Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ACNIS Roundtable on Public Opinion and the Armenian Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ACNIS Roundtable on Public Opinion and the Armenian Genocide

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Center for National and International Studies
    75 Yerznkian Street
    Yerevan 375033, Armenia
    Tel: (+374 - 1) 52.87.80 or 27.48.18
    Fax: (+374 - 1) 52.48.46
    E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]
    Website: www.acnis.am


    April 26, 2005


    ACNIS Roundtable on Public Opinion and the Armenian Genocide
    Richard Hovannisian Keynotes

    Yerevan--The Armenian Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS)
    today released the results of a public survey on "The Armenian Genocide: 90
    Years and Waiting" which it conducted among 1900 citizens from Yerevan and
    all of Armenia's regions.

    ACNIS founder Raffi K. Hovannisian invited the participants to stand in a
    moment of silence for the one and a half million victims of the Armenian
    Genocide and the millennial homeland of which they were brutally
    dispossessed. "These 90 years could not make the Armenian nation forget this
    defining calamity, nor did they relieve the deep pain of the Genocide
    survivors and all Armenians the world over. The day will come when the
    civilized world condemns the Armenian Genocide, and Turkey too will
    recognize its crime against humanity. The current domain of European
    integration offers a pivotal chance for Armenia and Turkey to enter the
    European family together, having solved all outstanding issues, including
    the watershed legacy of the Genocide, and thus opened a new page in
    Armenian-Turkish relations. Justice at home, justice in the world--this
    should be the standard for Armenia's and its people's quest," Hovannisian
    said.

    Professor Richard G. Hovannisian, Chairholder of Modern Armenian History at
    UCLA, delivered keynote remarks on "The Enduring Legacy of the Armenian
    Genocide." Reflecting on a variety of challenges in the modern academic
    world relating to the Armenian Genocide, Hovannisian underscored that all
    serious scholars, both Armenian and foreign, and even several Turkish
    intellectuals, share the same conclusions, though with different
    interpretations, that the Armenian Genocide is an historical fact and
    undeniable reality. "According to the prevailing approach in academic
    circles, the Armenian Genocide was truly planned and premeditated, and a
    mere opportunity was needed to launch it. World War One provided such a
    cover," Professor Hovannisian noted, demonstrating that after Ottoman Turkey
    lost its European territories in the Balkan wars, its primary response was
    the expulsion of all Armenians from their homeland in Asia Minor and their
    settlement by Turks. Before the 1915 final solution, there already was in
    place a state program of reducing the proportion of the Armenian population
    in each of its historic regions to 5-10 percent, which was then methodically
    implemented as genocide.

    ACNIS research coordinator Stepan Safarian focused in detail on the findings
    of the opinion poll. Accordingly, 44.7% of surveyed citizens nearly always
    have participated in Genocide commemorations in their mature life, 42.5%
    sometimes, and only 9.8% have never participated in them. As for the
    motivation for going to Tsitsernakaberd or other memorials on April 24 every
    year, 63% find that it is their duty to respect the memory of the martyrs,
    17.3% want to show the world that Armenians do not forget their history,
    whereas 9.7% think it is a way of protesting against Turkish denial of the
    fact of Genocide. For 3.4% of citizens it is merely a long-standing
    tradition, for 0.3% just an occasion to go for a walk, and 3.8% do not go
    anywhere that day.

    Hence, 95% of respondents assert it is very important to mark that day with
    a national commemoration every year, while it does not matter much for 4.2%
    and is not important at all for 0.5%. 39.6% of citizens feel pain when
    thinking about the Armenian Genocide, 21.1% revenge, 18.1% hatred, 11.5%
    enmity, 5.2% sympathy for the victims, and 2.1% have a sense of guilt. 64.7%
    consider the human loss of the Genocide to be the biggest, 34.1% believe it
    to be the territorial loss of homeland, 18% the nation's loss of spirit and
    will, and 15.4% loss of the pre-Genocide intelligentsia.

