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'Bastards Of The Infidels'

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  • 'Bastards Of The Infidels'

    'BASTARDS OF THE INFIDELS'

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/11/14/bastards-of-the-infidels/
    By Eric Nazarian // November 14, 2013

    Reflections on the Hrant Dink Foundation's Conference on Islamized
    Armenians

    "Bastards," "infidels," "remains of the sword" were the derogatory
    words directed at Armenian survivors of the genocide in Turkey as
    well as their offspring. Under this same umbrella was another set of
    "bastards" who were Christian Armenians forcibly or willingly converted
    to Islam in the wake of the genocide.

    Photo by Eric Nazarian

    This was one of the many topics covered over the course of three
    eye-opening days at the Hrant Dink Foundation's Conference on
    "Islamized Armenians" on the Bogazici University campus in Istanbul.

    We heard lectures and panels comprised of international scholars
    presenting a myriad of oral and academic histories about forcibly
    Islamized Armenians, as well as the histories of the willingly
    converted that bridge and divide these communities. The conference
    was a platform for these unofficial minorities, a sort of "People's
    History of Islamized Armenians," to borrow half of Howard Zinn's
    title. This percentage of the Turkish population is the resurfacing
    "remains of the sword."

    The conference began with a remarkable and open-hearted speech by
    Rakel Dink that echoed the humanist ideals of her late husband, Hrant.

    The president of the university then enthusiastically welcomed the
    attendees and made it clear she supported this conference. Hrant's
    spirit hovered everywhere. The energy, respect, and openness of his
    legacy was palpable as we watched and listened to the mellifluous voice
    of Fetiye Cetin tell the story of how her grandmother had survived the
    genocide. And of a certain spot on a river where her grandmother had
    seen her own mother drowning two of her siblings during the marches,
    to prevent them from the terror that befell the Armenians of the
    Ottoman Empire. When Fetiye was a child, her grandmother would take
    her to this river and say nothing of what she remembered except,
    "If only these mountains had eyes and could say what happened here."

    This was one of the countless stories that made it into the public
    consciousness thanks to Fetiye's 2008 book, My Grandmother, one of the
    most important personal family histories of our time, as well as the
    follow-up book Grandchildren, which she wrote with Ayse Gul Altinay.

    We learned from the articulate opening panels how historians in the
    past had neglected the lives of women and children, who were seen
    as objects of a masculine nation and not subjects independent of
    themselves. There was a freedom and a deep earnestness in most of
    the presentations that was moving to experience. Nobody gave a damn
    for the most part about mincing words or reiterating euphemisms, and
    there were no gendarmes to stop or censor the free flow of ideas and
    the innumerable times "genocide" was used in the panels and discourse.

    The conference unspooled snippets and overviews of oral histories
    and tales gathered from the field research of the scholars present,
    including Laurence Ritter, Umit Kurt, Helin Anahit, Avedis Hadjian,
    and Anoush Suni.

    One of Suni's stories was about an Armenian man who converted, was
    given the name Mehmet, married an Arabic woman, and had a son named
    Jemal who was taken in as a son by an "agha" after his father's death.

    Through this and other stories we learned how the process of renaming
    the converted was a step in creating a new religious identity. There
    was also the presence of Turks who, over time, found out they were
    Kurds, who later found out they were Armenians.

    The perception of Armenians in Kurdish novels; the 1915 Besni Armenian
    orphans who were Islamized; the issue of Kurdish complicity in the
    Armenian Genocide; as well as the current state of relations and
    possible methods of reconciliation were discussed at a panel entitled,
    "Memory, Ethnicity, Religion: Kurdish Identity."

    During the coffee breaks, there were occasional tears on the campus
    lawn, a genial warmth among most of the attendees, and something
    quite the sight for sore eyes, especially for a Diasporan--a stack of
    loudspeakers and a live-feed set on campus overlooking the Bosphorus
    echoing the word "Soykirim" (the Turkish word for "genocide") openly
    during Taner Akcam's presentation.

