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Historical truths belong to no political policy

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  • Historical truths belong to no political policy

    Cyprus Mail
    Oct 14 2006

    Historical truths belong to no political policy

    THE LOWER House of the French Parliament on Thursday adopted a bill
    criminalising denial of the Armenian genocide in a move that has, not
    surprisingly, infuriated Turkey.

    One can be cynical about France's motives: look at the influential
    Armenian lobby and the looming elections, suggest that perhaps the
    bill has as much to do with unease at possible Turkish membership of
    the EU as it does with historical memory. One can also point (as
    Turkey has done) to France's (and others') failure to come to terms
    with an often shameful colonial past.

    The move will certainly not have eased the growing tensions between
    Europe and Turkey, as Ankara nears its progress report next month,
    facing a possible `train crash' over its refusal to meet commitments
    over Cyprus. Many will rightly point out that confronting Turkey at
    such a stage is more likely to create a nationalist backlash than
    facilitate a political maturity that would allow acknowledgement of
    past crimes.

    But the fact remains that Turkey's blinkered refusal to confront its
    brutal past is illustration of how distant it is from the values on
    which the EU has been built. It was only a few months ago that Nobel
    prize winner Orhan Pamuk was put on trial for `insulting Turkishness'
    in comments he made about the Armenian question.

    Of course, not all of Europe is perfect in this regard. Far right
    groups routinely revise history across Western Europe, while
    questions of collaboration with Nazi Germany or with Communist
    authorities in the former Eastern bloc remain extremely sensitive in
    many countries.

    But society is watchful to guard historical truth against political
    revisionism. In much of Europe, holocaust denial is a crime, with
    France now adding Armenian genocide denial to the same category. In
    Turkey, genocide denial is state law, with those who speak out about
    it facing jail. If Turkey ever hopes to join the EU, that has got to
    change.

    Rats, we're all settlers

    RAUF DENKTASH once famously said that the only true Cypriot was the
    donkey, the others were Greeks and Turks.

    The time has come to revise that view. After all, the donkey was
    brought to the island from somewhere, by someone, a Mycenaean,
    perhaps, or a Phoenician - the zoologists will know.

    No, the real Cypriot it turns out is a mouse, Mus cypriacus, which,
    we learned this week, established itself in the Cypriot environment
    several thousand years before the arrival of man and has survived as
    a unique species to this day.

    So the indigenous population is not Greek or Turk... but rodent. The
    rest of us are settlers, human visitors who have been colonising the
    island in waves, from Neolithic times until today.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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