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ANKARA: The Relation Between History And Politics According To Hanio

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  • ANKARA: The Relation Between History And Politics According To Hanio

    THE RELATION BETWEEN HISTORY AND POLITICS ACCORDING TO HANIOGLU
    Sahin Alpay

    Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 15 2006

    No doubt M. Sukru Hanioglu is at the top of the list of historians
    illuminating the last period of Ottoman history. Leaving aside the
    articles he has written in various academic magazines and books,
    a list of the books he has authored is enough in itself to show the
    dimensions of his contribution:

    "Preparation for a Revolution: The Young Turks, 1902-1908," Oxford
    University Press, 2000.

    "The Young Turks in Opposition," Oxford University Press, 1995.

    "Kendi Mektuplariyle Enver Pasha (Enver Pasha in Light of His Own
    Letters)," Der Publications, 1989.

    Professor Hanioglu has been a faculty member at Princeton University,
    one of the U.S.'s most distinguished universities, from the 1990's to
    date, and chairman of the Middle East Research Department for the last
    three years. He is a source of pride for Turkey as a social scientist,
    not only for being an extremely fastidious researcher and superior
    analyst, but also with his intellectual character tied to independent
    values and critical method.

    His new book is entitled "Osmanli'dan Cumhuriyet'e Zihniyet, Siyaset
    ve Tarih (World-view, Politics and History from the Ottomans to the
    Republic, Baglam Publications, 2006), and it is comprised of articles
    published in Zaman newspaper from the fall of 2002 to the summer
    of 2006. I am very happy that a short time after I began writing for
    Zaman, I encouraged my old friend Professor Hanioglu to write for Zaman
    once every two weeks as well. His Zaman articles, which combine his
    broad knowledge of history with an analytical logic, are the most
    valuable contribution made in recent years to the understanding of
    Turkey's presence in light of the historical behind-the-scenes reality
    of the transitional period from the Ottomans to the Republic.

    In regard to the interest shown to these articles, Hanioglu says the
    following: "These commentaries that were aimed at bringing different
    perspectives to current issues received an unexpected amount of
    interest. While messages related to my academic publications generally
    don't reach two-digit numbers, I received close to 50 notes after
    each newspaper commentary. I had an opportunity to exchange ideas
    with many people, even if it was in a virtual realm." (p. 9)

    In this article I want to dwell on his last piece, published in
    Zaman in two parts, entitled "History, Politics and the 1915 Tragedy
    in Light of the Vote in the French Assembly" (October 26-27), which
    was not included in Professor Hanioglu's book, but which is extremely
    worthy of attention. Here Hanioglu interprets the relationship between
    history and politics in view of the bill accepted on October 12th by
    the French Assembly that makes denial of the "Armenian Genocide" a
    crime. He takes this "denial" argument even further: It is impossible
    to leave history to historians, and it is inevitable that politics
    interpret history. The problem is not with politics' interpreting
    history; it is with imposing your interpretation, as the only truth,
    on society and prohibiting debate. (In this respect, Hanioglu reminds
    those supporting the thesis, "Let's leave history to historians,"
    that the Turkish Parliament declared May 27th as a "Constitution and
    Freedom Holiday" on April 3, 1963, and that it made it a crime to
    "insult the memory of Ataturk" on July 25, 1951.)

    Hanioglu points out that it is past the time for producing politics
    by means of free discussion instead of countering prohibition with
    prohibition, when taking up the issue stemming from the question,
    "What Happened to the Ottoman Armenians?" In other words, the most
    important historian of the Union and Progress period says to stop
    curtailing debate by means of Turkish penal code 301 and elsewhere
    and, instead, allow for the production of new and result-oriented
    politics by means of free historical debate to counter the campaign
    for "recognizing genocide" and now "punishment for the denial of
    genocide." Actually, this is the task before us.

    With this opportunity, I would like to note on the record that I am
    one of those eagerly awaiting his book-in-progress on the Committee
    for Union and Progress' reign of power (1908-1918).
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