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Balanced Portrayal An Extremist's Worst Nightmare: PBS Documentary"A

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  • Balanced Portrayal An Extremist's Worst Nightmare: PBS Documentary"A

    BALANCED PORTRAYAL AN EXTREMIST'S WORST NIGHTMARE: PBS DOCUMENTARY "ARMENIAN GENOCIDE"
    Elizabeth Frierson

    Cincinnati Enquirer, OH
    April 24 2006

    A remarkable new documentary, "The Armenian Genocide," was broadcast
    nationwide on PBS last Monday - except in Los Angeles. This controversy
    is at heart, behind all the bloviating rhetoric, over freedom of
    speech and freedom of inquiry, basic human rights that KCET quashed -
    in the United States of America - by suppressing this documentary. Our
    local affiliates did not buckle under the pressure.

    Why did this documentary upset extremists on both sides of this
    history?

    Emmy Award-winning producer Andrew Goldberg tells as big a story
    as possible, showing not just what happened, but why, not just two
    sides with their own versions of events, but multiple victims and
    perpetrators with differing points of view. In other words, this
    balanced portrayal is an extremist's worst nightmare.

    Viewers see starving Muslim refugees from Christian atrocities in
    the Balkans before WWI. This complicates the idea that Muslims were
    always the aggressors and Christians always the victims in ethnic
    conflict. The documentary also shows Armenian guerrilla fighters
    attacking Turks. Neither Christian atrocities nor Armenian resistance
    justified genocide. Still, these stories are often downplayed, as
    if people today couldn't make those distinctions, and need to be fed
    simple lies in order to be horrified by atrocities.

    Second, the film shows ordinary Turkish citizens telling family
    stories of atrocities against Armenians, expressing their grief and
    disgust over what happened. This shows that ordinary Turks - despite
    the government's denials of genocide - today are ready to acknowledge
    and mourn this tragedy. This upsets extremists on both sides.

    Third, we meet scholars and writers who are, even as you read this
    paper, on trial in Turkey just for using the term "genocide" to
    describe what happened. These courageous Turks do research and publish
    results knowing that they put their lives and livelihoods at risk by
    doing so. They are actively supported by Armenian colleagues who are
    equally sickened by easy answers to messy questions on the Armenian
    side. This kind of cooperation across boundaries is what frightens
    extremists on both sides most of all, precisely because it threatens
    to break boundaries of hatred that make life simpler than truth and
    reconciliation would require. It is ironic that Turkish journalists on
    trial were rendered invisible by intimidated broadcasters in the U.S.

    Rwanda, Sudan, Iraq, Bosnia, WWII Europe - it's a long and filthy list,
    and to many an incomprehensible, and therefore unstoppable, part of
    "human nature." It is neither incomprehensible nor unstoppable, as
    long as we are free to see the whole picture, including its shades
    of grey. Messy truth may be hard to take, but that's precisely why,
    in this country, censorship is illegal. Except, apparently, in L.A.

    Elizabeth B. Frierson, Ph.D., is Associate Professor, History of the
    Middle East and North Africa, University of Cincinnati, and editor
    of The Turkish Studies Association Journal. She was among the experts
    interviewed for "The Armenian Genocide."

    http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll /article?AID=/20060424/EDIT02/604240341/1090
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