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ANKARA: Deportation in Essence or So-Called Genocide ... Does itReal

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  • ANKARA: Deportation in Essence or So-Called Genocide ... Does itReal

    Deportation in Essence or So-Called Genocide ... Does it Really Matter?

    By Yigit Bener

    www.iktidarsiz.com
    (An online Turkish journal)
    April 2005 issue

    Exile or genocide? Massacre or self-defense? Should the historians
    decide or the politicians?

    We are watching the debate as if we were watching a soccer match.
    Although we keep getting scored against, we still haven't lost our
    faith saving the game using new tactics: If we could just get our
    official history accepted, we are sure that we will have a great
    victory... We are proud. We are motivated. We get excited by the
    cues of our cheerleaders, and we wave our flags in support of our
    representatives on the playing field. Our anger overflows against
    the overcrowded opposing side in the stadium and the biased referees
    who keep making decisions unfavorable for us, and we mix angry
    profanities into our cheering and booing. And if somebody from our
    side of the stadium supports the opposing team, we really fly off
    the handle: while the most primitive among us wish to lynch them,
    our intellectuals condemn them as nationless. See, that's because
    this is a national cause. We are in the right, we are united, and we
    absolutely want to win the game.

    Frankly, we aren't interested in exactly what happened in 1915; we
    leave the details to historians to sort out; besides, as ordinary
    people, we don't have much to say about those details. We believe in
    our elder experts: whatever is in our archives must be the truth!

    In any case, the important thing is to disallow the mention of the word
    "genocide" without the "so-called" qualifier, and to define the event
    as "exile", `internecine fighting', and hopefully even more ambiguous,
    obscure terms that are hard to find in ordinary dictionaries. When
    we substitute those words, we will have won, you see.

    Even if we assume that we are historically correct, and that our
    official thesis is accurate, and that it contains the truth and only
    the truth, don't you think there is something fishy and troublesome
    in the hostile attitude and the demeanor of a football fanatic that
    we adopt every time this issue comes up? The efforts of some of our
    retired diplomats and state historians to reduce what happened in 1915
    to some "technical definition" or some arcane problem of legalese,
    their cold-blooded assertions that the real number of dead wasn't 1.5
    million as the Armenian nationalists claim, and that "only" 300,000
    were killed, mentioning it with a smirk on their faces, as if they
    just made a really clever move ... Don't you discern the crassness,
    rawness, and shamelessness in all that?

    Even if we are content with our official numbers, are we so far removed
    from our humanity to forget that we are talking about the murder of
    THREE HUNDRED THOUSAND citizens of this country, including women,
    children, the old and the sick? In other words, let's assume that
    the Armenian nationalists are lying and slandering ... but don't you
    think we have at least a rudeness problem? When talking about the
    death of so many people in front of the whole world, don't you think
    we should at least use a more humane, more respectful language? So
    where are our famous customs and traditions that we are so boastful of?

    Aren't we going to think about the meaning of the numbers we are
    willing to admit? After saying "The number of dead was just three
    hundred thousand; those Armenians are really exaggerating", is it
    easy to continue where we left off to wax lyrical about "how right we
    are in this national issue" with the same self-confident tone without
    thinking of the horror this n umber represents, without taking a moment
    to sincerely feel sorry, without sorrow, without wishing "condolences"
    to the grandchildren of the victims, and without feeling a particle
    of discomfort?

    Are we ever going to face the forgotten human reality hiding behind
    the terms in our official thesis? For example, aren't we ever going to
    ask the question: "Just what does 300,000 people mean?". What kind of
    a number is 300,000? Is it close to the number of dead in the recent
    tsunami disaster in Asia? Or twenty times the number of dead in the
    Golcuk earthquake? Sixty times the number of Kurds killed in Halabja
    by Saddam? Twice the number of Turks in Cyprus? The size of a city
    like Chorum or Sivas?

    If the number of dead in 1915 is "only" three hundred thousand instead
    of 1-1.5 million, can we sleep well at night? Does the image of three
    hundred thousand corpses put side by side look insignificant when
    viewed from a distance of 90 years? Are the lives of three hundred
    human souls that cheap?

    Besides ... let's say that our official thesis is correct and those
    people that died were not systematically killed wholesale because of
    their being Armenian (that is, they were not subject to genocide or
    ethnic cleansing), and that they died inadvertently due to disease,
    accident, and one or two acts of banditry during a forced relocation.
    Does it really make that much of a difference in terms of the
    humanitarian and political responsibilities of the government?

