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Turkey After The Armenian Genocide Conference

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  • Turkey After The Armenian Genocide Conference

    Assyrian International News Agency
    Sept 29 2005

    Turkey After The Armenian Genocide Conference

    (AINA) -- After efforts of deterrence by the executive in May and
    obstruction of the 4th Istanbul Administrative Court on September
    23rd, the conference entitled, 'Ottoman Armenians in the Final Period
    of the Empire: Scientific Responsibility and Problems of Democracy'
    has been successfully completed on the 25th of September. The venue
    of the event had to be changed from one university to the other and a
    three-day conference had to be telescoped to two days. The
    participants and audience had to pass through a barrier of slandering
    nationalist protestors throwing eggs and tomatoes. Yet two and half
    institutions deserve credit for standing behind academic autonomy,
    freedom of expression and culture of deliberation. The first is the
    government who spoke through the Prime Minister. His resolve dwarfed
    the initial resistance of the Minister of Justice who called the
    initiative "treason" and "back stabbing the nation" in May. The
    second is the university as an institution who defended the rights
    and liberties that make it a center and advocate of freedom. The
    third institution is the media; of course some of it, which is
    conscious of the fact that, this conference was not all about the
    Armenian issue that needs to be discussed impartially but it is
    rather a matter of democracy.

    The speakers, or better deliberators, were all Turkish scholars
    serving at domestic or foreign universities to avoid prejudice
    against ill-willed foreigners. Among a sundry of topics some like,
    'An Identity Squeezed Between the Past and the Present', 'Examples of
    Forgetting and Remembrance in Turkish Literature: Different Breaking
    Points of Silence', 'The Armenian Issue and Demographic Engineering',
    'Scenes of Conscience through a Bitter History', 'From Heranush to
    Seher: A Story of "Salvation"', 'Mother Fatma, the Child of
    Deportation' and 'Thinking About the Stories of the Survivors of
    Deportation', suggest that the issues were not limited to just
    historiography and document rattling. That has been taking place for
    a long time. Both the Armenian and Turkish nationalists and 'official
    historians' have unfortunately narrowed down the discussion of this
    important matter to the acceptance or denial of "genocide". This
    radical stance has not only impoverished scholarship but has
    politicized the matter forcing individuals to take sides. In this
    ado, unfortunately the human side of the matter, the suffering of
    real human beings, no matter who they were, has been neglected.
    Indeed what we ought to start discussing is the human condition at
    the turn of the last century.

    A multicultural society existed with different ethnic, linguistic and
    confessional groups. They were torn apart, their age-old relations
    were severed, an economy was shattered, the lives of ALL were changed
    irreversibly and forever. The majority of them had little to do with
    the fate they were forced to live through if they had not lost their
    lives in the chaos of World War One years.

    I will not go on into the arguments of "clashing nationalisms",
    "securing the eastern-front where a war was waged with occupying
    Russian armies" or simply, "revenge of the Turks over the Armenians
    where a part of the Armenians took up arms and tried to carve out an
    independent Armenia by exterminating Turks in eastern Turkey". All of
    these are parts of the wider truth. But the truth is larger than that
    and larger than the lives of individuals or groups that were caught
    up in the turmoil of the decade between 1910-1920. Turks were
    recruited to go to the Libyan (or Tripoli) campaign in 1911 to be
    followed by the Balkan War next year that ended up by loosing all of
    the East European lands of the Empire in 1913. In the next year WW1
    broke up that ended with the dissolution of three major empires of
    the time, the Ottoman being one. During that fateful decade, Ottomans
    lost 2 million soldiers. No one knows how many civilians perished
    during hostilities and following forced migration, by hunger and
    famine. But a rough estimate is that five million Turks or Muslims
    identifying themselves as Ottoman had to migrate into present Turkey
    and remaining territories. They left behind dead family members,
    their property and a life that had taken root on European soil in the
    past centuries.

    They were frustrated, impoverished, uprooted and bitter. However,
    they had come to a friendly land where they were welcome and the
    government of the day compensated their loss to a certain degree.
    That is why they chose to forget. Did they forgive? Obviously not.
    Historical evidence shows that the ruling cadre in the last Ottoman
    decade was the government of the Committee of Union and Progress,
    better known as the Young Turks. The leading group, including the
    dictating triumvirate, Talat, Enver and Cemal Pashas of the Young
    Turks were basically of Balkan stock. When they moved the
    headquarters of their semi-secret organization from Selonica to
    Istanbul in 1912, they brought their feelings of loss, betrayal (by
    the non-Muslim peoples of the empire who had attained their
    independence through painful struggles for national liberation by
    fighting against Ottoman officers and officials who were mainly
    members of the Union and Progress.

