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An historical heroine; Turkey and the Armenians

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  • An historical heroine; Turkey and the Armenians

    The Economist
    March 27 2004

    An historical heroine; Turkey and the Armenians

    Sabiha Gokcen, a Turkish aviator

    A row over the ethnicity of a Turkish icon

    WAS she Armenian? The question was on the minds of generals marking
    the third anniversary, on March 22nd, of the death of Sabiha Gokcen,
    Turkey's first woman pilot and the adopted daughter of modern
    Turkey's founder, Kemal Ataturk. The generals denounced claims that
    Turkey's feminist icon was an Armenian by birth when they appeared
    last month in Agos, a Turkish-Armenian paper in Istanbul.

    Any such debate mocked national values and was not conducive to
    social peace, fumed the top brass. Hrant Dink, Agos's managing
    editor, counters that it shows that Turks cannot confront their
    identity and past. He has been deluged with death threats and mobbed
    by ultra-nationalists ever since publishing claims by Hripsime
    Sebilciyan Gazalyan, an Armenian, that Miss Gokcen was her aunt. The
    official version is that she was an orphan from Bursa, in western
    Turkey, who was adopted by Ataturk in 1925. Mrs Gazalyan says that
    Ataturk plucked her from an orphanage in the south-eastern town of
    Sanliurfa, where she was dumped after losing her father in the mass
    slaughter of Armenians in 1915.

    Armenians insist that as many as 1.5m of their kin were murdered by
    Ottoman forces in what they term genocide. The Turks say at most
    300,000 Armenians perished, in a conflict Armenians instigated by
    allying with invading Russian troops. The few Turkish scholars who
    have challenged the official line have been called traitors. Taner
    Akcam, the only Turkish historian to have talked of genocide, had to
    seek refuge in America after a string of Turkish universities refused
    to hire him.

    Despite the row over Miss Gokcen, Mr Dink argues that attitudes to
    Turkey's 80,000 Armenians are changing. The mildly Islamist
    government led by the Justice and Development Party has nominated
    several Armenians for local elections on March 28th. Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan, the prime minister, vows to restore an exquisite Armenian
    church in the eastern province of Van. There is talk of resuming
    diplomatic ties with Armenia - so long as the Armenians drop demands
    that Turkey admit to genocide.

    GRAPHIC: A magnificent Turk - or Armenian?
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