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  • PBS Ombudsman Letters

    http://www.pbs.org/ombudsman/

    LETTERS


    On the `The Armenian Genocide' and Follow-up Panel

    I read with great interest your story about the panel discussion to
    follow the documentary about the Armenian Genocide. The problem is one
    of finding and reporting the truth. If you put on some crackpot
    historian from the midwest who doesn't know the truth, but who wants
    to be on TV, then you are doing the nation and the Armenians who were
    stripped of their land and belongings and then marched to their death
    a great injustice. Documents have been found that have proven the
    Turkish government ordered these atrocities. Knowing this,it is
    irresponsible for PBS to pass off ignorant people as authorities of
    the subject. There are those who deny the Jewish Holocaust including
    the present Iranian government, but because of our own GIs accounts of
    the death campswe know that it happened. To give liars and fools a
    podium on national television is a big mistake and great care should
    be taken that the documented truth not be lost to them. The only
    reasons the US has not officially recognizedthe genocide is the
    political repercussions that it would cause with Turkey, not because
    they don't think it happened.

    Lawrence Darpinian, Modesto, CA


    I have just read your column entitled `Coming Soon to Viewers Like
    You: The Armenian Genocide.' Thank you very much for the detailed
    discussionof the issue and your concerns. I certainly believe that PBS
    is doing a great service by exploring issues that others do not,
    whether I like the topic or not.

    However, given the intensity and the importance of the debate, I
    believe that PBS should provide the American public with a more
    balanced view on the Armenian issue. As far as I understand from your
    description, `The Armenian Genocide' documentary seems to be heavily
    influenced by the political and economic strength of the Armenian
    community in the U.S.

    I will not spend much time to describe how disappointed I am to see
    that PBS fails to incorporate the views of the Turkish side to this
    discussion. In particular, by accepting `The Armenian Genocide' title,
    which seems to assume that the issue has already been settled, PBS
    fails to provide the American public with deeper insights regarding
    this highly contested issue. Moreover, the very fact that the
    Armenians do not want the airing of the follow-up panel should alert
    PBS regarding the importance of having this panel discussion. In order
    to protect `the public's trust in the editorial integrity of PBS
    content and the process by which it is produced and distributed,' PBS
    should ` shield the creative and editorial processes from political
    pressure or improper influence from funders or other sources,' as
    stated in its own Editorial Standards.

    Washington, DC


    Is it actually a coincidence that you have published the `Ombudsman's
    Mailbag' every month except March? My guess is that, to save PBS from
    further embarrassment about the shameful act of giving voice to
    Turkish Historians' denial of the Armenian Genocide in a panel
    discussion that accompanied a recent documentary dealing with the
    subject, you conveniently neglected to publishour opinions. Sure, you
    wrote some pithy response alluding to our comments, but you should let
    our opinions be read.

    Ty Smith, Sacramento, CA


    The fact of the matter is that an overwhelming amount of the funding
    and support for this documentary is from the Armenian community. This
    should bea huge red flag as to how balanced this `documentary'
    is. Consider that at the same time, the much briefer panel discussion
    (which allows the dissenting opinions of two respected scholars)
    received an onslaught of Armenian protest, and this despite still
    incorporating the Armenian point of view. I find it difficult to
    believe then, as New York's WNET suggests, that the documentary is
    unbiased and complete in its analysis. True, we all have yet to see
    either program. ut I ask you - even if the panel merely repeats the
    claimsof the documentary, why not air it anyway? The answer is likely
    that two members of the panel disputed the documentary's claims. And
    by not airing this discussion, WNET and certain other PBS stations
    have likely censored themselves to please the lobby of the well funded
    and organized American Armenian community.

    Toronto, Canada


    I am quite pleased to see that the PBS has recognized the importance
    of bringing to light one of the most important events of the 20th
    Century. However, I am equally distressed at your lack of regard for
    the hundreds of thousands of Assyrians and Greeks who perished in the
    same Genocide. Proportionally,the Genocide of 1915 or the Seyfo (as
    Assyrians call it) brought greater calamity to the Assyrians (also
    called Chaldeans and Syriacs) in the Ottoman Empire.

    It must be noted that two out of every three Assyrian living in what
    is now called Iran, Turkey, and Iraq perished directly as the result
    of this Genocide. It would be a great injustice if only the names of
    one of the three equally important Christian communities in the
    Ottoman Empire is noted in your reviews and television programming.

