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For Turkey's Armenians, Painful Past Is Muted

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  • For Turkey's Armenians, Painful Past Is Muted

    FOR TURKEY'S ARMENIANS, PAINFUL PAST IS MUTED
    By Anne Barnard

    Boston Globe, MA
    Nov 30 2006

    ISTANBUL -- When Mesrob II, the Armenian Patriarch of Istanbul and
    All Turkey, meets today with Pope Benedict XVI, the one topic he says
    he definitely won't bring up is the one that most intensely interests
    his people around the world: the Armenian genocide.

    Getting Turkey and the rest of the world to acknowledge the slaughter
    of more than 1 million Armenians in the early 20th century, many by
    troops of the collapsing Ottoman Empire, is a cherished goal of the
    Armenian diaspora. The visit from the spiritual leader of 1 billion
    Roman Catholics might seem the perfect opportunity not only to draw
    attention to the problems of the tiny Christian minority here, but
    also to ask the pontiff to press Turkey for an apology.

    But for about 68,000 Turkish citizens of Armenian descent, who --
    along with 20,000 to 30,000 people from neighboring Armenia who
    have migrated here in search of jobs -- make up by far the largest
    Christian community in Turkey, the situation is much more complicated,
    even dangerous.

    Armenians here must balance a deep need to preserve the memory of the
    killings, known in Armenian as metz yeghern, or "the big calamity,"
    with safeguarding the small community that remains, which to them means
    avoiding conflict with the Muslim Turk majority or the nationalist
    government. Turkish citizens who mention the killings -- including
    Orhan Pamuk, the Turkish author who won the Nobel Prize this year --
    have been charged with the crime of "insulting Turkishness," and risk
    fines, jail sentences, and even death threats.

    The Armenian community is treading cautiously around the pope's
    visit. Leaders are seeking his support on general issues of religious
    expression; during his first two days Benedict has already stressed
    the importance of religious freedom. But they are being careful not to
    embrace too closely a pontiff widely seen by Muslims as having insulted
    Islam -- and they are avoiding any public reference to the genocide.

    Many Armenians here say they have chosen to leave the past buried --
    or partly buried -- in order to press for more immediate benefits.

    They want to persuade the government to ease onerous restrictions,
    such as laws that ban Christians from bequeathing land to the church or
    running independent seminaries to train priests. And they want to live
    in peace with the rest of this country of nearly 80 million people,
    about 99 percent of whom are Muslim and overwhelmingly ethnically
    Turkish.

    Mesrob, the leader of the Armenian Orthodox Church here, is a case in
    point. Speaking the confident English he perfected at Memphis State
    University, he chose his words carefully in an hourlong conversation
    with three foreign reporters.

    Asked whether he would discuss the genocide with the pope, he said
    he never brings up "local issues" with visiting dignitaries. Asked
    whether he could state for the record that a genocide took place,
    he fixed a reporter with a friendly gaze and was silent for a long
    moment. Then he said, "I acknowledge that people were killed."

    But Mesrob, 50, spoke more readily when asked what had happened to
    his own family at the time. His grandfather's six brothers were all
    deported from the town of Izmit, during a time when many Armenians
    were shipped off to the Syrian desert. His grandfather, who escaped to
    Istanbul and became a baker, never heard from them again. He assumed
    most of them died.

    Mesrob's parents and grandparents never told him the details. "They
    never talked about it. They didn't want us to be at odds with our
    Muslim neighbors," he said.

    "There is no family that didn't share this situation," said Navart
    Beren, 51, an administrator at St. Mary's Church, across the street
    from the patriarch's residence on a winding street near the Sea of
    Marmara, where she was attending Mass last Sunday. Her parents were
    close-mouthed, too, she said: "They didn't want us to carry revenge
    in our hearts."

    "All that is in the past," said her friend Margarit Nalbantkazar, 52.

    "But this did happen: My husband's father was 8 or 9 years old. He
    saw them take his father by hitting him on the back of the head with
    a gun. . . . They never saw him again."

    Murat Belge, a Turkish academic who runs the publishing house that
    prints Pamuk's books, explained why Armenians inside Turkey walk such
    a fine line between forgetting and accusing.

    Told of the patriarch's comments, Belge said: "If he had said there was
    an Armenian genocide, it's very likely that he would be assassinated
    by some fascists, the patriarchate would be burned, and Armenians
    leading their daily lives would be shot by unknown people."

    Turkey has always insisted that the deaths, most of them in 1915,
    were part of a war in which a beleaguered Ottoman Empire was facing
    Armenian rebels allied with its enemies, which included the United
    States, Britain, and Russia.

    But most historians agree that Armenians were systematically killed
    and driven out. The subject is extremely sensitive in Turkey because
    many of the military leaders of the dying Ottoman Empire went on to
    found the secular Turkish republic in 1923.

    Also in the 1920s, hundreds of thousands of Greek Orthodox Christians
    were forced to leave Turkey as smaller numbers of Muslims were forced
    out of Greece, under the agreement that established the Greek and
    Turkish borders. Today, Christians make up less than 1 percent of
    the population.

    US policy on the Armenian deaths is to respect the position of Turkey,
    an important NATO ally, though the 1.2 million Armenians in America
    fiercely lobby Congress to recognize the genocide.

    Pope John Paul II called the events a genocide in a 2000 document,
    and in 2001 visited a memorial to the victims in Yerevan, Armenia's
    capital. In a speech there, he avoided the term genocide but adopted
    the Armenian phrase "big calamity."

    The Vatican has given no indication of whether Benedict will mention
    the issue.

    Mesrob said he hoped the pope's visit would improve interfaith
    relations, but whether it does "depends on what kind of language he's
    going to use," he added with a chuckle. He said the pope's September
    remarks, quoting a Byzantine ruler's criticism of Islam as violent,
    "jeopardized" Christian minorities.

    A metal detector and security checkpoint stand outside Mesrob's ornate
    residence, and security will be extra tight during the pope's visit,
    he said.

    Mesrob said Turks do not bear all responsibility for the killings
    of Armenians but have "the most important responsibility" because
    "they were ruling the country." He said many people believe "ethnic
    cleansing" was carried out to "remove Christians from public life."

    When asked if Armenians in Turkey have a ceremony or memorial site to
    commemorate the killings, he said that they do not, but that people
    remember the date April 24, 1915, when Armenian intellectuals in
    Istanbul were rounded up and deported, as a kind of "beheading of
    the community."

    Mesrob dismissed recent allegations that he forbids church officials
    to speak of the killings. "It's not a question of silence," he said.

    "How can you make friends with someone if you confront them?"

    Instead, he recommends cultural exchanges between Armenia and Turkey
    to pave the way for an honest discussion of the events, he said. In
    the meantime, he said, when foreign governments raise the issue,
    ethnic Armenians in Turkey get nervous.

    Aida Barsegian, 56, a house cleaner who moved here from Armenia,
    said it didn't help when France passed a law last month declaring it
    a crime to deny the genocide. "If they care so much, they should open
    the borders of France and let us find work there," she said after
    lighting candles at the church. "Here they give me work."
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