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Despite Late Challenge, Scholars Finally Hold Meeting in Turkey

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  • Despite Late Challenge, Scholars Finally Hold Meeting in Turkey

    Despite Late Challenge, Scholars Finally Hold Meeting in Turkey on Armenian
    Genocide

    The Chronicle of Higher Education

    Monday, September 26, 2005

    An academic conference on Turkey's controversial "Armenian question" took
    place over the weekend in Istanbul, despite legal maneuvering by Turkish
    nationalists that had threatened to prevent it. The conference was
    originally to have taken place in May, but was postponed at the last minute
    under pressure from government officials.

    The meeting was rescheduled for this past weekend at Bogaziçi, University,
    also known in English as Bosphorus University, but was once again postponed
    on the eve of its opening, this time because of a legal challenge that
    questioned its scientific validity and the qualifications of its
    participants. The challengers also said it was inappropriate for Bogaziçi, a
    public university, to be the venue for such a gathering, which they said
    contravened its mission.

    Academics from Bilgi University, Bogaziçi, and Sabanci University, three of
    Turkey's leading higher-education institutions, organized the meeting, which
    they described as the first conference on the Armenian issue in Turkey not
    organized by state authorities or government-affiliated historians. Bilgi
    and Sabanci are private.

    Armenians have long contended that the killings of up to 1.5 million
    Armenians in 1915 and subsequent years, during the waning days of the
    Ottoman Empire, constituted genocide by Ottoman Turkish forces. Turkey
    officially rejects that view. Turkish historians and other academics have
    become increasingly outspoken in challenging the nationalist line on the
    issue, however, and growing international attention has also focused on the
    matter. Talks on Turkey's bid to join the European Union are set to begin
    this week, and the government's inflexibility on the Armenian question
    remains a sticking point.

    The conference, titled "Ottoman Armenians During the Demise of the Empire:
    Issues of Democracy and Scientific Responsibility," was postponed in May
    after its organizers decided they could not guarantee participants' safety
    (The Chronicle, May 10).

    Last week, participants had arrived in Istanbul and the rescheduled meeting
    looked set to begin on time when the fresh legal challenge against it came
    to light. A three-judge panel of an administrative court had ruled, 2 to 1,
    that a legal investigation of the conference's validity should take place,
    even though its organizers were notified of the decision only the day before
    the conference was to begin. With that inquiry pending, Bogaziçi could no
    longer play host to the conference without being held in contempt of the
    court's ruling. Organizers hastily shifted the venue to Bilgi so the
    conference could proceed.

    The official response to the threat to the rescheduled conference differed
    starkly from the government's approach in May, when the justice minister
    took to the floor of Parliament to brand the meeting "treason" and a "dagger
    in the back of the Turkish people." This time, in comments broadcast on
    television, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he was saddened by the
    new threat to the conference. He characterized the legal challenge as an
    "anti-democratic development" to which he was opposed.

    Aybar Ertepinar, vice president of the Council of Higher Education, a
    government-financed organization that oversees all Turkish universities,
    said on Sunday that although his group had not been invited to take part,
    the conference should have been allowed to proceed at Bogaziçi. "Our
    Constitution grants academic and scientific freedom to universities," he
    said. Taking up the opponents' challenge "was an unfortunate decision of the
    court that went beyond the borders of its responsibility," he said.

    With the more than 350 participants once again assembled in Istanbul, the
    conference's organizers decided that "we can either do this now or we cannot
    do it all again," said Fatma Müge Gocek, an associate professor of sociology
    at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor who was on the meeting's advisory
    committee.

    Organizers had selected Bogaziçi as the venue for the meeting precisely
    because it is a public institution, but they decided they had no choice but
    to relocate to Bilgi. The rectors of all three sponsoring universities
    welcomed the participants, who met in marathon sessions to condense into two
    days a program that was to have been spread over three.

    Because the conference had received so much attention in the Turkish news
    media, participants did not even need to be notified of the change, said Ms.
    Gocek. Opponents were also aware of the new location, and about 100
    protesters showed up on Saturday to heckle participants and pelt them with
    eggs and tomatoes, she said.

    As the conference concluded, Ms. Gocek said she felt a real "paradigm shift"
    had occurred. "We had lots of Turkish journalists there who said they are
    not going to use the word 'alleged' from now on, in terms of talking about
    the genocide. They may refer to 'genocide claims,' but they will no longer
    talk of an 'alleged genocide,'" she said.

    Papers from the conference will be published immediately in Turkish, which
    was the working language of the gathering, and as soon as possible in
    English, Ms. Gocek said.

    http://chronicle.com/temp/email.php?id=ftmx8a0cc5r8dregepvg31pc5676lov2
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