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  • ANKARA: Armenia: Friend or Foe?

    Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 14 2005

    Armenia: Friend or Foe?

    Published: Friday 14, 2005
    zaman.com

    Yerevan is a stone-gray city. Only the girls with hairs colored in a
    standard way have smiles on their faces, here, in this city, and only
    music forms networks and links between souls, here, in this country.
    Throughout the visit, I was caught between the feelings that our
    common ties were so strong or that our grudges would separate us
    forever. Just as my attitude was constantly changing, I found the
    attitude of the Armenians I spoke to oscillate between wondering why
    Turkey wouldn't show mercy and open its borders, or why Turkey won't
    accept and take responsibility for the genocide.

    The last stop of the visit initiated by the East Conference on the US
    meddling in the region was Yerevan and the theme was "let's get
    acquainted with our neighbors so that if anything happens to them, we
    will know who they are." Armenia was not under the same threat as
    other countries we visited; on the contrary, Armenia believes it will
    join NATO to integrate with the US and to consolidate its security.
    The irony is that what America means for an Iraqi today is the same
    as what Turkey meant for an Armenian. Not that we were beaten or even
    insulted, and the meeting at the Tashnak Sutyun Party was incredibly
    refined despite the many excessive demands and messages it included.
    They managed to present even the most radical demands in a highly
    aesthetic way, saying, "Our radicalism derives from our sincerity in
    asking for the establishment of a permanent peace." Members of
    Tashnak Party, which demands the return of Armenia's historical
    territory and maintain the allegations of genocide as if it happened
    yesterday, were convinced that Turks made pilgrimages to Talat
    Pasha's grave. They were surprised when we said that Turks don't even
    know where his grave is, and put this misunderstanding down to the
    lack of knowledge about the other between Armenia and Turkey. They
    went on to say that if Turkey recognized the genocide, it would be a
    sign that political problems no longer needed to be solved through
    the use of force.

    My blood feud or my neighbor

    Turkey is both Eros and Thanatos for Armenia, a country that
    continues to defend its claims at the same level and in the same
    severity without knowing that they make the meeting of its demands
    impossible. Even on the first day, we came across with an event at
    Turkology Department at Yerevan State University which we could not
    understand whether it was staged or not. While Vice Rector Melikyan
    was welcoming us saying: "It is nice that you came and we should
    appreciate this contact as all we want is a stable dialogue so there
    will be no problems for Turkey to open its borders," one of the
    students stood up and called us to "stand up for the memory of those
    who died during the genocide." Quick-thinking Aydin Cubukcu stood up
    in the memory of "all Turks and Armenians who died in those years."
    Thus, our Armenian brothers, who have built almost their whole
    national identity on the tragic events of 1915, stood up for Turks in
    the name of deaths they themselves caused, and perhaps this was a
    'first'.

    It could be said that the East Conference claimed many 'firsts' in
    this sense as our program included a visit to the Chief Patriarch of
    the Armenian Diaspora Karekin II, which is apparently the first
    meeting of the Patriarch with such a delegation. The Patriarch is a
    polite man with a beaming face who was extremely open and warm. While
    he called the genocide an unquestionable reality, he did not dwell on
    it, instead talking of a policy that favors the development of
    relations between Armenia and Turkey. We understood it as a sign of
    his pleasure at the visit that the Patriarch showed us the locked
    case holding the golden letters of the Armenian alphabet, which hold
    religious significance and a special place in the Armenian identity.
    2005 will be celebrated as the 1600th year of the Armenian alphabet
    and an exhibition regarding this is planned to be held at the Louvre
    in Paris. This is further evidence of the strength of the Armenian
    diaspora, with seven million living abroad, twice the number of those
    in Armenia. The diaspora is very important for Armenia as the
    country's economy stands on the financial flow of $600 million from
    abroad. The only industry in the country is a cognac factory.

    Opaque future, sulky faces

    Surveys about Armenia's future have found 50 percent see the future
    as 'unclear'. Armenian Research Center surveys have found that around
    the same amount have no hopes for economic improvement in the short
    term and are concerned about security issues. The desire to join NATO
    rises in line with tension with Azerbaijan. A very small number of
    people, meanwhile, think that going further to west will detach the
    country from Russia and this will give "rather negative results".
    Russia plays the role of a hysterical father who loves but also beats
    his children. The Armenian National and International Research Center
    finds that except for a small minority who prefer Russia due to
    geographical proximity, the majority of the people find the US more
    rational and acceptable than Russia, but each negative development
    stimulates people in panic to get closer to Russia. Turkey's
    attitudes and approaches are also included in these developments.

    In my opinion, this environment is responsible for the sulky
    expression on people's faces and a fear of Turks, but there are
    lovely things, too, in Yerevan and people who defy your expectations.
    For example, the guidance of two Armenians of Istanbul origin, Ara
    and Sevan, who work at Jamanak newspaper (which means "zaman"), and
    their both being avid "Zaman" readers. Also my confusion after the
    incident in the Turkology Department in the gift shop of the hotel I
    was staying in, as I was quizzed on the state of Afyon, where the
    shop assistant's mother was from. I could not tell her much about the
    present state of Afyon and this made me embarrassed a bit. As I said,
    being a Turk in Yerevan is like traveling with a suitcase full of
    embarrassment. When you say, "We came from Turkey", the answer you
    will get might be, "No problem". On the other side, several meetings
    that started in an unfriendly way ended in friendship when they
    deepened a little. You frequently feel in meetings: "If only that
    history had not existed, how nice it would have been."

    Is it possible that Armenians could move on? In fact, there is some
    development in this direction. Garen Bekaryan, whom we talked at the
    European Union (EU) Integration Center, says: "In fact, Armenians
    might have to bury this genocide issue into history, but Turkey's
    massing of troops at the border during the Karabag incident revived
    past fears." She is not wrong on this point. Russia sent Armenia
    50,000 soldiers after Turgut Ozal's remark "What happens if a bomb
    falls on Armenia?" These soldiers are still in Armenia, ostensibly to
    protect it, but are damaging the country's attempts at
    democratization in the meantime.

    The situation resembles the riddle of the chicken and the egg. It
    seems that both sides must embrace their responsibilities and it's
    unlikely that a solution will be found overnight.

    NIHAL BENGISU KARACA
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