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  • None Dared Call it Genocide

    None Dared Call It Genocide
    Yigal Schleifer. The Jerusalem Report. May 2, 2005. pg. 24

    Of course, the question of what occurred fundamentally divides Turks
    and Armenians. What's clear is that with the approach of World War I,
    the Ottoman Empire found itself in a state of steep decline, and
    confronting a growing sense of national identity among its subjects,
    both Turks and non-Turks. The nationalism among its minorities -
    especially Greeks and Armenians, who had historical territorial claims
    on Ottoman lands - was particularly threatening to the Ottomans.
    Armenians claim the Ottoman Turks killed as many as 1.5 million of
    their people during the years 1915-1923 through deportations and mass
    killings in what is now eastern Turkey. To the Armenians, this was an
    ethnic cleansing campaign, meant to drive the non-Muslims out of
    Turkey's Anatolian heartland. On April 24, Armenians worldwide will
    commemorate 90 years since the beginning of the massacres. Turkey
    rejects the genocide claim, admitting that Armenians were killed at
    the time, but disputes the number and says the deaths were unorganized
    and part of wider regional wartime violence that also affected Muslim
    Turks.

    Perhaps inevitably, the newfound readiness to delve into the past is
    evoking a backlash in Turkey. Openly discussing the genocide question
    is "a radical shift, but it also brings about radical reactions," says
    sociologist [Ferhat Kentel]. "There are two things happening at the
    same time: [progressive academics and intellectuals] are talking about
    the Armenian issue, while nationalism becomes stronger." In Turkish
    nationalist ideology, Armenians are viewed as a seditious threat,
    their claims of genocide nothing more than a ruse to take Turkish
    territory. When Orhan Pamuk, one of Turkey's best-known authors,
    stated in a Swiss paper in early February that "a million Armenians
    were killed in Turkey," the response included death threats and
    charges of dishonoring the state filed against him in court. A
    governor in one rural Turkish district even ordered that all of
    Pamuk's books be taken off the shelves in the district's few libraries
    and destroyed, only to soon find out that none of the libraries had
    any books by the author.

    "To my sorrow, Israel has become Turkey's principal partner in helping
    it deny the Armenian claims," says Yair Auron, a professor at Israel's
    Open University and author of "The Banality of Denial: Israel and the
    Armenian Genocide." While countries that have not recognized the
    genocide will still send officials to commemoration events or issue
    statements that use nuanced language to remember what happened without
    calling it genocide, Israel refrains from doing either, Auron
    says. The two times Israeli officials have made a public appearance at
    a commemoration event - most notably by then- education minister Yossi
    Sarid, in 2000, when he referred to what happened as "genocide" caused
    strains with Ankara and led to disavowals from Jerusalem. And in 2003,
    Naomi Nalbandian, an Israeli citizen of Armenian descent, was
    pressured to change the text of remarks she had planned to deliver
    when lighting a torch at Israel's 55th Independence Day celebrations
    at Mt. Herzl. Nalbandian was forced to delete a reference to herself
    as a "third-generation survivor of the Armenian genocide carried out
    in 1915." Full Text (3876   words) (Copyright (c) 2005. The Jerusalem
    Report)

    None Dared Call It Genocide

    For 90 years, the atrocities suffered by the Armenians at the hands of
    Ottoman Turks were a taboo topic in Turkey. Now, the country has begun
    to discuss this troubling chapter in its history.

    Yigal Schleifer Istanbul

    When it was launched 10 years ago, Agos, a weekly newspaper serving
    Tur-key's Armenian community, was meant to be a brash new
    voice. Unlike two other papers that had been publishing for decades,
    Agos was written mostly in Turkish, rather than Armenian
    exclusively. It was a way of reaching out to younger readers of
    Armenian descent, while at the same time expanding the paper's impact
    beyond the confines of the 60,000-member Armenian community, making it
    both something of a public voice for the community and a window into
    it.