    In this aura of minorities telling their layered and Byzantine stories,
    the familial taboos and ethnic histories braided and dovetailed into
    a very complicated and illuminating fresco of what it means to be
    an "Islamized Armenian." This process of unveiling family secrets
    through the act of storytelling became a source of healing for the
    teller of these stories. As a filmmaker, this was a very touching and
    inspiring moment to witness. Stories have the power to heal and educate
    the public about the unsung and unheard experiences of uncharted
    histories. The questions from the audience were prescient and spoke to
    the resurfacing anger at a state that has shunned multi-ethnic identity
    and diversity instead of celebrating it. This small minority of the
    Dink generation took an intelligent and engaged stand by directly
    examining the traumas of the past and nurturing an aura of empathy and
    respect for the history of the oppressed wanting and deserving to be
    heard. This is the clearest ray of light in an otherwise still darkness
    in Turkey when it comes to the issue of acknowledging the far-reaching,
    multi-faceted immediate and long-term effects of the genocide.

    Victor Hugo once said, "An invasion of armies can be resisted; an
    invasion of ideas cannot be resisted." And at this conference, this
    "invasion" of ideas was certainly welcome and critically articulated.

    I felt torn between hope and possibility that ebbed into the gnawing,
    perhaps unjustified, pessimism that all the analysis, research,
    and incredible hard work done by countless scholars loyal to these
    voices of history and the corroborate-able truth of the genocide still
    would change nothing for the ocean of bones in the sands of Der-Zor,
    which a hundred years ago were living, breathing families. We will
    never know their names or stories. We will never know their voices
    or what they might have been.

    There will never be any panel capable of granting them justice for
    what they endured. They will remain the nameless and abandoned dead.

    "How can we Armenians heal from this trauma?" is the first note I
    wrote in my notebook, inspired by the always warm and gracious Fetiye
    Cetin. I still don't have a convincing answer, but maybe a large
    part of the healing lies in establishing ties with willing Turks and
    Kurds ready to face and discuss the past openly and empathetically. I
    remember the tale of the Turkish village "kasap" (butcher) who said
    he knew that most of the Armenian men in the village were heavily
    addicted to tobacco and nicotine, as their throats and esophagi were
    tar-yellow after the wholesale village beheadings he took part in.

    This, too, is part of the taboo history that affects the consciousness
    of those who live on the lands where the atrocities took place. As
    Cicero said, "The life of the dead is set in the memory of the living."

    Projected images, be they photographic or cinematographic, have the
    power and capacity to trigger stories and ideas in the eye of the
    beholder. These knee-jerk ideas can evoke a realization or an inner
    epiphany that otherwise would not have been conjured. This unintended
    interpretation churning within the mind's eye of the moviegoer has
    the capacity to hold up a mirror into our inner lives and show the
    need for quiet self-reflection.

    The stream-of-consciousness images triggered by the panelists cast
    my memories back to Van and Bitlis in May of this year on my journey
    to Historic Armenia. Since the conference centered on "Islamized
    Armenians," whose religious conversions can be broken down into a
    garden variety of sub-sets of the forced and the willingly converted,
    I couldn't help but stray back to the churches and cemeteries we
    witnessed in Van, Edremit, and Bitlis that had undergone their own
    forced spatial conversions from places of ancient spiritual worship
    to barns where donkeys and livestock bred in villages off the map.

    These seemingly irrelevant memories lingered in the back of my mind as
    I listened to tale after tale of survivalist horror, identity politics,
    and skeletons surfacing after generations of denial, self-censorship,
    and violent repression. I began to feel a very unpleasant certainty in
    my gut that the next time we returned to Van, Bitlis, and the ancient
    lands of our ancestors, we would still witness the neglect and plunder
    of the remains of our culture and faith. This was triggered by the
    projection of a black-and-white image of the Church of Surp Garabed in
    Dersim before it was bombed in the late 1930â~@²s. And yet, the stones
    remain. They have an uncanny, almost supernatural way to stay rooted
    in some battered and ravaged form of quasi-existence. Perhaps its that
    Armenian stubbornness refusing to go away, refusing to stop fighting,
    refusing to be silenced, always wanting to be heard and acknowledged
    in the dark waters of those in power quietly silencing truth.

