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BERLIN: Reference to Armenian genocide to be added

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  • BERLIN: Reference to Armenian genocide to be added

    Frankfurter Allgemeine, Germany
    Feb 11 2005

    Reference to genocide to be added
    State retracts decision to eliminate notation


    11. Februar 2005 F.A.Z. Weekly. The eastern state of Brandenburg has
    withdrawn its decision to remove a passage in a history lesson that
    refers to the killings of more than 1 million Armenians by the Turks
    in the early 20th century.


    The state's premier, Matthias Platzeck, made the announcement on
    Tuesday after he met with Armenian representatives in the state
    capital of Potsdam. Beginning next school year, the history lesson
    for the ninth and 10th grade will once again include a reference to
    the killings, but it will also contain other examples of genocide.
    Previously, the killings of the Armenians were listed as the only
    example.

    In explaining the latest decision, Platzeck said it would be wrong to
    list just one example of genocide. The view was shared by the state's
    education minister, Holger Rupprecht. In a newspaper last week,
    Rupprecht defended the decision. "The reference was removed because I
    and the premier consider it to be a mistake to list Armenia as the
    sole example of such a controversial subject."

    The issue is an extremely sensitive one between Armenians and Turks.
    Armenians say 1.5 million people were killed between 1915 and 1923 as
    part of the Ottoman Empire's campaign to push them from eastern
    Turkey. Turkey maintains the Armenians were killed as the empire
    fought civil unrest.

    As a result, the Social Democrat Platzeck faced pressure from both
    the Armenian and the Turkish representatives. The first change was
    announced in late January two weeks after Turkish General Counsel
    Aydin Durusay raised the issue.

    The decision set off a wave of criticism from parties in the state,
    including at least one member of the Social Democrats, who demanded
    that Platzeck reverse the decision. Sven Petke, the general secretary
    of the Christian Democrats in Brandenburg, said the removal of the
    passage had hurt the state's reputation. "It was not the reference to
    the genocide on the Armenians that communicated a wrong image. It was
    the unjustified removal," Petke said.

    Armenians joined the criticism as well. This protest resulted in
    Tuesday's meeting, which was attended by the Armenian Ambassador
    Karine Kazinian. Kazinian expressed her satisfaction with the change.
    "The key issue is that that genocide and everything associated with
    the things that happened then will be discussed clearly," she said.

    Platzeck denied previous reports that he had bowed to Turkish
    pressure and noted that discussions with the Education Ministry had
    been conducted months ago.
    Brandenburg is the first of Germany's 16 states to use a textbook
    that discusses the subject of genocide in the 20th century.
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