    Even if we assume that our official thesis is correct, aren't we going
    to ask those questions: Weren't the killed the citizens of the state
    that took the decision of exile? Weren't they under the protection
    of that state? Did the officials that made the decision to hastily
    remove such a huge number of civilians from Northeastern Anatolia to
    remote locations on foot really not know that a significant portion
    of them would die on the road? (furthermore, if we are saying that
    "not all of the exiled died", implying that a small proportion of
    them died, then we have to admit that the number of people forced
    into relocation was much, much higher than three hundred thousand!)
    Could they really not see what was about to happen?

    If the decision to exile them was taken with the full knowledge of its
    consequences, was it not an act of cruelty? And if the responsible
    officials were unaware of the consequences of their decisions, and
    did not act with ill will, shouldn't they still be held accountable
    for such a terrible, terrifying decision that resulted in the deaths
    of three hundred thousand citizens? Isn't that decision itself a big
    enough crime? Aren't we going to question how much the "pashas cared
    about the lives of the civilians they accused of collaborating with
    the enemy when they led their own troops to oblivion in Sarikamish?
    Aren't we going to protest the mentality behind the decision for the
    forceful relocation?

    It can be said that the rulers of the period had not taken that
    decision in a vacuum, and that it had a reason. Of course, the third
    leg of our official thesis states that, during wartime, Armenian
    organizations collaborated with the Russian and British imperialism,
    massacred Turkish villages, and that the decision for the expulsion
    was taken in self-defense.

    But shouldn't we remind ourselves that the war in question was not
    a righteous war of independence, but a global war of imperialistic
    interests in which tens of millions of people died pointlessly? Under
    these conditions, when the rulers of the state sacrificed 90,000
    soldiers in Sarikamish for their rabid adventures of Turanism, can
    we pretend that some elements of a crumbling empire would not be
    contemplating independence? Furthermore, how honest is it to close
    our eyes to the fact that the Ottoman rulers were collaborating
    with German imperialists, who were at least as ruthless and savage
    as the British and the Russians, and whose army general staff had
    considerable influence in the Ottoman army, and then turn around
    and accuse Armenians of collaborating with imperialists? Were "we"
    really so innocent in that war?

    But even if we don't consider such arguments, assume that our official
    thesis is entirely truthful, and assume that Armenian bandits duped
    by the imperialists rebelled against their government and that they
    massacred the Muslim population ... Can we really ascribe the crimes
    of Armenian bandits to the entire Armenian population? In other words,
    even if there was a civil war, can a "collective punishment" resulting
    from "collective guilt" be defended at all?

    If we look back into the past, can the reasons cited in our official
    thesis, which are used to justify the decision of forced expulsion
    that caused the death of three hundred thousand civilians, be still
    justified? If we analyze the events by contemporary standards of a
    nation of laws --even if we take wartime conditions into account--
    can the actions of Armenian political organizations justify the
    forceful relocation of the entire Armenian civil population under
    the conditions of war? Can such a decision, regarding its essence
    and its humanitarian consequences, be still defended today?

    Even if the official narrative is entirely truthful, as the citizens
    of today's Republic of Turkey, a country that signed the European
    convention on human rights, looking at it through the prism of a
    democratic regime of a country of laws, shouldn't we have declared
    that a decision that resulted in the death of so many people cannot be
    defended under any circumstances? Is it really so easy to trivialize
    what happened as a "simple tragedy" without accepting the above,
    and without facing the logical consequences of our thesis regarding
    the values we pretend to have today?

    Even if we suppose that Armenian claims are libelous, don't you
    recognize a brusqueness that should bother every Turkish citizen of
    conscience (let alone the grandchildren of the killed), an ugly lack
    of respect for the memory of the deceased, and an unbelievable lack
    of concern about the feelings of their relatives when you see the
    spokespersons of the official Turkish thesis, their accusing of the
    victims, their demeanor in defending what was done, and the way they
    express their contempt of Armenians?

    As long as we discuss the matter in this way, what difference does
    it make if it was a "so-called genocide" or an "exile in essence"?

    Is this really about objecting to "unfair accusations of genocide"?
    Or, can it be that our inability to show the slightest respect to the
    memory of those who died in 1915, and our inability to express the
    smallest heartfelt regret are indications of something else? Say,
    do you think there is an entirely different mentality lying under
    spewing hatred towards the grandchildren of those that died, defending
    a decision that caused so much death, and glorifying the rulers of
    the time as heroes?