    Who is first and foremost responsible for the Armenian Genocide? In response
    to this question, 61.1% accuse the Turkish state in its entirety, 54.8% the
    Young Turk government, 23.1% the Turkish people, 29.7% Germany, 13.4% the
    Russian Empire, 10% traditional Armenian parties, 6.5% the entire Armenian
    people, 6.2% Great Britain, and 5.2% Jews.

    62.6% of surveyed citizens think that "a Turk remains a Turk, always capable
    of committing genocide," 6.9% are of the opposite opinion, and 28.9% believe
    that Turkey's governmental policies are one thing but its average citizens
    another. 81% are convinced that today's Republic of Turkey is accountable
    for the Genocide, 7.6% assert the contrary, with 11.4% finding it hard to
    answer. 72.9% trust that Turkey will recognize the Genocide in the next five
    to ten years if the international efforts of Armenia and the Diaspora for
    recognition are activated and/or the United States and the European Union
    exert stronger pressure on Turkey. 12.8% think this to be impossible, and
    14% have difficulty answering. 93.5% hold that Armenia should claim
    reparations from Turkey; 67.7% of these expect official acknowledgment and
    apology, education, and removal of all forms of denial, 60.7% return of
    territories in Western Armenia, 44.1% financial reparations to the heirs of
    the victims.

    It is noteworthy that 39.8% agree with Armenia's current posture toward
    Turkey, 29.1% do not agree, and 31.1% find it difficult to answer.
    Nonetheless, a clear majority (76.3%) believe that the Armenian side should
    establish relations with Turkey without forgetting the past. 51.8% are
    against Turkey's accession to the European Union, 25.2% are in favor of it,
    and 23% do not give a firm response.

    The formal interventions were followed by contributions by National Academy
    of Sciences Vice President Vladimir Barkhudarian; professors Babken
    Harutiunian, Khoren Palian, and Vardan Khachatrian of Yerevan State
    University; Sonia Mirzoyan of the Armenian National Archives; Giro Manoyan
    of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation; Edgar Martirosian of UCLA; Tigran
    Matosian of the Museum-Institute of the Armenian Genocide; Taline Papazian
    of the Paris Institute of Political Sciences; National Press Club
    chairperson Narine Mkrtchian; Armen Aghayan of the "Protection of Liberated
    Territories" public initiative; Noyan Tapan News Agency political analyst
    Davit Petrosian; and several others.

    42.5% of respondent citizens participating in the ACNIS poll are male and
    57.5% female; 14.7% are 16-20 years of age, 20% 21-30, 20.8% 31-40, 22.2%
    41-50, 13.5% 51-60, 6.1% 61-70, 2% 71 or above. 47.1% of them have received
    a higher education, 13.1% incomplete higher, 18.4% specialized secondary,
    15.3% secondary, and 1.9% incomplete secondary training. 54.8% are actively
    employed and 19.8% unemployed, 7.2% are pensioners and welfare recipients,
    and 15.4% students. Urban residents constitute 65.2% of the citizens
    surveyed, while rural residents make up 34.8%. 32% of all respondents hail
    from Yerevan, and the rest are from outside the capital city.


    Founded in 1994 by Armenia's first Minister of Foreign Affairs Raffi K.
    Hovannisian and supported by a global network of contributors, ACNIS serves
    as a link between innovative scholarship and the public policy challenges
    facing Armenia and the Armenian people in the post-Soviet world. It also
    aspires to be a catalyst for creative, strategic thinking and a wider
    understanding of the new global environment. In 2005, the Center focuses
    primarily on civic education, conflict resolution, and applied research on
    critical domestic and foreign policy issues for the state and the nation.

    For further information on the Center or the full graphics of the poll
    results, call (3741) 52-87-80 or 27-48-18; fax (3741) 52-48-46; e-mail
    [email protected] or [email protected]; or visit www.acnis.am or
    http://www.acnis.am/pr/genocide/Socio13eng.pdf

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X