    If it broke new ground dealing with present-day problems, Agos, like
    its older rivals, had to take a circuitous approach in talking about
    the past. "Previously, when we talked about history" - in particular,
    about the fate of Turkey's once-sizable Armenian minority - "we didn't
    mention things that actually happened but focused instead on culture,"
    says Hrant Dink, the newspaper's founding editor, speaking in Agos's
    downtown Istanbul offices.

    This roundabout method made sense: What happened to the Armenians in
    Turkey during and just after World War I had long been one of the most
    taboo and explosive topics in Turkey, the limits of its discussion
    strictly controlled by the government. Those who claim there was a
    genocide could conceivably be prosecuted for tarnishing the honor of
    the Turkish state. An attempt two years to screen in Istanbul
    Armenian-Canadian director Atom Egoyan's "Ararat," which deals with
    the genocide issue, was called off after extreme nationalist groups
    threatened violence.

    Of course, the question of what occurred fundamentally divides Turks
    and Armenians. What's clear is that with the approach of World War I,
    the Ottoman Empire found itself in a state of steep decline, and
    confronting a growing sense of national identity among its subjects,
    both Turks and non-Turks. The nationalism among its minorities -
    especially Greeks and Armenians, who had historical territorial claims
    on Ottoman lands - was particularly threatening to the
    Ottomans. Armenians claim the Ottoman Turks killed as many as 1.5
    million of their people during the years 1915-1923 through
    deportations and mass killings in what is now eastern Turkey. To the
    Armenians, this was an ethnic cleansing campaign, meant to drive the
    non-Muslims out of Turkey's Anatolian heartland. On April 24,
    Armenians worldwide will commemorate 90 years since the beginning of
    the massacres. Turkey rejects the genocide claim, admitting that
    Armenians were killed at the time, but disputes the number and says
    the deaths were unorganized and part of wider regional wartime
    violence that also affected Muslim Turks.

    Since the 1960s, the Armenians have been waging an international
    campaign to have it recognized as genocide, a step that has been taken
    as a symbolic gesture by legislatures in more than a dozen countries,
    most notably France. In response, over the past 25 years, Ankara has
    waged its own political fight to keep the word "genocide" from being
    attached to what happened.

    Until recently, the state's official version of events was the only
    one that could be aired publicly in Turkey. Those who dared to
    challenge the taboo could expect a swift backlash in the press, and,
    perhaps, in the case of academics, being blacklisted.

    But over the last few years, something has started to shift in Turkey,
    something that is being reflected in the pages of Agos, Dink
    says. "Slowly we started to ask what happened to the Armenians," he
    says. "Now we're at the point of telling what happened to them."

    But Agos is not the only venue in which a change is taking place. If
    the subject of the Armenians' fate was at one time never talked about
    or even mentioned in the media or history books in Turkey, the topic
    today has entered the public arena in a major way, particularly with
    the approach of the anniversary.

    With the government concerned about the country's undemocratic image
    as it presses its bid to enter the EU, it seems reluctant to clamp
    down on freedom of speech. In recent years, a group of academics,
    small in number but influential, have begun to question the official
    narrative. Turkish newspapers are now filled with articles on the
    subject. Most of them still ultimately reject the Armenian claims, but
    some rather daringly push the envelope on what can be asked. For
    example, the mainstream daily Milliyet recently ran a long interview
    with Turkish historian Halil Berktay - one of the first academics to
    support the genocide case - in which he called the Ottoman plan
    against the Armenians "genocide" and "ethnic cleansing."

    Meanwhile, one of Turkey's best-selling books right now, "My
    Grandmother," by Istanbul lawyer Fethiye Cetin, tells the true story
    of an Armenian woman who survived the 1915 massacres and was raised as
    a Muslim Turk.

    These are developments that would have been unimaginable 10 years ago,
    says Dink. "The Armenian problem is no longer seen as a taboo subject
    in Turkey," he says.

    Turks say the softening of the country's historical stance is one
    aspect of increasing democratization and reforms, both related to
    Turkey's EU membership bid. These changes have spurred the growth of a
    civil society, which has allowed an increasing number of
    nongovernmental groups - from academics and businessmen to musicians
    and women's organizations - to meet with their Armenian counterparts,
    in the process helping to redefine the debate in Turkey. At the same
    time, as the limits on that debate expand - and as pressure grows on
    Turkey to confront its past - a backlash is brewing, with the Turkish
    state getting ready to fight for its honor.

