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Zoryan Inst. Message to the Turkish PM Erdogan

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  • Zoryan Inst. Message to the Turkish PM Erdogan

    Please find below a link to the Message of the Prime Minister of The
    Republic of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdošan, on the "Events of 1915,"
    issued on April 23, 2014. This is followed by the text of the response
    to that message by the Zoryan Institute.

    http://www.mfa.gov.tr/turkish-prime-minister-mr_-recep-tayyip-erdogan-publis
    hed-a-message-on-the-events-of-1915.en.mfa


    ZORYAN INSTITUTE OF CANADA, INC.
    255 Duncan Mill Rd., Suite 310
    Toronto, ON, Canada M3B 3H9
    Tel: 416-250-9807 Fax: 416-512-1736 E-mail:
    [email protected]
    www.zoryaninstitute.org


    May 5, 2014

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdošan
    Ankara, Turkey
    [email protected]

    Prime Minister Erdošan:

    Your official statement on April 23 acknowledging how "The 24th of
    April carries a particular significance for our [Turkey's] Armenian
    citizens and for all Armenians around the world" and your message of
    condolence, "... we wish that the Armenians who lost their lives in
    the context of the early twentieth century rest in peace, and we
    convey our condolences to their grandchildren" constitute an
    unprecedented step from the Turkish Government and must be recognized
    as such.

    But, Mr. Prime Minister, we can't stop there, for the sincerity of
    your condolence is undermined by the calculated presentation in the
    rest of the letter. Allow me to point out a few examples.

    1. You begin by saying this occasion "provides a valuable opportunity
    to share opinions freely on a historical matter." There can be
    legitimate differences of opinion on historical matters, but opinions
    must be grounded on facts. When there is incontestable evidence of
    genocidal intent in the events of 1915-including from the Turkish
    Archives-it undermines belief in your sincerity when you refer
    euphemistically to "relocations," instead of the painful death marches
    they were. It was the killing, planned and executed by the state
    apparatus, of about 1.5 million and the deportation of the rest of the
    2.5 million Armenian citizens of Ottoman Turkey, with the intent to
    exterminate the entire race. This is not a matter of historical
    opinion; it is the reality that we must share. Presumably, this is the
    reason for your letter of condolence in the first place.

    2. You state that "In Turkey, expressing different opinions and
    thoughts freely on the events of 1915 is the requirement of a
    pluralistic perspective as well as of a culture of democracy and
    modernity." This lofty sentiment creates the impression that you are
    open and caring about truth, when, in fact, you are using it as a
    Trojan horse and a blatant political stratagem to play with the minds
    of the general public. During your tenure, many scholars, journalists
    and intellectuals have been persecuted, jailed, and even murdered for
    holding opinions on 1915 that differ from your official state
    narrative.

    3. It is true that "It is indisputable that the last years of the
    Ottoman Empire were a difficult period, full of suffering for millions
    of Ottoman citizens, regardless of their religion or ethnic origin."
    Indeed, your Foreign Minister, His Excellency Ahmet Davutoglu, refers
    to this in his op-ed piece in The Guardian expressing support for your
    letter of condolence:

    A series of ethnic cleansings in the Balkans pushed millions
    eastward, transforming the demographic structure of
    Anatolia..... Approximately 5 million Ottoman citizens were driven
    away from their ancestral homes in the Balkans, the Caucasus and
    Anatolia. While much of western history tells of the suffering of the
    dispossessed and dead Ottoman Christians, the colossal suffering of
    Ottoman Muslims remains largely unknown outside of Turkey.

    We can understand and share with compassion the pain of all those
    Muslims who were forcibly expelled from the Balkans, the Caucuses and
    Crimea. We know firsthand that pain. I am the son of two Armenians
    orphaned in 1915 from Urfa, Anatolia, and who were deported after
    losing their entire families, and others at the Zoryan Institute, as
    well as most other Armenians, also have this personal experience. We
    know well the pain of being uprooted from your ancestral homeland and
    of being a refugee growing up in several countries, none of which
    replace what home once was, or allow you to maintain continuity with
    your cherished history and culture.

    But, Mr. Erdošan, you talk about suffering while ignoring how the
    suffering was inflicted. You lump all of the millions of deaths
    together without making the critical distinction between the causes of
    death, those who were targeted for extermination, and those who died
    from the war. More Germans died in WWII than did Jews, for example,
    but the deaths had very different causes and different meanings, as
    did the deaths of the Armenians within the Ottoman Empire. We agree
    that no one should try to construct hierarchies of pain. However, the
    pain of those Ottoman Muslims was not inflicted by our Armenian
    fathers or grandfathers, whereas the pain of the planned destruction
    of the 2.5 million Armenians in 1915 was caused by yours.

    Genocide denial involves four dimensions: denial of the facts,
    responsibility, calling the events something else, and relativization.
    Your letter engages in all four. Until you and the Turkish State
    demonstrate a sincere and apologetic expression about the consequences
    of your ancestors' actions, your condolences to the Armenians will be
    perceived as insincere and a cleverly contrived trick for gaining an
    end.

    No Turk living today can be held responsible for the crime of the
    genocide committed by the Ottoman regime. Yet, your country and your
    government are responsible for the aggressive and ongoing denial,
    which exacerbates and perpetuates the pain of the Armenians and itself
    is considered the continuation of the crime. We believe that the
    Armenian people worldwide would embrace the whole people of Turkey, if
    the Turkish Government acknowledges the responsibility of its
    predecessor, the Ottoman Empire, in the planned annihilation of its
    Armenian citizens, expresses a sincere apology, and makes appropriate
    efforts at atonement. That would build trust between the parties and
    allow the healing and forgiving process leading to a true liberation
    for all concerned. In this respect, we take this opportunity to
    express our deepest sympathy to the families of all those righteous
    Muslims-Turks, Kurds, and Arabs-who risked their lives to save
    Armenians during that period.

    Your call for a joint historical commission to study the events of
    1915 is only a public relations stratagem. Please recall that in 2003,
    the Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Commission requested The
    International Center for Transitional Justice to examine the Armenian
    Genocide issue. The ICTJ issued its finding that "the Events, viewed
    collectively, can thus be said to include all of the elements of the
    crime of genocide as defined in the Convention, and legal scholars as
    well as historians, politicians, journalists and other people would be
    justified in continuing to so describe them." The Turkish members of
    the Commission rejected this finding and TARC broke apart. Why would
    you now propose another joint commission, when you have already
    rejected an independent, third-party finding from an organization
    headed by the renowned Elie Wiesel? You, yourself, have repeatedly
    stated publicly that you would never accept that Turkey committed
    genocide. It is difficult to reconcile this with your statement that
    "Turkey has always supported scholarly and comprehensive studies for
    an accurate understanding of history."

    Mr. Prime Minister, if you really would like to see "that the peoples
    of an ancient and unique geography, who share similar customs and
    manners will be able to talk to each other about the past with
    maturity and to remember together their losses in a decent manner,"
    then perhaps you could take a few very simple steps to show your
    commitment, by establishing diplomatic relations with Armenia, with no
    preconditions, and opening the borders between the two countries
    (closed only from the Turkish side), as a first step to commencing
    dialogue. This would demonstrate in a tangible way the sincerity of
    your letter of condolence and be a first step towards reconciliation.


    Yours sincerely,

    K.M. Greg Sarkissian, President

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