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Turkey, Armenia...: Will There Ever Be a Post-Genocide Era?

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  • Turkey, Armenia...: Will There Ever Be a Post-Genocide Era?

    Newropeans Magazine, France
    April 26 2005


    Turkey, Armenia, and the Sweet Hereafter: Will There Ever Be a
    Post-Genocide Era?

    Written by Raffi K. Hovannisian
    Tuesday, 26 April 2005

    The Armenian Genocide and its final act turn ninety last week. The
    lack of recognition, redemption, and closure of this defining
    watershed for Armenians and Turks alike has been driven by power
    politics and the hedging of history, aggressive revisionism and a
    strategic incapacity of the perpetrators, the victims, and their
    generations to call it like it is and move beyond.

    The lessons, risks, and dangers flowing from the Genocide and its
    contemporary continuation are all the more poignant because the
    Armenian case was not only the physical murder of most individuals
    making up the nation, but also the violent interruption and forcible
    expropriation of its millennial homeland and way of life. This
    pivotal distinction constitutes a primary source, different from the
    Holocaust, for the denialist demeanor of the Ottoman Empire's
    successor regime, the quest for justice and personal integrity of the
    battered and scattered Armenian survivors, and the vicissitudes of
    international diplomacy.

    The legal, ethical, educational, material, and territorial components
    of this landmark catastrophe have proved too complex a challenge for
    any party or power to meet. It is the truly unique underpinning of
    the Armenian experience that accounts in large measure for why a
    historical, world-documented nation-killing remains in suspense to
    this day and continues to serve as an instrument for polemics,
    politics, and a variety of "national interests."

    Absence of a meeting of modern Turkish and Armenian hearts and minds
    means a history that is off limits but ever present, a frontier that
    is undelimited but closed, and a relationship (or lack thereof) that
    is hostage to the heritage of homeland genocide. It is this very
    relationship, between Turkey and Armenia and their constituencies,
    that is the key to creating a brave new region where the interests of
    all players converge to form a single page of security and
    development. And it is this relationship, if honestly and
    efficiently forged, that would become the foundation for the
    strengthening of respective sovereignties, for cooperation in matters
    of education, culture and historical preservation, for an enduring
    peace in Karabagh, Nakhichevan and the broader neighborhood, for open
    roads, skies and seas, and for the guaranteed choice of a rightful
    return of all refugees and their progeny to their places of origin.

    As it stands, however, an unrequited past still doubles as an
    unsettled present, leaving unchecked and unpredictable the many
    future impediments to peace, stability, and reconciliation. How long
    can this commingling of tenses go on? How can all concerned frame a
    process for a resolution of substance? Can the heirs to Turkish
    perpetration translate self-interest into seeking atonement, and can
    the descendants of the great Armenian dispossession agree to move on?
    Will we, or our children, ever see the light, let alone reflect back
    from the heights, of the post-Genocide world?

    Turkey's and Armenia's initially separate paths to European
    integration might provide them one, perhaps penultimate opportunity,
    against their own odds, to assume history, draw the line, and embrace
    a promising epoch as sound, if unlikely partners in regional and
    global affairs.

    New benchmarks and new leaders and a new discourse are in order.

    Raffi K. Hovannisian, formerly Armenia's minister of foreign affairs,
    is founding director of the Armenian Center for National and
    International Studies in Yerevan.
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