    The 1948 United Nations Genocide Convention defines the act as
    measures "committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a
    national, ethnical, racial, or religious group." Although a clear- cut
    definition exists, Turkey has been able over the years to bring just
    enough contrary scholarship forward to keep going the debate of
    whether what took place constituted genocide. What is certain is that
    the Armenian issue, in many ways, long ago left the realm of history -
    in Turkey and elsewhere - and firmly entered that of politics.

    The Armenians' campaign for recognition started in earnest in the
    mid-1960s, around the time of the 50th anniversary commemoration of
    the events of 1915, when their diaspora, especially in the United
    States and France, had become more organized politically. By the year
    2000, the campaign had picked up enough steam that the U.S. House of
    Representatives came very close to passing a resolution recognizing
    the genocide. But by that time, fighting the Armenian claims had
    become a central tenet of Turkish foreign policy. Ankara has
    threatened to sever relations with countries that pass genocide
    resolutions, while in the case of the U.S., it threatened to cut off
    access to Turkish air bases as well as cancel lucrative defense deals
    if Congress recognized the Armenian claims. The lawmakers ultimately
    agreed to shelve the bill after an appeal by then- president Bill
    Clinton on the grounds of national interest. In the case of France,
    Turkey temporarily withdrew its ambassador to Paris, and canceled
    deals involving French companies after a genocide bill was passed
    there in 2001.

    The subject of intense lobbying by both the Turks and Armenians aside,
    the genocide issue has also involved American Jewish organizations,
    which have put their Washington connections behind Turkey's cause, as
    well as Israel, which has refrained from recognizing the Armenians'
    claims, in order not to jeopardize its strategic relations with Turkey
    (see box, page 26).

    Inside Turkey, meanwhile, the Armenian issue was a non-subject, kept
    out of the classrooms and textbooks. In the universities, which until
    less than a decade ago were completely state-controlled, the topic was
    off-limits for researchers.

    "It used to be a silent thing," says Ferhat Kentel, a sociologist at
    Istanbul Bilgi University, one of several private universities that
    have opened up in the country in the last decade. Kentel, along with a
    colleague in the Armenian capital of Yerevan, has just completed the
    first joint Turkish-Armenian public opinion survey, which found a high
    level of mistrust and prejudice between the two nations, particularly
    on the Armenian side. "When I was a kid, I wasn't even aware of this
    issue," says Kentel.

    Taner Akcam, a professor of history at the University of Minnesota and
    the first Turkish academic to publicly describe the World War I-era
    events as "genocide," in the early 1990s, believes the tension with
    the U.S. in 2000 over Congress's actions helped turn the issue into
    something Turks can discuss. As Congress came close to passing its
    resolution, the Turkish press and public started paying more attention
    to what was happening in Washington, contemplating the significance of
    the Armenian issue in a way they never had before, he says.

    "Before 2000, there was a shield outside of Turkey keeping anything
    about the genocide issue from coming in," says Akcam, 51, who left his
    home country in 1997 after becoming a political liability that no
    university wanted to touch. "The debate in 2000 made a crack in this
    shield," he says, speaking by telephone from Minneapolis. In response,
    the Turkish government decided to add a domestic component to its
    fight against the Armenians, introducing lessons teaching the Turkish
    perspective to school curriculums. Akcam compares that move to Mikhail
    Gorbachev's Perestroika in the Soviet Union during the 1980s: a reform
    that only left people wanting more. "Turkish society was curious to
    know what happened. They couldn't keep [the issue] out anymore," Akcam
    says.

    At the same time, other forces were starting to make their mark on
    Turkish politics and society. While at its Brussels summit last
    December the EU finally decided to begin accession negotiations with
    Turkey, EU-minded democratic reforms in Turkey had already started to
    be put in place several years ago, creating more space for public
    debate on the Armenian question.

