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  • Zeytinoglu: Reconciliation Needed Between Turkey, Armenia

    ZEYTINOGLU: RECONCILIATION NEEDED BETWEEN TURKEY, ARMENIA

    Daily Northwestern
    May 5 2014

    Ekin Zeytinoglu, Columnist
    May 5, 2014 *

    To put this in the most straightforward fashion, the ruling AK Party
    of Turkey has been oppressing freedom of speech, censoring all kinds
    of ideas and threatening the living standards of non-conservatives
    excessively for quite some time. However, the very same government
    took a huge step forward last week, one that preceding governments
    have failed to do. On April 23, the day before the Armenian Genocide
    Remembrance Day, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan expressed
    his condolences for those who lost their lives under the rule of
    Ottoman Empire during World War I.

    The events of 1915-1918 are still some of the most controversial topics
    of the 20th century. Unlike what Armenian or Turkish governments claim,
    there are really two sides to this story and both have the right to
    be told. After the Genocide Convention in 1950, it became clear that
    both "actus reus" (guilty act) and "mens rea" (guilty mind) must be
    present to call any historical event a genocide.

    Undeniably many Ottoman citizens, mostly but not limited to Armenians,
    lost their lives under extremely inhumane conditions during that
    time period. So to decide whether this is a genocide or not, the
    question here is whether or not those mass murders and sufferings
    were premeditated. Many historians such as Gregory Stanton, Stanford
    Shaw and Bernard Lewis have argued for and against this. However,
    before one can answer that question, there are plenty of prior
    events that should be considered. It is up to Turkish, Armenian and
    international historians to find a satisfying answer as, so far, all
    of the responses from both viewpoints have failed to recognize opposing
    aspects. Regardless of what we call it, what happened will not change.

    Many times, I have been asked where I stand and whether or not I
    am willing to apologize for all those unimaginable sufferings and
    atrocities. I never had a satisfactory answer because I wanted to
    say "yes" and "no" for various reasons. Lately I have been asking
    myself the same question, and today I can answer confidently. The
    main reason others asked me this was because of my ethnicity or my
    "heritage" as they saw it. Today, by no means do I feel responsible
    for these reasons, as I do not see the Ottoman Empire, a dictatorial
    regime whose political, religious and cultural values I never shared,
    as part of my "heritage." Unlike what many think, I cannot be defined
    by the actions of the "Three Pashas" of the last years of the Ottoman
    Empire, who had blood of thousands in their hands. Therefore, I refuse
    to apologize because of these reasons.

    However as a 20-year-old college student I can see the horror
    Armenian people lived through for decades. I can try to understand the
    incomprehensible pain generations felt for decades, I can anticipate
    the absences Armenian children experienced who grew up without their
    mothers and fathers, I can sense the torments of the families back then
    and afterwards, and I can imagine the immense agony Armenians lived
    through to this day. I personally do not feel responsible, but I can
    empathize and therefore wish to apologize to the Armenians, just as
    I wish to apologize to the Congolese for the loss of millions under
    the rule of Leopold II, or to the Palestinian for their immeasurable
    sufferings for decades, or to Native Americans, or to the Vietnamese,
    Chinese and Cham Muslims, or to Gypsies, homosexuals and Jews.

    We have experienced far too many tragedies so far and we should be
    able to remember and learn from every single one of them. Therefore I
    believe April 24 is extremely important, not to remember a genocide but
    to remember the suffering, not only those who have enough political
    power to make their voices heard but also those who do not possess
    such power.

    Even today we don't have full freedom of speech on many platforms to
    talk about the events of 1915-1918. But we need to, as, unlike many
    claim, it still isn't clear whether those events should be classified
    as genocide or not, because there still isn't a general consensus
    among scholars. That can never be achieved unless Armenian, Turkish
    and international historians start working together. Unfortunately
    this never is going to happen as long as France limits the freedom
    of speech by defining not recognizing the genocide as crime or as
    long as Turkish courts consider not denying those sufferings as
    "insulting Turkishness."

    Ekin Zeytinoglu is a McCormick freshman.

    http://dailynorthwestern.com/2014/05/05/opinion/zeytinoglu-reconciliation-needed-between-turkey-armenia/



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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