Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Lessons in history: Controversial Turkish Historian argues

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

  • Lessons in history: Controversial Turkish Historian argues

    The Gazette (Montreal, Quebec)
    June 26, 2004 Saturday Final Edition

    Lessons in history: Controversial Turkish Historian argues that
    recognizing the Armenian Genocide is a political necessity for his
    country

    by LEVON SEVUNTS

    It's sometimes hard to explain to non-Armenian friends the need to
    recognize the 1915 Armenian genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman
    Turkish government.

    "Why don't you let it go?" I often hear. "Get on with your life. It
    happened 90 years ago, for God's sake."

    But for Turkish historian Taner Akcam, the need to recognize and
    learn from the Armenian genocide is as acute now as it was when the
    modern Turkish Republic was founded 80 years ago, particularly in
    Turkey itself.

    Akcam, a controversial historian at home whose views have made him
    the target of death threats, argues that Turkey is approaching a
    second crucial stage in its nation-building process and if it doesn't
    learn from past mistakes, it is bound to repeat them.

    Akcam contends the collapse of the Soviet Union and the U.S. invasion
    of Iraq have reawakened the Eastern Question, the redrawing of the
    political map of the Middle East at the expense of the Ottoman Empire
    and now the Turkish Republic.

    Equally dangerous, Akcam argues, is the reawakening of revanchist
    ideas among Turkey's military-bureaucratic elites. Coupled together,
    these tendencies could lead to another calamity, he warns.

    >From Empire to Republic is certain to create controversy, especially
    in Turkey, where discussions of the Armenian genocide are still
    taboo. But what makes Akcam's book stand out among other works on the
    subject - apart from the fact that the author is a Turk - is that it
    is the first serious scholarly attempt to understand the genocide
    from the perspective of the perpetrator, rather than the victim.

    Akcam uses a curious mix of historical research, sociology and
    psychoanalysis to examine the cultural, ideological and political
    climate that led to the genocide and argues it was a carefully
    planned extermination, not an unfortunate byproduct of the First
    World War, as is the official Turkish position.

    His analysis of Turkish national identity and its past and present
    propensity for political violence is shocking even for a reader who
    does not see the country through the rosy glasses of Turkey's tourism
    ads.

    But Akcam is not a "self-loathing Turk." On the contrary, he comes
    across as somebody who cares deeply about his native country. In
    fact, one could argue that for Akcam, the issue of recognition of the
    Armenian genocide by Turkey is not just a question of a moral
    imperative, but of a political necessity for Turkey's transformation
    into a truly democratic country and its integration into the European
    Union.

    "It is a quest for Turkish national identity," Akcam writes. "The
    emergence of this Turkish national identity was one of the important
    reasons for the occurrence of the genocide and today is one of the
    important obstacles on the way to integration with Europe. The
    existence of the same mindset that caused the Armenian genocide seems
    today a major hindrance to solving the Kurdish question, and,
    therefore, to membership in the European Union."

    >From Empire to Republic is also a passionate plea for a dialogue and
    reconciliation between Armenians and Turks.

    Akcam's book is available online at http://www.zoryan.org/

    Levon Sevunts is a Montreal writer.

    [email protected]

    -------

    >From Empire to Republic:

    Turkish Nationalism & the Armenian Genocide

    By Taner Akcam Zed Books, 273 pages, $32

    GRAPHIC: Photo: RICHARD ARLESS JR. THE GAZETTE; Robert Kouyoumdjian,
    a member of the Armenian National Committee of Canada, near the
    Armenian National Monument in Montreal after the federal government
    agreed in April to recognize the Armenian genocide during the First
    World War.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X