Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Nepal: Reflections on Turks and Armenians, Nations and Society

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Nepal: Reflections on Turks and Armenians, Nations and Society

    PeaceJournalism.com, Nepal
    Nov 3 2006

    Reflections on Turks and Armenians, Nations and Society

    Editorial Opinion Posted On: 2006-11-03 18:07:55

    By: Greg Somerville Unsettled

    It is unsettling to think about some matter after we have learned
    that the words we were going to use are themselves in question, and
    that we had best avoid them in order to speak truly. But it is a
    constant possibility we must acknowledge.

    In speaking about peoples located here and there, banded together as
    nations, yet sharing across today's borders most of the features
    which enable us to recognize society and culture, we use words like
    'French' or 'British' or 'Irish' or 'German' without much worry. You
    have to start somewhere. But then you look a bit more deeply at
    history and at conflict and you begin to wonder whether the conflict
    has been misconceived, even by its participants. Nagging doubts begin
    to complicate your life. Who shall we say was fighting? Who were
    these people and what sort of a fight was that? And who should say?

    Elizabeth Kolbert has written a short piece in the November 6, 2006,
    edition of The New Yorker, describing the Armenians and the Turks and
    a new history of this conflict by Taner Akcam, "A Shameful Act: The
    Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility."
    Kolbert can be forgiven for starting somewhere and for writing a book
    review rather than a tome. But it is all food for thought on the
    table of life.

    Who are these "Turks"? I will leave the corollary question regarding
    Armenians aside for later delectation, anyway less pressing while we
    address this course of our historical feast. The sentences of
    Kolbert's which piqued my interest are these, where she makes a claim
    unremarkable among all the notions we entertain as facts concerning
    the early twentieth century:

    "As the rulers of the Ottoman Empire, the Turks had been fighting
    against history; they had spent more than a century trying - often
    unsuccessfully - to fend off nationalist movements in the regions
    they controlled. Now, in defeat, they adopted the cause as their own.
    In the spring of 1920,"...

    And Kolbert goes on to sketch the establishment of the Ankara
    government and their work to reject the Treaty of Sevres, just drawn
    up by the Allies in 1920, and replace it in 1923 with the Treaty of
    Lausanne recognizing the Republic of Turkey. And Kolbert draws our
    attention to the pertinence of 1915 actions for the competing
    treaties of five and eight years later. When a million Armenians lost
    their lives at Ottoman hands in April of 1915, Kolbert (with Akcam,
    we must presume) observes that it "changed the demographics of
    eastern Anatolia; then, on the basis of these changed demographics,
    the Turks used the logic of self-determination to deprive of a home
    the very people they had decimated." Thus a war crime is made
    foundational as to boundaries of a nation and self-organization of a
    people.

    But what people are we talking about? Kolbert and many others when
    describing the legal adventures of Orhan Pamuk bring up the Turkish
    penal code which outlaws "insulting Turkishness" and I think most of
    us wince or smile chidingly at such bald defensiveness inscribed into
    criminal sanction. And when we hear that Kurds are routinely called
    "mountain Turks" so as to avoid their right name, we roll our eyes at
    stubborn, willful racism ill-suited to a civilized modern
    understanding.

    Our own context frames a beginning, maybe, for diluting our disdain
    with modest realism, for stepping back from such easy superiority as
    leads us to mock the Turks for foolishness. In her final paragraph,
    Kolbert leans this way, pointing to the forty million indigenous
    people living in the Americas before Europeans came and fewer than
    ten million visible by 1650. Racism in the United States is marked,
    certainly, by no less confusion and argument over the proper naming
    of people than our conventional reading of Turkish history and
    custom.

    But if we step back from the fog of the Great War and perform the
    slightest of reality checks, we will find that empire and nation and
    people and ethnic identification are far from simple, and Turkey is a
    wonderful place to start. We should look at Turkey through two
    lenses: composition of empire and bonds between people. That is to
    say, from the top down and the bottom up, we will try to answer the
    question of how society organizes, and how it ought to organize, with
    Turkey as our focus. Let me announce my findings right off the bat.
    We are all amateur humans; there are no professional social
    practitioners; there is no agreement as to how we form society.