    "Turkey has transformed. The level of education has gone up and civil
    society has expanded, so the state can no longer dominate and
    monopolize the public sphere the way it used to," says Fatma Muge
    Gocek, a Turkish sociologist who teaches at the University of Michigan
    and who is the co-organizer of the Workshop for Armenian- Turkish
    Studies (WATS), a gathering of Turkish and Armenian scholars that has
    been meeting annually since 2000.

    Meanwhile, the growth of private universities in the country has meant
    that researchers can slowly start delving into previously forbidden
    topics or can say unpopular things without fearing the loss of their
    jobs. "Generally speaking, the average academic mind is not open, but
    there are some islands in the academic world who are trying to go
    deeper, to investigate," says Kentel.

    Says David Phillips, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign
    Relations, in New York, who helped organize the now-defunct Turkish
    Armenian Reconciliation Commission (TARC), a group of high-level
    Turkish and Armenian academics and former diplomats that held several
    meetings between 2001 and 2004: "Five years back, you couldn't talk to
    anyone about Armenian issues" - be it the genocide claims or the lack
    of diplomatic relations between Turkey and Armenia - "because they
    knew that the history was implicit in the discussion. Now there is a
    veritable cottage industry of groups working on the Turkish-Armenian
    issue."

    For example, Istanbul freight shipper Noyan Soyak helped found in 1997
    a pioneering group that brings together businessmen from Turkey and
    Armenia, which became independent in 1991, on joint projects. Though
    neighbors, Turkey broke off diplomatic relations with Armenia in 1993
    in the wake of its occupation of a large chunk of territory belonging
    to Turkish ally Azerbaijan.

    Soyak, a boyish-looking 38-year-old with bushy blondish hair, says the
    organization stepped into a gaping void when it got off the
    ground. "When we started, it was difficult to even publicly pronounce
    the word 'Armenia' or 'Armenians' in Turkey," says Soyak, whose group
    - the Turkish-Armenian Business Development Council - today has some
    250 members from both countries. Among other projects, the council is
    currently producing a jazz CD that brings together Turkish and
    Armenian musicians. "As long as the borders are closed, doing business
    is difficult, so we're doing everything here but business," Soyak says
    with a shrug.

    Perhaps inevitably, the newfound readiness to delve into the past is
    evoking a backlash in Turkey. Openly discussing the genocide question
    is "a radical shift, but it also brings about radical reactions," says
    sociologist Kentel. "There are two things happening at the same time:
    [progressive academics and intellectuals] are talking about the
    Armenian issue, while nationalism becomes stronger." In Turkish
    nationalist ideology, Armenians are viewed as a seditious threat,
    their claims of genocide nothing more than a ruse to take Turkish
    territory. When Orhan Pamuk, one of Turkey's best-known authors,
    stated in a Swiss paper in early February that "a million Armenians
    were killed in Turkey," the response included death threats and
    charges of dishonoring the state filed against him in court. A
    governor in one rural Turkish district even ordered that all of
    Pamuk's books be taken off the shelves in the district's few libraries
    and destroyed, only to soon find out that none of the libraries had
    any books by the author.

    While civil society groups have taken the lead in pushing Turkey along
    in confronting the Armenian question, in recent weeks the Turkish
    state has made it clear that it is not quite out of the picture,
    stepping in in order to once again try and set the course of the
    debate on the issue.

    For Turkey's ruling elite, the Armenian issue still remains a bete
    noir, one that is especially threatening today. "Turkey feels [that
    recognizing the genocide] might be a precondition for entrance to the
    EU," says Yusuf Halacoglu, director of the Turkish Historical
    Society. This quasi-governmental body has recently been stepping up
    its work on countering the Armenian claims, even sponsoring
    archaeological digs in Eastern Turkey that are intended to uncover
    mass graves of Turks allegedly massacred by Armenians. "No one has
    said this explicitly, but we see that this is being discussed behind
    the curtains." Although European officials have denied this, it is
    also true that the EU - which has been trying to promote a "good
    neighbor" policy in Europe and the surrounding region - would prefer
    that Turkey patch up its differences with Armenia sooner rather than
    later.

