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Netherlands: Turkey in EU only after reconciliation with Armenia

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  • Netherlands: Turkey in EU only after reconciliation with Armenia

    Turkey in EU only after reconciliation with Armenia

    Reformatorisch Dagblad
    May 21, 2004

    The relation between Turkey and Armenia must be re-established before the
    admission of Turkey to the European Union can be considered, states prof.
    dr. J. A. B. Jongeneel.

    The European Union (EU) will probably decide this year upon the possibility
    and desirability for allowing Turkey to become a member in the long run. The
    Netherlands will soon be President and will therefore have extra
    responsibility.

    It is extremely remarkable that neither Dutch policy, nor the Dutch press
    publicly pay attention to the broken relation between Turkey and its
    neighbouring country Armenia. This relation must be re-established before a
    EU membership of Turkey can be considered seriously.

    When Turkey is admitted to the EU in the long run, we will become direct
    neighbors with Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaidjan, Iran, Iraq and Syria. This
    article will only discuss the external border with Armenia.


    Change

    Approximately 99 percent of Turkey is Muslim today. A century ago, however,
    this was entirely different. An estimated 77 percent was Muslim and
    approximately 22 percent was Christian. At that time most of the Christians
    in Turkey belonged to the Armenian church or the Greek Orthodox church. In
    the past century Christianity in Turkey has thus on the one hand been
    excessively marginalised and on the other hand Islam has developed into a
    religion which has an uncontested monopolized position. This development to
    a mono religious society - with barely any churches, synagogues and temples
    still in use - is problematic.

    The enormous degradation of the number of Christians in Turkey at the end of
    the nineteenth century and in first half of the twentieth century has been
    caused by terrible events there. Two things stand out. First of all the
    'exchange' of population between Greece and Turkey, which was enforced by
    the politicians at that time: approximately 1,000,000 Greek orthodox were
    forced to move from Turkey to Greece, and approximately 400,000 Moslems from
    Greece to Turkey.

    Much more terrible than this "ethnic cleansing" was the deportation and the
    massacre of approximately 1,500,000 Armenians. This genocide, dating from
    the time before Atatürk came to power in Turkey, is still strongly denied by
    the current government of Turkey. Without batting an eye, Turkish historians
    also deny this historically well-established fact.


    Compensation

    Similar to Germany being able to become a full member of Europe after the
    second world war only by doing penance and giving compensation, present-day
    Turkey must also be able to qualify as a member of the EU right after
    recognition of and dealing with the above mentioned genocide. The
    Netherlands as temporary president of the EU must take the initiative for
    the reconciliation by means of a thorough historical study into the charged
    past.

    The best way for this to happen is through an EU commission of two Turkish,
    two Armenian and two European top historians (with a European President),
    with the task to describe and analyze the said genocide within a maximum of
    five years and consequently indicate ways in which to re-establish the
    mutual relations. A "great reconciliation" is desirable and subsequently
    history books should be rewritten for Turkish schools and other Turkish
    institutions.

    This way Turkey can not only learn how it has lost its multi religious and
    multicultural society in one hundred yearsı time, but also learn how it can
    regain this in the coming one hundred years. Reorientation will also be
    necessary for Armenia. As the victims of the apartheid in South Africa have
    required that peace be based on justice, in the same way the Armenians too
    will have their conditions for the reconciliation with Turkey.


    The Netherlands

    The admission of Turkey to the EU in the long run is one of the greatest
    European questions of this moment. Nevertheless it plays no role of meaning
    in the run-up to the European elections. Let us hope that the Dutch
    government will exploit its temporary presidency of the EU to turn the
    Armenian Genocide into a hard point of negotiation in the discussion
    concerning the admission of Turkey to the EU and will pursue an equitable
    reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey.

    The author is Professor Emeritus in Missiology at the University of Utrecht.
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