    In fact, that is the crucial point: The official thesis and the
    manner in which it is defended rely on a line of thought that goes
    beyond trying to explain what was done 90 years ago, and extends
    into justifying "Armenians deserved what was done". Sometimes even
    that defense really gets out of hand and degenerates to a nonchalant
    "So what if we did it? We would do it again today". The problem is
    that the flag bearers of the official thesis appear to share the same
    ideology and the same sort of nationalism of the Ottoman rulers of
    that time. In other words, they seem to defend their own mentality
    and ideology by defending the forced deportation. Perhaps that is
    why they ar e so hostile, as they would be when caught in the act.

    Do the creators of that narrative, who try to establish the supremacy
    of the chauvinism of Enver and Talat Pashas, an ethnic nationalism that
    is capable of not only sinking a huge empire, but also of destroying
    the Republic as well, realize that they go beyond even those who
    took the decision of forced deportation? Because, if those decision
    makers did not make that decision for the purpose of annihilation,
    as the official thesis claims, they could try to defend themselves by
    saying "If we knew so many people would die, we would not have done
    it". However, current defenders of that decision have no such excuse as
    they know what the consequences were: 90 years after a long-gone war,
    they still find the sacrifice of three hundred thousand civilians
    justifiable! Furthermore, their hateful rhetoric that accuses the
    Armenians for what happened to them has neither the excuse nor the
    cover given by "wartime conditions". The inability to display a
    humanitarian, rational behavior even after ninety years can only be
    explained by a certain ideological outlook, a well-known "deep state"
    mentality: a paranoid, aggressive, racist nationalism that views
    anyone who is not a "Turk" and does not think like them as enemy,
    and that intimidates the population by the purported existence of
    perennial internal and external enemies.

    Those behind such rhetoric will say that Armenians also approach the
    matter with hostility, and from a nationalist/chauvinist angle, view
    history with a bias, and that especially the diaspora Armenians have
    turned the issue into a "raison d'etre", and add that Armenians also
    killed Turks during those times. They will also remind about ASALA's
    terror campaign for revenge, and the murders committed by them.

    But is criticizing the chauvinism of one side, and talking about its
    acts of murder, equivalent to supporting the other side's chauvinism
    and excusing their acts of murder? Can't one be against all kinds of
    chauvinism and murder? Besides, the logic of nationalism and chauvinism
    is the same everywhere and they feed off one another; therefore
    there is no reason to suppose that Armenian chauvinism is any more
    humanitarian than Turkish chauvinism. This much is certain: there can
    be no good excuse for any massacre or any terrorist act. There is no
    "good" or "innocent" side in an inter-ethnic conflict. Regardless of
    his nationality, a murderer is a murderer. And every nation produces
    murderers. An Armenian that slaughters a Turk is a murderer, just as
    a Turk that slaughters an Armenian is a murderer. Whatever the pains
    endured by whomever, an entire nation cannot be declared "murderer",
    and a "collective guilt" of an entire people cannot be accepted.

    On the other hand, let us not forget that whenever the murderers had
    lots of power, weapons, a state apparatus, and an army they caused
    that much more harm to humanity!

    Apart from everything else, if we don't want to create conditions
    that lead the way to new massacres and fester new feuds and perpetual
    hatred by using the past events as excuses, all sides should hold their
    murderers to account, even if the crimes were committed against the
    "other" side. Every people must deal with its conscience itself, and
    face its own history. No one has the right to justify their shameful
    acts by using the acts of the "other side".

    Now if we turn to ourselves, even our official thesis admits that
    three hundred thousand people died as a result of the decision to
    forcefully exile civilians. When are we going to understand that
    we cannot get anywhere with an ideology that defends or excuses a
    massacre, and even tries to present it as "righteous"!

    In other words, it is not necessary to accept the Armenian theses,
    to pronounce the "genocide" without the "so-called" qualifier, or
    to talk about one million dead in order to move away from the ugly,
    shameless demeanor adopted by the majority of the defenders of the
    official thesis. The confessions contained in the official Turkish
    thesis are horrible enough!

    In order to really be able to discuss the Armenian question, Turkey
    first of all must deal with its own official thesis, the confessions
    it contains, and manage to face those sad truths. Looking into the
    official Turkish thesis without putting on our chauvinistic glasses
    will suffice to show us that we need to approach the Armenian question
    from an entirely new perspective, and an entirely new attitude. Simply
    facing what has been admitted in our official thesis will force us
    to move towards a more humane and more ethical level.

