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Turkey should face the past. Yavuz Baydar

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  • Turkey should face the past. Yavuz Baydar

    Turkey should face the past. Yavuz Baydar

    20:18, 19 September, 2012

    YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 19, ARMENPRESS: Apology, in my opinion, is
    secondary. First and foremost, the emphasis should be on this
    society's courage to face the sins of the past. We were deprived of it
    until today. This is a frightened society. I am not ashamed to say
    this: We were fed this fear, we were scared throughout all our lives.
    Our ruling system has been based on fear. We have to change that. The
    only way is to confront our past. As Armenpress reports citing
    Huffington Post, these are the words of Ä°shak Alaton, a prominent
    octogenarian Turkish businessman of Jewish origin. After releasing his
    memoirs not so long ago, Alaton has become more and more vocal,
    calling endlessly for an end to the bloody Kurdish conflict as one of
    the "wise men" ready to be part of a dialogue on reconciliation,
    asking for the courage to face the crimes that were committed during
    the collapse of Ottoman rule and asking citizens to speak out. When a
    ship called the Struma was dragged to the port of Old Ä°stanbul in
    1941, Alaton was a 15-year-old witness to the agony onboard. The
    60-year-old vessel was the last hope of 769 Romanian Jews fleeing the
    Nazis, but its engines had stopped at the Black Sea end of the
    Bosporus. The issue led to pressure on Ankara from Adolf Hitler's
    regime, and after 72 days of despair, the Struma was sent by Turkish
    authorities back into the Black Sea, where it was torpedoed by the
    Soviet navy. Only one person survived. "Those responsible for this in
    Ankara are, to my mind, murderers. This society, of which I am a part,
    has a problem with hiding from its past. We pretend that if we lock
    them away the problems will be gone. But the corpses that rot in there
    poison the air that we breathe. Is any serenity possible without
    confrontation? Let us do it, so that we can make peace with the past."
    The Struma disaster, a hidden episode in the republic's history, is
    the subject of a new book written by Halit Kakınç, and its preface is
    written by, yes, Alaton himself. It is not for nothing the subject of
    "genies out of the bottle." is to persist on the agenda of Turkey,
    opened up in a sort of "Turkish perestroika" by the ruling Justice and
    Development Party (AKP) in the past decade. And, only days after the
    release of the Struma book, another hit the shelves -- a potential
    intellectual bombshell. "1915: Armenian Genocide" is its title and,
    not only due to its cover but also its groundbreaking content, it
    overwhelms many others on the subject that have been published. What
    makes the book outstanding and unique is that it was written by Hasan
    Cemal, an internationally renowned editor and columnist who is the
    grandson of Cemal Pasha. This kinship is key to understanding the
    book's historic significance: Cemal Pasha was a member of the
    triumvirate, whose other parts were Talat and Enver Pasha, responsible
    for the Great Armenian Tragedy, which started with a mass deportation
    of Ottoman Armenians from their homelands and ended with their
    annihilation between 1915 through 1916. In his account, Hasan Cemal
    concludes it was genocide. He does not intend, or pretend, to argue
    his case like a historian would. His is a painful intellectual journey
    that takes us through his own evolution, a rather ruthless
    self-scrutiny of his intellectual past that amounts to an invaluable
    piece of private archeology. He has done this before. In other books,
    he questioned his "militarist revolutionary" past, confronting boldly
    his own mistakes his deep disbelief in democracy, plotting coups, his
    experience as newspaper editor, etc. But this one is even more
    personal. "It was the pain of Hrant Dink which made me write this
    book," he told the press. Dink was a dear Turkish-Armenian colleague
    to many of us, as he was to Cemal. He was assassinated in broad
    daylight on a street of Istanbul by a lone gunman in January 2007,
    sending shockwaves around the world. "Look at my age; it's been years
    and years that I have defended the freedom of expression. But should I
    keep secret some of my opinions, only for myself? Should I still have
    some taboos of my own? Should I still remain unliberated? Is it not a
    shame on me, Hasan Cemal?" In the preface, he writes: "We cannot
    remain silent before the bitter truths of the past. We cannot let the
    past hold the present captive. Also, the pain of 1915 does not belong
    to the past, it is an issue of today. We can only make peace with
    history, but not an 'invented' or 'distorted' history like ours, and
    reach liberty." The pain of Dink's memory, which scarred many of us
    so eternally may have been a crucial point for it, but by turning a
    "personal taboo-breaking" into a public one, Cemal opened a huge hole
    in the wall of denial of the state. It broke another mental dam. This
    bold exercise in freedom of speech will, in time, pave the way for the
    correct path. It is up to the individuals of Turkey to do the same,
    and bow before their consciences. Perhaps this is why there has been
    such silence over this book in the days since its publication. It is
    also very difficult to find in bookstores. There are rumors that some
    chains are refusing to sell it. This may be true, but it cannot now be
    unpublished. The genie is out of the bottle but the ghosts of the past
    are also very much alive. The "silent treatment" is proof of that. If
    anything, it shows how frightened people are. Not only does the state
    owe an apology for the past, but an even bigger apology is necessary
    for enforcing, decade after decade, a mass internalization of
    denialism in this country.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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