    The more brazen the indignities of chameleonic politics that recognized
    the genocide over a generation ago during the time of Reagan,
    then flips to the official position of banning the now controversial
    "Armenian Orphan Rug" from public display to appease Ankara. Everything
    is indirectly or directly part and parcel of history's ironic and cruel
    cycles. And all of the stories in this conference were in some shape
    or form tied to the tapestry of this region's history and future. If
    everything is connected then nothing is irrelevant, especially in
    human rights and the silencing of crimes against humanity, including
    the discrimination today's Islamized Armenians continue to face. This
    must change, and it will take one person at a time looking into their
    own conscience and respecting the right of the other to exist and be
    heard in the name of true, sincere human diplomacy, not meaningless
    photo-ops and fickle handshakes.

    The common thematic denominators that I took away from the panels
    included the unsettling realization that very little is accepted on
    its own merits when it comes to a human being's right to exist in
    the state of nature they were born into. This is the troubling and
    ugly truth. What I've gathered from people I've met over numerous
    travels to make a film in Bolis is that if you are not born into the
    ethnic and religious majority, then you will forever be subordinate
    and an object of oppression. This comes from most of the people I
    have spoken to that hail from Anatolia or from minority families
    living in Turkey: Armenian, Greek, Assyrian, Kurd, or Chaldean, it
    does not matter. With the exception of the Kurdish people and their
    colorful ethnic and cultural traditions, the majority of these ancient
    cultures are gone from their ancestral land. This is nothing new,
    and the obvious sometimes needs to be reiterated in order not to be
    forgotten or neglected. Their pasts, their schools and neighborhoods,
    have been deleted the further east you go. But the cemeteries and
    the churches remain in various conditions of decay or damage through
    neglect. In the case of the Islamized Armenians, they are considered
    subordinates in the eyes of the converters, and religious traitors in
    the eyes of Christian Armenians. They are, in perpetuity, in a state
    of limbo. The roots of almost every family story told from Mush to
    Artvin to Sassoon traced back to this common denominator of Armenians
    and ethnic minorities tossed into the grinder of history and forced
    to accept belief systems and lifestyles in order to survive.

    Will there be more of these conferences in the east and south of
    Turkey, and will they continue to convert ignorance into knowledge
    and knowledge into respect for all cultures and faiths? Is that too
    idealistic a notion to hope for given the irreversible magnitude of
    the bloody history that birthed this generation of minorities wanting
    to be given a place to stand, to be heard, and, more importantly,
    to be accepted on their own merits without precondition? Will there
    be another conference on the braided and inter-related histories of
    the Greek, Armenian, and Assyrian Genocides? Some day, in a possibly
    more democratic future, will these conferences be converted into the
    impetus to grant official civil and human rights to these people,
    and all remaining religious properties and foundations in Anatolia?

    Will there come a time for the "others" culture, faith, and history to
    be respected, preserved, and taught in schools, instead of plundered
    by grave-robbers fancying themselves as treasure hunters of the fabled
    Armenian gold? Where will the commission be in the Kurdish areas to
    help stop this rampant and insulting quest for the so-called buried
    treasures that has dug hole after hole in our churches, spurring only
    more pillage? In the process of trying to form the building blocks of
    reconciliation through cultural diplomacy and meaningful dialogue,
    respect for cultural landmarks and touchstones are fundamental to
    the trust-building process.

    This incredible conference was a much-needed gift in giving voice to
    the voiceless and unofficial histories of the Islamized Armenians. And
    through this first of what will hopefully be many conferences to come,
    the tangible results require time and will be measured in the long
    run. This region has a long way to go until it comes to grips with
    its own Civil Rights Movement on a massive national scale. But the
    important work of converting ignorance into beads of knowledge braided
    together into inspiration and the meaningful exchange of ideas has
    begun, and continues quite nobly thanks to the Hrant Dink Foundation.

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