    It is impossible to seriously discuss the extent to which Armenian
    claims are true before understanding and sharing their pain, facing the
    human dimensions of the matter, and adopting a more humane attitude. We
    can never enter into a healthy dialog with the grandchildren of the
    "the other side" as long as we do not adopt an ethical approach to
    the events of 1915, the breaking point of our shared history. Indeed
    we cannot solve these problems without establishing a constructive
    dialog towards reconciliation among the grandchildren of all the
    sides that belong to various chapters of this land's history. And we
    haven't been able to for ninety years anyway!

    Besides, let us not forget that some of those grandchildren with
    whom we have to reconcile are still the citizens of our country;
    they are Armenians of Turkey and are part of the national totality we
    define as "us". If Turkey is not a country that belongs to a single
    ethnic group, if it is truly a secular, unitary country based on
    the supremacy of the law, how can an exclusionary, insensitive,
    and unconvincing history on their ancestors be written?

    Whatever was experienced in 1915, if we are not acting with "genocidal
    mentality" today, and our aim is not the complete erasure Armenian
    existence from this land, we cannot forget that the Armenians of this
    country are equal citizens of the Republic of Turkey, that since the
    Armenians in our neighbor Armenia share ancestry with them they share
    ancestry with us, and that we can only write our common history by
    coming together in that effort. Moreover, it is helpful to remember
    that even those diaspora Armenians, with whom we are so angry,
    are the grandchildren of the people who once lived on these lands,
    that their origins are in this soil, and that in their essence they
    are of this soil, and that they are our people and our relatives.

    Objecting to the chauvinism and hostile manners of our side will
    encourage the other side to do the same, and will help those with
    similar, reconciliatory mentality. If we truly want to solve this
    problem, we need to abandon the "genocide match against the opposing
    team" mentality, and approach our common history from a humane
    perspective and with a view to understand, share, and transcend,
    rather than with the "war" mentality.

    Besides, let us not forget that the ones that are going to ultimately
    decide on these issues are not the historians, the politicians, or
    the diplomats. The ultimate arbiters are those among the people of
    these lands who can judge the events of the past relying on their
    conscience. That is, we will decide, together, collectively. If the
    peoples of this land cannot agree on what transpired in the past,
    and cannot forgive one another, none of the diplomatic "victories"
    will have any meaning to anyone.

    It is not necessary to be a historian, an archivist, a specialist of
    international law, or a retired diplomat. Because the problem is not
    "was it deportation or genocide?", or some other legal/technical
    matter. From a human perspective, as far as the pain suffered by
    people, what they have lost, and what we have lost are concerned,
    there is no difference between deportation and genocide! The fact
    is that, of the Armenians, who constituted a significant part of the
    population before the First World War, only a relative handful remain
    on these lands. Therefore, in terms of its consequences, there is no
    difference between deportation and genocide. Even if the Turkish and
    Armenian theses describe what happened in 1915 differently, there is
    no difference in terms of its human cost.

    In order to understand what we lost in 1915, we need to be able to
    look into people's faces, not into the archives. Archives form a
    dimension that interests historians. Documents, treaties, conventions
    are of course important in the workings of a state. But in order to
    face our history, instead of looking at mol dy, dusty documents in
    archives, we need to look into the eyes of our people, and manage to
    see their heartache.

    The problem is that, even if we manage to convince everyone with our
    thesis, that would not bring back what we lost in 1915. Just as the
    symbolic apology resulting from having the genocide thesis accepted,
    or the decision of an international forum or an international court,
    or the compensation that may be paid can never bring back what we
    have lost ...

    Because, regardless of whether you call it deportation, genocide,
    massacre, or internecine fighting, and regardless of whether you
    call it ethnic cleansing or a "tragedy", in the end "We" are the
    losers. In every war, in every division, in every separation, in
    every population-exchange, in every wave of emigration, every time
    a village was emptied, in every massacre, in every assassination,
    in every enmity, we, as the people of this land, lost, became less,
    became poorer. We killed one another, and we lost the "we" that gave
    his soil its richness.

    So, there is nothing Turkey can win in the "genocide game". On
    the contrary, as long as we continue discussing the issue with
    a chauvinistic language and attitude we will forever lose the
    grandchildren of the Armenians we lost ninety years ago. We will have
    poisoned a new generation of Turkish and Armenian youths with inhuman
    hatred. We will have lost the right to be a civilized society.

    Instead, if we can get rid of our chauvinistic blinders when looking
    at our past, if we can face what all of our people have lived through
    and the pains they suffered, if we share those pains, and if we manage
    to see what's lost as our loss, and if we accomplish that today,
    then maybe tomorrow we can win back the "we" that we lost yesterday,
    and reconstitute it with a new, common struggle.

    It is still not too late to regain that richness.
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