    Wilfred Bet-Alkhas, Washington, DC


    To me the use of the word Genocide is correctly associated with the
    Nurenberg trials. It was the findings and judgment of a court similar
    to any other judgment passed by a court after hearing the charges and
    defense offered by recognized officers of that court using evidence to
    support the positions of the parties. To imply that a country is
    guilty of genocide without a proper trail is clearly a
    `politicalization' of justice.

    Chris C., Scio, OR


    It was a pleasure to read your fairly balanced comment on the
    documentary and the follow up. Thanks for trying to understand the
    issue with your own reasoning rather than depending on the others' and
    more importantlysupporting the freedom of speech for everyone no
    matter if it is Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist or something else.

    Duru A., Boston, MA


    In case of Armenian genocide, PBS feels that a historically settled
    matter needs panel discussion after a related documentary has been
    aired. However, documentaries such as FRONTLINE that deal with events
    of greater controversy require no follow-up debate. PBS's argument is
    bogus.

    Jack Yaghoubian, Sherman Oaks, CA


    The decision to have a panel discussion is not a bad idea. I wish that
    rather than including total deniers, you would have considered
    moderate Turks who are objective and willing to review the
    issue. Bringing a panel of deniers only fuels the argument that the
    State Department's influence on`Free Media' remains as strong as ever.

    Vatche' Nazarethian


    Your column, while providing interesting background information,
    completely misses the point that thousands of Armenians have made to
    your station. You are giving airtime to people who deny a genocide
    which, as you have shown and agree, is accepted to have taken
    place. You would never, ever have a couple of Neo-Nazis sitting on a
    panel with Holocaust scholars arguing that therewas no Holocaust. You
    are giving them legitimacy whether you intend to or not.

    You are giving them a chance, in a few minutes of airtime to make
    allegations that would require scholarly texts to rebut, something
    nobody could hope to accomplish during an on-the-air panel. Freedom of
    speech is the right of a person to say something. Justin McCarthy has
    the right to say what he likes, but when you put him on PBS, you have
    instantly given him something he does not deserve: credibility.

    Raffi Kojian, Orange, CA


    One wonders how far outside the norms of scholarly discourse people
    need to drift before organizations such as PBS stop using the excuse
    that it is necessary to broadcast every opinion, no matter how
    contrary to reality it may run. Would PBS give air time to people who
    deny the Holocaust? Would it give air time to people who deny Darwin's
    Theory of Evolution? Would it giveair time to people who think that
    humans never walked on the moon? Would it invite a panel discussion by
    people who think that Elvis Presley is still alive? Isit really
    necessary to broadcast a lie to counter every truth?

    Bruce Boghosian, Lexington, MA


    By calling the program `Armenian Genocide' are not the program-makers
    becoming the judge and also the jury? Why not let the historians
    decide after they study all the archives. Armenians killed many
    innocent Turks in Erzurum while the Turkish army was fighting with the
    enemy (WWI). The so-called documentary has been financed by
    Armenians. How could it be unbiased and impartial?

    Does it mean whoever has the money can change the history? This
    program should not even be aired on PBS.

    Minneapolis, MN


    I will be watching the `Armenian Genocide' documentary withgreat
    interest.

    I am very proud of PBS for showing the documentary and allowing many
    of its members to see, maybe even for the first time, the horrific
    events of the genocide and it's tragic aftermath. I am however very
    disappointed about the decision to allow the `discussion panel' to
    follow the documentary. For me personally, all this does is
    demoralizes and de-humanizes, all those who lost their lives and
    suffered unspeakable horrors. It's a disgrace to their memories and a
    great dishonor to its descendants.

    San Francisco, CA

    A Summing Up What follows are excerpts from a lengthy letter from
    David Saltzman, Counsel of the Assembly of Turkish American
    Associations. His initial reference to PBS policy refers to
    widely-quoted remarks in the press in recent weeks from PBS officials
    that the network believes the genocide `is settled history' and
    `acknowledges and accepts that there was a genocide.'

    Our concern is that PBS' publicly stated policy supporting the
    genocide thesis prevents PBS affiliates from making an objective
    assessment whether to broadcast the post-film discussion, which, at
    least in part, challenges the genocide thesis ...

    Few episodes in history are more controversial than the historical
    treatment of the suffering brought on by the dissolution of the
    Ottoman Empire, an event which saw the birth of more than 20 new
    states. Many of these states include as central elements of their
    national lore some form of heroic struggle to wrest themselves free
    from `The Terrible Turk.' This lore,in many cases has bred lingering
    anti-Turkish prejudice that applies not just to the Turkish state, but
    to all who are ethnically Turkish ...

