

    June 13

    Prof. Michael Abdalla of Poznan University explored Opportunities and
    Barriers to Disseminating the Holocaust of the Assyrians in Poland. He
    described the need for Christian churches and large organizations like
    universities to discuss Assyrians' whole history, not in pieces. He
    described difficulties in attempting to speak on Assyrian persecution
    in the Ottoman Empire and Iraq at the Catholic University of Warsaw,
    one of whose faculty forbade students to attend an event organized by,
    what they still call "heretics". He explored reasons why Polish
    institutions might be willing to raise funds for Georgia or Japan, but
    less often for Christian Assyrians in Iraq. Nevertheless, some members
    of the Polish church have been very active in facilitating Prof.
    Abdalla's speeches on the Ottoman and Iraqi Assyrians, which have been
    well attended. In addition, the Church/People in Distress organization
    Poland invited Archbishop Louis Sako from Iraq to speak, and he was
    interviewed or profiled in numerous Polish newspapers and television
    programs.

    Scharbil Raid Gharib of the University of Tübingen (Politics, Ph.D.
    Programme) presented a talk on 'Sword and Betrayal--The Repercussions
    of Seyfo on the Syriac Speaking Communities.' He identified several
    internal and external factors that have blocked the inclusion of
    Syriac speaking people in the modern world. External factors involve
    depopulation and dispersion as a result of Seyfo, and internal factors
    relate to the culture, politics, and religion of Syriac speaking
    communities. Malik Kambar criticized the diplomats of the West for
    dividing the Assyrian nation in their own interests. The
    denominational division of the Assyrian/Syriac nation represented a
    further betrayal. In the aftermath of Seyfo, the leaders of the Syriac
    speaking people presented demands aimed at reversing both betrayals,
    including liberation from the Turkish and Persian yoke, reparations
    for material damage, and a unified Assyrian state under a League of
    Nations mandate. Similarly, Archbishop Ignatious Afram I Barsoum
    demanded that the delegates to the Paris Peace Conference guarantee
    the Syriac speaking people French protection, reparations for lost
    churches, monasteries, and schools, and the same material aid as
    Armenians. Mar Shimun's representatives asked for British protection
    with an autonomous patriarchal government, with boundaries from
    Bashkala and Bitlis in the north to Jazireh in the southeast. The last
    remaining sources of Assyrian unity were lost with the exile of Agha
    Petros by the British and French, and the massacres at Simele which
    destroyed the last remaining power of the Assyrians, politically and
    militarily.

    Sabri Atman of Seyfo Center described 'Seyfo Activities at the
    International Level.' Activism and scholarship have contributed to the
    recognition of the Assyrian genocide by the Swedish parliament, the
    South Australia parliament, the local government of New South Wales in
    Australia, and several governors of the State of New York. A monument
    was erected in Fairfield, Australia. Monuments also exist in Chicago,
    Illinois and Los Angeles, California. Seyfo Center has been active in
    documenting the Assyrian genocide, representing the Assyrian cause in
    governmental and intergovernmental institutions, and educating
    non-Assyrians and Assyrians alike in educational and political fora.
    It is a resource for academics, journalists, politicians, and
    filmmakers.

    Dr. Jan van Ginkel of Leiden University spoke on 1917: A New Bishop in
    Amid/Diyarbakir. Who was Mor Dionysus 'Abd an-Nur Aslan? He told a
    fascinating story of a bishop with strong social connections, who was
    transferred from Harput to Syria in 1913, and became bishop of
    Diyarbakir in 1917. The appointment represented the hope of the Syrian
    Orthodox church that Diyarbakir would again become a center of Syrian
    Orthodox life in the aftermath of the Seyfo, a hope unrealized.

    Abdulmesih BarAbraham of the Yoken-Bar-Yoken Foundation described
    Turkey's Key Arguments in Denying the Assyrian Genocide. He summarized
    the works of Salahi Ramadan Sonyel and Bulent Ozdemir on the Assyrian
    genocide, which emphasize that the Assyrians were the 'smallest Ally'
    of Britain and Russia, who rebelled against Ottoman Empire. In
    addition, both play down the effect of the events on the Assyrians,
    claiming that Assyrians had long lived together in peace with Turks
    and Kurds, and suffered flight from their homes and losses in battle
    as a result. In 1931, the Republic of Turkey issued a directive on the
    teaching of history from a Kemalist slant. The Turkish Historical
    Society enjoys a constitutional mandate under article 134 of the
    constitution of 2005. The Assyrian section of the society was set up
    in 2007 under the leadership of Bulent Özdemir. Özdemir argues that
    the Jacobites of Mardin, Midyat, Diyarbakir and Mosul lived in peace
    because they did not rebel, while the Assyrians of Hakkari, Van and
    Urmia suffered losses because they joined with Russia in the war. The
    Society's stand is denial of any wrongdoing by the Turks; to blame are
    external powers, missionaries, and the victims for what happened. In
    their narrative, there was no planned genocide, but some armed
    robberies and outbreaks of illness.

