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Beirut: Students Travel to Spain to Raise Awareness of Arm. Genocide

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  • Beirut: Students Travel to Spain to Raise Awareness of Arm. Genocide

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    Aug 12 2004

    Lebanese students travel to Spain to raise awareness of Armenian
    genocide
    Youths gathered at annual festival use venue for open discussion

    While agreement is not always achieved, openness and mutual respect
    abound

    By David Munir Nabti
    Special to The Daily Star
    Friday, August 13, 2004



    BARCELONA, Spain: Close to 10,000 young people have gathered in
    Barcelona for the 3rd World Youth Festival, holding intense
    discussions on complex and controversial global events, interspersed
    with friendly encounters, social gatherings and music and dancing
    from around the world.

    However, despite feelings of solidarity and cooperation that are
    clearly evident among most of the young people participating in this
    event, conflict and controversy is unavoidable at an event of this
    size, populated with active, engaged and energetic young people from
    all corners of the globe.

    Taline Ladayan, a sociology student at Universite St. Esprit Kaslik
    in Lebanon, is one of several Lebanese attending the Festival. Back
    in Beirut, when she's not engrossed in her studies, she works with
    other Lebanese of Armenian descent to draw attention to the treatment
    of Armenians in the early part of the 20th century, in the waning
    years of the Ottoman Empire.

    "We are trying to let the world know about the Armenian genocide,"
    Ladayan explained. "We want Turkey to recognize the atrocities,
    because that is a step closer to peace, to a peaceful world, and
    making sure something like that doesn't ever happen again."

    Ladayan came to Barcelona to help spread that message to young people
    from other parts of the world, to try to build awareness and
    understanding for a largely unknown situation, and to "help build a
    world with more peace and justice." Different perspectives and
    challenging opinions, however, are a prevalent aspect of this
    gathering.

    Several Turkish youth took issue with some of the materials and
    information that Ladayan and her group were distributing.

    Esra and Sebnem, both 21 and studying at the Middle East Technical
    University in Ankara, Turkey, were open to discussion and wanted to
    explain their views, but did not want to give their last names.

    Esra explained that she and her friend "are not nationalists and we
    know that many bad things happened under the Ottomans, but we are
    against the references to Turkey, the word genocide and the numbers
    they are giving are really exaggerated," referring to the statistic
    of 1.5 million Armenians killed under Ottoman rule during World War I
    in an effort to ethnically cleanse Armenians from the Ottoman empire.



    Even more frustrating for Esra and Sebnem is the feeling that, as
    Turkish people are trying to improve their country, the issue of the
    treatment of Armenians in the past constantly hinders their movement.

    "We do not deny our heritage, but whenever Turkey becomes more
    qualified in the eyes of the global community," Sebnem said,
    "Armenians say that Turkish history is very bad. Turkey is then
    denied any sort of advancement. These actions support the backward
    attitudes in Turkey."

    Esra added that "in the process of joining the European Union many
    things are changing, but many people cannot see that. Turkey has a
    lot of problems, we do not deny this. We are not in the Middle East
    and we are not in Europe. We are something different.

    "Armenian people always say we are doing bad things, and we do not
    have a strong lobby, we do not explain ourselves well," she said.

    Ladayan appreciated the frustration that Esra and Sebnem were
    voicing, and again offered a suggestion as to how to resolve the
    conflict.

    "The long-standing conflict between Turkey and Armenians should end,"
    Ladayan said. "Turkey should recognize and pay for the suffering they
    caused, and then we can move on."

    After a heated discussion, Ladayan agreed to change her materials
    referring to Turkey, and instead have them refer to the Ottoman
    empire. Beyond that, however, they mostly agreed to disagree. The
    encounter was positive, though.

    Ladayan said she spoke with another Turkish participant earlier in
    the day, and after their heated conversation, "We were nice to each
    other. We were friends. We even shook hands at the end."

    Hovig Kouyoumdjian, another Lebanese student attending the Festival
    and working with Ladayan, said these encounters are important, even
    if most disagreements are not resolved on the spot. "I see in this
    event the leaders of the future," Kouyoumdjian said.

    "Reconciliation starts in places like this. It is in the hearts and
    minds of people."
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