    >From the Turkish American perspective, the oft-told stories of
    suffering during the late Ottoman Empire tend to extricate and isolate
    the Armenian experience from the complex circumstances of the day. One
    is thus given the impression Armenians were all good and Turks were
    all bad and that Armenians suffered alone ...

    PBS, by establishing an official position on a matter of historic
    controversy, provides cover to PBS affiliates who bow to pressure
    brought on by government officials and panic-stricken proponents of
    the genocide thesis.

    WNET/WLIW

    (in New York) are not alone. Already PBS affiliates in Los Angeles,
    Boston, Orange County, CA, Miami, FL, Fresno, CA, and Mountain Lakes,
    NY have determined not to air the post-film discussion. Thus, two of
    the three largest PBS markets will not see the discussion. Orange
    County, Boston, and Miami are also among the largest 20
    U.S. metropolitan areas served by PBS ...

    We remind PBS that no person, living or dead, or any foreign state or
    sovereign body has been tried for the crime of genocide stemming from
    the Armenian allegation of genocide despite the opportunities to do so
    that continue even today. Yet the accusation of the crime of genocide
    permeates all presentations favoring the genocide thesis ...

    Turkey unequivocally denies the genocide allegation made against it in
    such films, statements, and legislative resolutions. Whether the facts
    of the Armenian tragedy in eastern Anatolia during World War I
    constitute genocideas defined by the Genocide Convention is a matter
    that experts have yet to debate in the arena deemed competent by the
    treaty itself - the International Court of Justice ('ICJ') at The
    Hague. Any future such adjudication will be poisoned by the one-sided
    treatment of the issue by quasi-governmental bodies such as CPB and
    PBS.



    What follows are excerpts from a letter from Peter Balakian, a
    professor of the humanities at Colgate University, who was an advisor
    on the documentary and appears in the panel discussion that follows.

    The fact remains that PBS would not run a fair and rich documentary
    about the Armenian Genocide - one that included nearly a dozen
    Turkish voices - without running what many in genocide studies
    consider to be an unethical privileging of denial.

    This is not a free speech issue as much of the scholarly community has
    made clear. The deniers are free in this country to express themselves
    without fear of prosecution or harm but this does not guarantee them
    the right to elite forums. The leading authority on Holocaust and
    genocide denial, Professor Deborah Lipstadt, has written:

    `Denial of genocide whether that of the Turks against the Armenians,
    or the Nazis against the Jews is not an act of historical
    reinterpretation. Rather, the deniers sow confusion by appearing to be
    engaged in a genuine scholarly effort. The abundance of documents and
    testimonies that confirm the genocide are dismissed as contrived,
    coerced, or forgeries and falsehoods. The deniers aim at convincing
    innocent third parties that there is another side of the story. Free
    speech does not guarantee the deniers the right to be treated as the
    other side of a legitimate debate, when there is no credible other
    side; nor does it guarantee the deniers space in the classroom or
    curriculum, or in any other forum.'

    Like many others, I fear that PBS resorted to the post-show panel as a
    kind of fire insurance because of the negative experience it had with
    Turkish government harassment in 1988 after airing an Armenian
    Genocide documentary, as you note in your column. While this was no
    doubt an uncomfortable experience, many institutions and organization
    around the world in recent years have ceased paying attention to
    Turkish harassment, and many of us hoped that PBS would not feel that
    sense of intimidation this time, with this particular documentary.

    Lastly, I find (PBS's co-chief programming executive) Ms. Atlas'
    explanation for the post-show program a bit disingenuous. She claims
    that its goal was not to provide a `platform for those who deny the
    genocide,' but to `explore how serious historians do their work and
    look at evidence.' However, by inviting two professional deniers (who
    have worked closely with the Turkish government) on a PBS program, a
    large platform was indeed provided for the repulsive lies that
    constitute denial. And, in the twenty-five minutes we had, there was
    not even a remote possibility that the show could explore how
    historians work. As fine a job as (panel moderator) Scott Simon did
    hosting it, the post-show could not help but be more than a staged
    `bake-off,' and sadly, a forum that abused the reality and memory of
    one of the major human rights crimes of our time.

    Having made these points, I still applaud PBS for putting on `The
    Armenian Genocide,' which is a landmark documentary. And, I appreciate
    your thoughtful wrestling with this issue.


    Posted by Michael Getler on April 14, 2006 at 1:48 PM
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