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Economist: Turkey's Armenians

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  • Economist: Turkey's Armenians

    Turkey's Armenians
    Beginning to face up to a terrible past
    The Economist

    Apr 7th 2005
    DIYARBAKIR

    At least the Turks now allow the Armenian tragedy to be talked about

    ZEKAI YILMAZ, a Kurdish health worker, was 12 when he found out that
    his grandmother was Armenian. `She was speaking in a funny language
    with our Armenian neighbour,' he recalled. `When they saw me they
    immediately switched to Kurdish.' Pressed for an explanation, his
    grandmother revealed an enormous scar on her back. At 13 she had been
    stabbed and left for dead together with hundreds of fellow Armenians in
    a field outside Diyarbakir. Mr Yilmaz's grandfather found her, rescued
    her, converted her to Islam and married her. `But in her heart she
    remained an Armenian and I sort of feel Armenian too,' said Mr Yilmaz.

    Similar accounts abound in Turkey's mainly Kurdish south-eastern
    provinces. The region was home to a thriving community of Armenian
    Christians until the first world war; traces of their culture are
    evident in the beautifully carved stone churches that lie in ruins or
    have been converted into mosques.

    But the first world war was when, according to the Armenians, 1.5m of
    their people were systematically murdered in a genocide perpetrated by
    Ottoman Turks, a massacre that went on even when the war was over.
    Millions of Armenians worldwide are set to commemorate the 90th
    anniversary of the start of the violence on April 24th.

    The Turks deny there was genocide. Though they admit that several
    hundred thousand Armenians perished - the figures vary from one official
    to the next - they insist that it was from hunger and disease during the
    mass deportation to Syria (then also Ottoman) of Armenians who had
    collaborated with the invading Russian forces in eastern Turkey.

    Some Kurds dispute this version saying that their forefathers had
    joined in the slaughter after being promised Armenian lands - and a place
    in heaven for killing infidels - by the Young Turks who ruled Turkey at
    the time. `You [Kurds] are having us for breakfast, they [Turks] will
    have you for lunch,' an Armenian proverb born in those days, was
    `eerily prescient' says a Kurdish journalist, referring to the violence
    between Turkish forces and separatist Kurds that later racked the
    south-east.

    Until recently such talk would have landed these Kurds in jail on
    charges of threatening the integrity of the Turkish state. But as
    Turkey seeks membership of the European Union, its repressive laws are
    being replaced by ones that allow freer speech. Calls are mounting
    within Europe, and much more encouragingly among some Turks themselves,
    for the country to face up to its past. As a result, unprecedented
    debate of the Armenian issue has erupted in intellectual and political
    circles and the mainstream Turkish press.

    Some of the reaction has been ugly. Orhan Pamuk, Turkey's best-known
    contemporary novelist, received death threats when he told a Swiss
    newspaper that `One million Armenians and 30,000 Kurds were killed in
    Turkey.' One over-zealous official in a rural backwater went so far as
    to issue a circular calling for all of Mr Pamuk's books to be
    destroyed - only to find there were none in his town. His actions were
    applauded by a vocal and potentially violent group of
    ultra-nationalists, who claim that the Europeans are using Armenians,
    Kurds and other minorities to dismember Turkey.

    Yet there are hopeful signs that the Turks are willing to listen to
    other opinions as well. Halil Berktay, a respected Ottoman historian
    long ostracised for his unconventional views, survived telling the
    pro-establishment daily Milliyet recently that the Armenians were
    victims of `ethnic cleansing'. After decades of wavering, Fethiye
    Cetin, a Turkish lawyer, roused the courage to publish the story of her
    grandmother, another `secret Armenian' rescued by a Turk. Published in
    November, the book is already into its fifth edition.

    In Istanbul members of a newly formed ethnic Armenian women's platform
    have vowed to shatter negative stereotypes by publicising the works of
    their successful sisters. `We are fed up with Turkish movies that
    portray us as hairy, morally promiscuous and money-grubbing creatures,'
    explained one.

    In a groundbreaking if modest gesture, Turkey's mildly Islamist prime
    minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, made a joint call last month with the
    main opposition leader, Deniz Baykal, for an impartial study by
    historians from both sides of the genocide debate. His reason, he said,
    was that he did not want `future generations to live under the shadow
    of continued hatred and resentment.' He believes that the findings will
    show there was no genocide.

    The move has been shrugged off by Armenia as a ploy to quash attempts
    in various EU quarters to link Turkey's membership with recognition of
    the genocide, as well as deterring America's Congress from a possible
    resolution mentioning `genocide'. Turkish officials retort that the
    prime minister's call marks the first time any Turkish leader has
    invited international debate of Turkey's past, albeit a purely academic
    one. If the government were insincere, they ask, why did the Turkish
    parliament ask a pair of ethnic Armenian intellectuals to brief it on
    April 5th?

    Hrant Dink, the publisher of Agos, a weekly read by Turkey's
    60,000-member Armenian community, was one of the questioned
    intellectuals. He offered plenty of sensible advice. He says that
    Turkey, rather than getting bogged down in endless wrangles over
    statistics and terminology, needs to normalise its relations with
    neighbouring Armenia. As a first step, it should unconditionally open
    its borders with the tiny, landlocked former Soviet republic. These
    were sealed in 1993 after Armenia occupied large chunks of ethnically
    Turkic Azerbaijan in a bloody conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh
    enclave.
    Make friends with Armenia, first

    Not only would Turkey score valuable credit with the EU and the United
    States, but mutual trade would blunt the influence of the hawkish
    Armenian diaspora. A recent survey carried out jointly by a Turkish and
    Armenian think-tank showed 51% of Turkish respondents and 63% of
    Armenians in favour of opening the borders.

    Even so, mutual hostility prevails. Among the Armenians, 93% said it
    would be `bad' if their son married a Turkish girl, while 64% of Turks
    said the same of an Armenian bride. This does not worry the
    irrepressibly optimistic Mr Dink. `Let's first get to know one
    another,' he declares. `Love will follow.'
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