    We all know what "never again" means. These new rulers of the Ottoman
    terrain promised the remaining lands not become a second "Macedonia"
    as they called the bulk of the Balkans. They made a conscious effort
    to prevent a second catastrophe by adopting the method of demographic
    engineering. There were two aspects of this engineering: 1) Removal
    of the Christians; 2) Mixing of the non-Turkish Muslims. The first
    method was territorial; the second was demographic engineering. The
    Bulgarians living in Edirne and in Thrace (European part of Turkey)
    was sent to Bulgaria or exchanged with Turks who felt victimized and
    wanted to go to Turkey. Deterring Greeks from remaining in Western
    and Black Sea regions was realized without overt exertion of force
    but with a convincing determination. The policy was to cleanse the
    Aegean littoral off Greeks 50 kilometers into the heartland. This
    policy reached its peak point by population exchanges with Greece in
    1924.

    Territorial mopping concerning the Armenians was put into effect with
    the official policy of deportation. It was an announced and
    acknowledged government policy of the time. However, territorial
    sterility was not only directed to these largest Ottoman peoples, it
    encompassed all Christian peoples, large or small including the more
    peaceful Assyrians in the southeast. How could the vengeful and
    wrathful Young Turks could know that by scaring off the peaceful
    Christians they would allow the Kurds to have sole control of
    southeast Anatolia and the 'later Turks' would have to put up with
    the unruly behavior of the more favored Muslims?

    As regards the non-Turkish Muslims, the ratio of one-to-ten or 10%
    was observed when they were moved from places where they were more
    crowded into wider Turkish communities where they would be a
    controllable minority. This plan was put into effect and the
    Armenians faced the harshest fate of all because there was no
    receiving state willing to compensate for their loss like the
    Bulgarians and the Greeks. From the day when Armenian deportation has
    started the event is no more a political matter born out of the
    exigencies and vagaries of the day and its power struggles. It is a
    human condition, which imposes on all of us, on all human beings, the
    responsibility to understand and to reconcile with.

    The present Turkish government bears no responsibility to what the
    adventurous Young Turks who led the Ottoman State into demise had
    done to the peoples whom they ruled over. They did not only deport
    Christian subjects, they sent armies totaling two million recruited
    from among Muslims to three continents and watched them perish in
    pursuit of their ambitious scheme of creating a Turanian Empire out
    of Turkic peoples. They depleted the Turkish stock of the motherland
    too. The conference drew attention to these (other) angles of the
    last decades of the empire during which the Armenian disaster took
    place. It was not particular to the Armenians. It was a human tragedy
    staged by an adventurous cadre who valued their imperial design more
    than human life, without distinguishing between that of their own or
    others. Their Machiavellian political methods justified the means
    they used for their exalted end that never succeeded but consumed the
    lives of millions as well as their own.

    What befalls on us is to acknowledge what happened to the Ottoman
    peoples of the time and why? No nation or nationality, no adherent of
    any creed can claim that those fateful years are the mark of history
    that denotes only their losses and grief. This is a shared calamity
    that we all lived through and bare responsibility for, some much
    less, some much more. Those days are left behind, not to be forgotten
    though. We must remember what has taken place; what ambitions,
    policies or impossible dreams have led to such large scale suffering
    then, so that we do not commit the same mistakes again. However, our
    primary duty is to understand what role our forbearers played and
    what we can do to ease the pain of those who still suffer today
    because they feel that their wounds are psychologically bleeding.

    We need a little empathy just like the former Minister of Health, Mr.
    Cevdet Aykan has said in the "Memories and Witnesses" section of the
    conference said: "In 1915, Tokat was a part of the Sivas Province.
    According to the 1908 Sivas Population Registrar, there were 240
    Muslims, 24,000 Armenians, and 14,000 Greeks in the province. The
    population of Tokat at the same time was 28,000. Of this number 8,600
    were Armenian and they were all living peacefully together. When the
    news of deportation reached Tokat and Sivas, the Turkish and Armenian
    community leaders got together and sought for a solution. The
    Armenian merchants and artisans transferred their property to their
    neighbors and trusted their spouses and daughters to Turkish families
    with mock weddings. Those who were sent away never came back". Mr.
    Aykan has told this story as a witness and added the most honorable
    statement: "I am telling these to pay back my moral debt to my
    Armenian citizens".

    This sentence tells all. Now, both the Armenians and Turks must get
    together not to accuse each other for the injustices of the past and
    how much suffering their great parents have inflicted on the other.
    Humanistic stories can be produced just s much as inhuman ones like
    officers committing suicide not to carry unjust orders or neighbors
    hiding forbidden citizens forsaking their own lives. No, what we
    ought to discuss is how we can heel the wounds that is no body's
    monopoly. If we do not want to carry the burden of history we must
    unload our feelings and expectations by cleansing our thoughts and
    souls from vengeance and hatred and wish for dialogue, which we can
    hopefully turn into an agenda for peaceful coexistence and mutual
    history building. Can we do it? Restless minds and souls only produce
    hatred and violence. Let us leave the souls of our grand parents
    alone to rest in peace. They have suffered enough and they do not
    want to be awakened to fight another war just because we want them on
    our side.

    By Dogu Ergil
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