    In response, the Turkish state has been revving up its in-house
    counter-information efforts. Halacoglu's organization, for example, is
    busy collecting material from European and American archives that it
    says will prove once and for all the falsity of the Armenian claims.

    In his spacious office in Ankara, Halacoglu, dressed in a dark
    pinstripe suit, lays out copies of war-era maps and diplomatic cables
    on a coffee table. According to his group's research, Halacoglu says
    around 300,000 Armenians died between 1915 and 1918, only 10,000 of
    them massacred. The rest died of hunger and disease, he simply
    explains, not touching on what role deportation might have had in
    bringing on either of those conditions.

    "Throughout Europe at the time, we see that a lot of people are dying
    from diseases," says Halacoglu, who previously worked at the Turkish
    state archives before becoming director of the historical society a
    dozen years ago. "I feel very comfortable after all the research we
    have done," he says. "We are open to dialogue with anyone. We are open
    to discussing if this was genocide or not," he adds.

    In fact, the Turkish government, together with the country's largest
    opposition party, recently announced that they also are open to
    dialogue and would like to get Turkish and Armenian historians
    together under international supervision to investigate the
    issue. While the statement was welcomed by some as a step forward,
    it's not clear how far Turkey is actually willing to go and just who
    the historians would be.

    During an interview in his office in the parliament building in
    Ankara, Sukru Elekdag, a dapper member of the opposition Republican
    People's Party (CHP) and one of the main architects of the Turkish
    dialogue initiative, says civil initiatives at Turkish-Armenian
    reconciliation have so far failed.

    "Now, with our march to integration with Europe, this problem has
    become much more acute," says Elekdag, 80, a former ambassador to
    Washington who speaks fluent English with something approaching a
    Midwestern accent. "Our leaders realize it's a problem that must be
    solved." While he proposes the joint study by Turkish and Armenian
    historians as a way of solving the problem, Elekdag seems to be
    already sure in whose favor the joint research will point.

    "To my mind, the Armenian allegations are baseless and groundless,"
    the legislator says. "When I look at this from a legal and historical
    perspective, it's almost impossible to accuse the Ottomans of
    committing genocide. There had been a civil war. It was started by the
    Armenians. The events of 1915 are a typical case of revolt and
    betrayal."

    Ronald Suny, an Armenian American professor of political science and
    history at the University of Chicago, and a co-organizer of WATS, the
    annual gathering of Turkish and Armenian academics, says this is a
    perpetuation of the historic Turkish position that "there was no
    genocide, and the Armenians were to blame for what happened to
    them. None of this is sustainable by any credible scholar."

    Despite the work being done by Turks and Armenians on bridging the
    gulf between them, truly resolving their differences may hinge not on
    agreeing on what happened, but, rather, if one word - "genocide" -
    fits those events. In that sense, any real progress may take a long
    time. As part of its work, the organizers of the Turkish- Armenian
    Reconciliation Commission had the New York-based International Center
    for Transitional Justice conduct a legal analysis of the applicability
    of the Genocide Convention to the 1915 events. The ICTJ report
    concluded that the events could be defined as "genocide," but because
    the convention could not be applied retroactively, Turkey would not be
    liable for any reparations, something Ankara has long expressed fears
    about having to do if it accepted the Armenian claims.

    If the document was an attempt to create a conciliatory way out of the
    impasse, it failed. Ustun Erguder, a Turkish political scientist who
    was a member of TARC, says the association of the word "genocide" with
    the barbarity of Nazi Germany makes the claim especially difficult for
    Turks, even forward-thinking ones, to accept.

    "I think Turks [who are dealing with the issue] have come a long way
    even to say, 'We did something wrong to the Armenians.' Turkey is in
    the process of recognizing that, but there are few historians or
    intellectuals who are willing to call it genocide, although the issue
    is becoming debatable in Turkey," he says.