    Ibrahim Seven, an independent activist, explored 'Seyfo in the Turkish
    and Kurdish Media.' A number of books have been published in Turkey by
    Turkish and Kurdish authors who recognize the Assyrian genocide,
    including not only Seyfo but the genocide perpetrated in the 1840s by
    Turks and Kurds. Mr. Seven described some of these books, the
    backgrounds of their authors, and their findings.

    June 14

    Tour of Amsterdam including the Jewish Historical Museum and Anne
    Frank House Museum.

    June 15

    Prof. Shabo Talay of the University of Bergen (Arabic and Aramaic)
    described the 'Impacts of Seyfo on the Aramaic Language.'
    Aramaic-speakers have suffered linguistic genocide due to direct
    killings, outlawing of their language, and exclusion from their
    traditional homes and communities. There has been a sharp decline in
    Aramaic speakers, because a language needs a culture, and the culture
    of Aramaic-speakers is changing as a result of living in diaspora. Dr.
    Talay described how Aramaic-speaking youth growing up in the wake of
    Seyfo would suffer punishment in Turkish schools for using Aramaic
    words and were forced to recite poems saying 'my father is a Turk' and
    so on. He explored how Seyfo is often referred to in Aramaic as a
    firman, the etymology of which reflects both a decree and
    cutting/killing/decapitating. Aramaic also uses kafla, which means
    deport or 'pursue', for Seyfo. He described the 1993 attack on the
    village of Hassan/Hasanna, in which 300 families of Protestant,
    Chaldean and Syrian Orthodox Christians fled the last base of Aramaic
    speakers in Turkey east of the Tigris river, many of them moving to
    Mechelen in the 1990s. This was the death knell of a dialect of
    Aramaic east of the Tigris.

    Nineb Lamassu of the School or Oriental and African Studies,
    University of London (Assyriology) spoke on a 'Private Archive of
    Malik Yaqu and Malik Ismael and Early Attempts at Compensation for
    Seyfo .' The maliks of the Assyrians living in the United States in
    the 1960s learned that Germany had paid over $800 million in
    reparations to the Jews for the Holocaust, and explored in private
    communications the tabulation of Assyrian losses due to Seyfo,
    especially churches and agricultural lands and flocks, for a lawsuit
    seeking compensation from Turkey. Mr. Lamassu reviewed several letters
    from private archives he has consulted in the United States during his
    participation in the Modern Assyrian Research Archive project. He
    described how MARA will help scholars engaged in similar research in
    the future.

    Naures Atto of Leiden University (Religious Studies Ph.D. program)
    reviewed the history of song lyrics about Seyfo in a talk entitled.
    'Lyrics about the Seyfo.' She described the evolution of this music
    from traditional to more contemporary formats such as hip-hop or rap.

    Mousa Elias of the Royal Academy of Music in Stockholm spoke on 'The
    Place of Seyfo in Mousa Elias' Music.' He described his collaboration
    with an Assyrian poet and the preparation of the melody prior to
    asking for the lyrics to be written. He then delivered a very moving
    performance of his music on the Seyfo.

    Nahrin Malki Atto, an independent artist, presented and discussed her
    Seyfo -related paintings. She passed around examples of her work and
    talked about the tension between evoking Seyfo without being too
    didactic about doing so.

    In the Open Session, two MA students presented their work. Sanharib
    Demir of Bielefeld University (Politics) spoke on 'Seyfo --A Result of
    Conflicting National Identities.' He described the importance of
    Assyrian national identity in the pre-war Ottoman context, as
    exemplified by the use of names such as Sanharib to evoke the Assyrian
    nations' past. He analyzed how the rise of racism and ultranationalism
    in the Ottoman Empire set the stage for genocide, referring
    specifically to the theories of Young Turk ideologist Ziya Gokalp. Oya
    Nuzumlali of Sabanci University (Cultural Studies) explored
    'Configurations of Genocide: The Case of Chaldeans in Istanbul.' She
    described preparing survey research on the Chaldean community in
    Istanbul today. She explored potential challenges in conducting such a
    study, and ways of facing them. She argued that the Chaldean community
    in Istanbul bears the scars of a past genocide, including fear of
    outsiders, heightened religiosity to the exclusion of worldly
    pursuits, and dispersion globally. Many Chaldeans have come from Iraq
    in recent years due to persecution, yet some view Istanbul as a mere
    wayplace en route to Europe, the United States, or elsewhere.

    In an event after the closing dinner which was organized to honor the
    Seyfo -related work by David Gaunt, several participants gave a speech
    and handed him a present. The invited musician Mousa Elias entertained
    the audience with his oud, a session which continued until midnight.

    By Hannibal Travis
    www.inannafoundation.org

    http://www.aina.org/news/20110710003901.htm



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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