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  • For Armenians, scars of genocide remain visible

    Posted on Sun, Apr. 24, 2005
    The Philadelphia Inquirer

    For Armenians, scars of genocide remain visible

    Joy E. Stocke
    lives and writes in Stockton

    Osman sits behind his desk in the tiny antique shop he owns tucked
    into one of the labyrinthine streets of Istanbul's Grand Bazaar. "Yes,
    it happened," he says. "To my father and my grandparents near Erzincan
    in what was then eastern Anatolia."

    Osman speaks slowly and clearly, a British inflection threading
    through his perfect English. "My father was 6 and his brother was
    4. When the soldiers came for my grandparents, two families of Alevi
    Turks [who follow the tradition of Shia Islam] hid my father and his
    brother. The soldiers gathered the people of the village and brought
    them to the fields in the shadow of the mountains, and slit their
    throats. For three years, the Alevis hid my father and his brother in
    the chimneys of their baking hearths. To protect the boys, they
    changed their Armenian Christian names to Muslim names."

    Osman's son arrives with small cups of coffee, and then shuts the door
    behind him. The air grows warm and stuffy, but Osman doesn't seem to
    notice. "When my father and his brother were freed, they became
    separated. For the rest of his life, my father looked for him,
    visiting every town no matter how small, hoping that his brother would
    appear on the street or in a coffee house.

    When I was 12, my father died of a broken heart, I'm sure. But there
    is irony in my story, because the government had a special program for
    orphaned boys.

    They sent me to one of the best schools in Turkey."

    In that school, Osman met Nuri, who owns a carpet shop nearby. "All
    these years, Osman and I have been friends," says Nuri, "brothers
    really, but we've never talked of this subject. He knows it happened;
    I know it happened. Why make problems between us?"

    Nuri and Osman spoke these words two weeks ago, well aware that today
    - April 24 - many Western countries will mark Armenian Genocide
    Remembrance Day, the 90th anniversary of the beginning of massacres
    and deportation of Armenians from a land where they had lived for more
    than 3,000 years.

    Five years ago, most Turks wouldn't speak openly about what they say
    is a "so-called genocide," but with Turkey's bid to enter the European
    Union, friends who once were afraid to voice their opinions about an
    event deleted from their history books are beginning to talk.

    The Turkish government, at odds with many of its citizens, denies that
    systematic deportations and killings of Armenians occurred. Yet, if
    you travel to the eastern border of Turkey, you will find abandoned
    churches. And in travel posters and ads in most tourist offices, you
    will see a lone red brick church sitting on an island called Akdamar
    in the center of a lake called Van, named for a once-thriving
    metropolis of Armenian farmers, craftsmen, businessmen, and traders.

    You begin to wonder: If a well-photographed Armenian church sits on an
    island - and in the nearby abandoned city of Ani sit hundreds more
    churches - where did the Armenians go?

    Until the 19th century, the Ottoman empire was known for tolerance of
    its Christian minorities, but things changed when the Ottoman empire
    went into decline. In July 1908, a group of Turkish nationalists known
    as the Young Turks - junior officers in the Turkish Army - forced the
    Sultan to allow a constitutional government guaranteeing basic rights
    to Turkey's citizens.

    But in 1913, three leaders of the Young Turks seized control of the
    government, planning to expand the borders of Turkey into Central
    Asia, creating a new empire called Turan with one language and one
    religion.

    Armed roundups of Armenians - who, encouraged by the European powers
    and Russia, had considered establishing their own state - began on the
    evening of April 24, 1915. Three hundred Armenian political leaders,
    educators, writers, and clergy in Istanbul were jailed, tortured, then
    hanged or shot.

    In the following three years, somewhere between 700,000 to more than 1
    million Armenians were killed or died of starvation, thirst and
    disease, and deported to camps in the Syrian desert.

    Ninety years later, the Turkish Parliament has launched an offensive
    saying that no genocide took place during what they claim was a war.
    Meanwhile, in the United States, Armenians are lobbying for formal
    recognition that the first genocide of the 20th century took place in
    Turkey.

    Osman finishes his coffee, gently setting the cup in its saucer. "You
    ask me what to call the murders of my family?" he says. "What good is
    a name if we can't openly admit it happened?"
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