Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Campus Should Hear Both Sides of the Story

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Campus Should Hear Both Sides of the Story

    Campus Should Hear Both Sides of the Story
    By MUSTAFA ERGEN

    The Daily Californian
    May 6 2005

    Friday, May 6, 2005

    As representatives of the Turkish student population of the campus, we
    deeply believe that the campus community deserves the right to hear the
    story from both sides in order to have a fair judgment on the issue.

    The Armenian community throughout the Ottoman territories lived as
    loyal and, in certain aspects, privileged subjects of the sultan.
    They could serve as ministers, ambassadors, commercial envoys and in
    other such capacities.

    However, beginning in the last quarter of the 19th century, external
    provocation from separatist Armenian bands started fomenting
    insurrection among the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire.
    These bands organized several rebellions in various provinces during
    which thousands of Muslims were killed.

    At the very beginning of World War I, they joined the invading
    Russian forces. They raided the Ottoman supply depots, savagely
    attacked Turkish cities, towns and villages in Eastern Anatolia,
    massacring inhabitants without mercy and doing whatever possible to
    ease the Russian military advance. Their hope was that participation
    in the Russian success would be rewarded with an independent Armenian
    state carved out of Ottoman territories.

    In response to these uprisings and massacres by Armenians, the Ottoman
    government ordered the relocation of the Armenian population from
    the war zone to southern regions of the Empire.

    To describe the events that took place during the relocation of the
    Armenian subjects of the Empire in 1915 as "genocide" is baseless.
    The fundamental element of "genocide" is "an intention" to destroy a
    group in part or as a whole. The Ottoman archives, under the control
    of the Entente states at the end of World War I, are full of government
    decrees proving the contrary.

    Objective historical studies clearly show that allegations that there
    was a premeditated plan to annihilate the empire's Armenian population
    by the Ottoman Empire is unfounded.

    Armenian insistence on viewing themselves as the only victims of
    the sufferings in Anatolia during World War I fuels today's racial
    animosity and is a feeble attempt to justify Armenian terrorism in
    recent history which has claimed the lives of 75 people of different
    nationalities, 34 of them Turkish diplomats and their family members.


    We are against the exploitation of this tragic episode of history
    for political purposes. In order to shed light on such a historical
    issue, the Turkish government has opened the Ottoman archives
    and made available four centuries' worth of documents regarding
    the Ottoman Armenians. These include the records of deliberations
    of the Council of Ministers for the years 1914-1922. Furthermore,
    we encourage historians, academics and researchers to discuss this
    historical issue in every platform.

    The Ottoman Empire was a multi-ethnic and multi-faith empire spread
    over a vast geography. During its slow disintegration everybody
    suffered alike. 5 million people-mostly civilian Muslims-died during
    this process.

    The primary sources of our common history should be the Ottoman
    archives, not the propaganda brochures of the countries that were at
    war with the Ottoman Empire.

    In Turkey, the historical archives are open to researchers. As the
    classification process is completed, more documents are becoming open
    to researchers. Access to the Ottoman archives through the Internet
    is possible. But unfortunately, we don't come across references to
    these documents in recent publications.

    Turkey always maintained that parliaments and other political
    institutions are not the appropriate forums to discuss or pass judgment
    on the disputed periods of history. History is a science and past
    events should be left to historians for judgment. In Turkey, every
    era in history can be discussed openly without any interference. We
    would like to see the same kind of approach in other countries as well.

    For this purpose, on March 8 our Prime Minister made a joint
    declaration with Deniz Baykal, the leader of the main opposition
    party. The declaration proposes that Turkish and Armenian historians
    examine the historical facts together. We call Armenia and other
    relevant countries to open their archives as well.

    Mustafa Ergen is president of the Berkeley Turkish Student
    Association. Reply at [email protected].
Working...
X