    Agos editor Dink believes the only way forward is to continue the work
    that civil society groups have begun and to increase the interaction
    between Turks and Armenians. Only this, he says, can break through the
    enmity that has developed over the decades. "Both sides are clinical
    cases, suffering their own paranoia," Dink says, speaking slowly and
    intently. "Both need their own cure. The remedy is dialogue between
    the two nations. This is the best medicine."

    'The Jewish Lobby Helped Enormously'

    In the 1970s and 1980, as Armenian lobbying efforts in the
    U.S. started to raise the pressure on Turkey, Ankara began to
    understand that the well-organized American Jewish lobby could act as
    a counterweight to the Armenians. The Jewish organizations played
    along, because the strategic value of the budding Israeli-Turkish
    alliance carried more weight than the historical claims of the
    Armenians.

    "The Jewish lobby helped us enormously," says parliament member Sukru
    Elekdag, who was the Turkish ambassador in Washington from 1979 to
    1989.

    In realpolitik terms, the arrangement has worked for all
    involved. Turkey gets a powerful ally in Washington. The American
    Jewish community then has a useful lever to push Turkey closer toward
    Israel (which has also refrained from recognizing the Armenians'
    claims). Meanwhile, the implicit support of U.S. Jewish organizations
    and the tacit support of Israel give moral cover to any American
    administration that stops legislation recognizing the Armenian
    genocide.

    "To my sorrow, Israel has become Turkey's principal partner in helping
    it deny the Armenian claims," says Yair Auron, a professor at Israel's
    Open University and author of "The Banality of Denial: Israel and the
    Armenian Genocide." While countries that have not recognized the
    genocide will still send officials to commemoration events or issue
    statements that use nuanced language to remember what happened without
    calling it genocide, Israel refrains from doing either, Auron
    says. The two times Israeli officials have made a public appearance at
    a commemoration event - most notably by then- education minister Yossi
    Sarid, in 2000, when he referred to what happened as "genocide" caused
    strains with Ankara and led to disavowals from Jerusalem. And in 2003,
    Naomi Nalbandian, an Israeli citizen of Armenian descent, was
    pressured to change the text of remarks she had planned to deliver
    when lighting a torch at Israel's 55th Independence Day celebrations
    at Mt. Herzl. Nalbandian was forced to delete a reference to herself
    as a "third-generation survivor of the Armenian genocide carried out
    in 1915."

    The person who was probably most responsible for setting this dynamic
    in motion is Turkish Jewish businessman Jak Kamhi, the founder and
    chairman of Profilo, a large electronics and appliance manufacturing
    company. Kamhi, 80, counts various U.S. presidents and Israeli prime
    ministers among his friends. Speaking in his cavernous Istanbul
    office, which is furnished with toffee-colored leather chairs and
    couch, Kamhi says he has helped the fight against the Armenian claims
    out of a sense of duty to the memory of the Jewish victims of the
    Holocaust. "[Countering] the so-called genocide is more important for
    the Jews in the Diaspora and Israel than the Turks," Kamhi says. "It
    is not something you can compare to the Holocaust and the genocide
    that happened in Europe. You can speak about a drama, about many other
    things, but not about a genocide. That happened in Europe."

    The policy is not without its critics. Jewish lobbyists in Washington
    admit that supporting Turkey in the genocide debate is an unpopular
    position among many of their organizations' members. "We get a lot of
    criticism from our own members on this," says one Jewish official, who
    asked not to be named. The issue is compounded by the fact that large
    Jewish and Armenian communities live side-by- side in places like New
    York, Boston and Los Angeles.

    "Israel committed an original sin by not explaining to Turkey from the
    start that the Armenian genocide could not be negotiated as part of
    their relations," says Auron. "I really think if we had told them from
    the outset that this subject is not part of the discussion regarding
    our relationship, the Turks would have accepted it." As custodian of
    the memory and lessons of the Holocaust, Israel is obliged to change
    course on the issue, Auron says. "You have to take a position: And the
    historic and moral position is one that accepts the genocide."

    Y.S.

    Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or
    distribution is prohibited without permission.
    Section:   Middle East
    ISSN/ISBN:   07926049
    Text Word Count   3876
    Document URL:    


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