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Old lady's secret puts Armenian massacre in focus

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  • Old lady's secret puts Armenian massacre in focus

    South China Morning Post
    March 16, 2005

    Old lady's secret puts Armenian massacre in focus


    Nicholas Birch in Istanbul

    Fethiye Cetin was a student when she discovered her grandmother's
    secret. Until then, she'd always known the woman who brought her up
    as Seher, the pillar of what seemed a typical Anatolian family.

    The bombshell came while the two were talking one day in Ankara.
    Seher's real name was Heranush, and she was Armenian. Nine years old
    when the little-known massacre of Armenians started in 1915, she had
    cowered in a churchyard as the village men were murdered and thrown
    in the river. Forced with the women and children onto the road to
    Syria, she was abducted and handed over to a police corporal who
    brought her up as his own child.

    Such tales are common in Turkey's eastern provinces. What makes
    Heranush's story unusual is that her granddaughter decided to turn it
    into a book.

    "She had hidden the things she told me for over 60 years," explains
    Ms Cetin, now a lawyer based in Istanbul. "I felt they needed to be
    given a voice."

    But Ms Cetin also wanted to help move the debate away from barren
    disputes over statistics and terminology: 300,000 killed? No, 1
    million. Genocide? No, ethnic cleansing.

    Such arguments, she says, "hide the lives and deaths of individuals
    and do nothing to encourage people to listen".

    Turks have certainly been listening to her. Published last November,
    My Grandmother is already in its fifth edition.

    Ms Cetin attributes the success to the growing impatience Turks feel
    for the official discourses on Turkish identity that have
    traditionally held sway in the country.

    "When books like this come out, even people with very different
    family histories begin to realise they aren't the only ones to
    question what they have been taught," she says.

    And nowhere is this more evident than on the Armenian issue. Five
    years ago, the taboo was almost total. An account of Seher's life,
    published in an Istanbul-based Armenian newspaper in 2000, was
    ignored. Now, there are Armenian cookery books and novels.

    In January, an Istanbul gallery hit the headlines with an exhibition
    of 500 postcards showing Turkish Armenians between 1900 and 1914.

    Much of the credit for breaking the silence must go to historian
    Halil Berktay, who in October 2000 became the first intellectual in
    Turkey publicly to describe the events of 1915 as genocide. Today, he
    is convinced the space for intelligent debate on the past is growing
    rapidly.

    "Beneath the bluster," he says, referring to a recent hate campaign
    against novelist Orhan Pamuk, "the Turkish establishment position is
    crumbling." He notes that unlike its nationalist predecessor, the
    country's present government has refrained from statements of denial
    about Turkey's actions in 1915.

    At different stages in the past half century, Turkish diplomats were
    instructed either to leave international conferences when genocide
    was mentioned in connection with Armenia, to describe the
    deportations as a necessary measure against Armenian treachery or to
    argue that the debate should be left to historians.

    Last week, senior politicians from Turkey's main parties called for
    the events of 1915 to be "researched under United Nations
    arbitration. If there is a need to settle accounts with history, we
    are ready", they said.
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