    Alexander the Great swept eastward signally, momentously. In making
    his conquered lands Greek, he Hellenized their people. Language is
    implicated mightily in identifying one people or another, and has
    become the lasting tool of historians, albeit ethnicity and
    nationality cannot quite conform to its marker. But language can be
    rejected, secret, disused, forbidden or broken: like memory, of which
    it is one token, one treasury. One primary fact we can state with
    certainty is that none of Alexander's conquered peoples spoke such an
    Altaic language as Turkish is. That family, standing apart from
    Indo-European, lurked behind mountains north of Alexander's route and
    of Ashoka's after him, reversing some of the Hellenic conquests.

    Kabul would come to hear both the Mongolian and the Turkic branches
    of the Altaic family spoken, and so would Jerusalem. So would the
    Viking princes who followed the Huns in Ukraine. But it took some
    time for Constantine's city to lose its Greek accent, and much
    Western European connivance. Turkic tribes moved through, and named,
    Turkistan over long, disputatious migrations strikingly similar to
    the uncoordinated arrivals of Angles, Saxons, Jutes and Frisians on
    Britain's coast. Like those Germanic speakers we now call English,
    Turks displaced a number of indigenous inhabitants along the way.
    Romans had already laid claim to Celtic lands both in southern
    Britain and in central Anatolia, fielding first pagan, and later
    Christian legions. Very few descendants of Celtic Britons persisted
    as landowners outside Wales, learning Old English, but Galatians
    sheltered within the Roman Empire, a subject kingdom where Paul would
    preach and which even Jerome found flourishing.

    So, when Seljuk tribes encroached ever more successfully upon the
    well-trodden soil of Anatolia, Greek-speaking inheritors of
    Alexandrine and Roman imperial tenure resisted militarily and
    demographically, leaving an ethnic crazy-quilt more brightly colored
    than even Byzantium sported. China, Christendom, Islam and Tibet were
    all predecessor empires to the Ottoman establishment which made
    Istanbul its capital, and all diverse.

    Armenians, Kurds, Arabs, Jews and Bosnians retained their identity
    within the Ottoman framework, along with many other minoritarian
    ethnicities. While Ottoman rule consolidated its bicontinental
    holdings, Persia to its east recovered national integrity. This was
    Europe's Renaissance as well, and it birthed new commercial economies
    under Italian, Spanish, Dutch and English leadership. Which way was
    history trending? When did the winner become clear, if there was a
    race to organize best?

    Frankly, I think the organization of society is no more a settled
    matter than the organization of business enterprises. My own
    experience has been that in any large business, there are a certain
    number of quite obvious operational chores to be done. And if we
    leave that bottom-up reality and adopt the perspective of the chief
    executives, there is a clear mission: make money. In between, middle
    management struggles constantly to find synergistic arrangements of
    medium-sized blocs of staff and function. Corporate history is
    littered with unsuccessful efforts at this sort of integration. So is
    the history of our social arrangements. If you study the changes in
    political maps, over time, you will see that there is no optimal size
    or shape for national definition. Even the definition of nationalism
    flaps in the wind of experience.

    Ottoman forces suffered major defeat at Russian hands. Some Armenians
    participated actively, helping Russians resist a siege of Baku. New
    "Bolshevik" Russia was not invited to Paris, where President Wilson
    checked them and Turkish self-determination by proposing that
    generous terms of Allied settlement be granted all Armenian subjects,
    Russian and Ottoman. Sevres extended exceptional generosity to the
    Kurds as well, declared sovereign in their mountain passes for only
    the second interval in their national existence. In all this the
    Greeks were surely complicit, receiving for themselves large
    Anatolian territories to rule with a sovereignty which they must have
    viewed as an acknowledgement of their undisputed historic tenure, in
    such places as the port of Smyrna. And the bitterness of Greeks at
    the eviction codified in Lausanne is with us still. Is that, too, a
    historical trend? But what of those who intermarried down the years,
    submerging an original ethnicity and learning languages they never
    heard in the cradle? Are they trendy or traitorous?

    No matter what mixture of ethnic extraction today's Turkish citizens
    enjoy, and what ancestral languages war has bloodied with bad
    memories, people in Asia Minor and everywhere else must hope that
    human efforts to build society do it peacefully.

    http://peacejournalism.com/details1.p hp?article_id=1136
Working...
X