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  • The Turks talk back

    North Shore Sunday, MA
    April 29 2006


    The Turks talk back
    By Barbara Taormina/ Staff Writer
    Friday, April 28, 2006

    When it comes to Armenia , Turkey has always told a different story.

    Many Turks believe that the current push to have the world
    recognize the Armenian genocide is an attempt to force Turkey to pay
    reparations and to annex the eastern part of the country to
    present-day Armenia.

    According to Turkish literature, the estimate of 1.5 million
    Armenian deaths is exaggerated. Instead the Turks claim 700,000
    Armenians were killed or died of starvation and disease during World
    War I in eastern Anatolia.

    But Turkish histories also point out that more than 2 million
    Turks and Muslims died during the same time frame. And they say many
    were massacred by the Armenians, while others died during the war
    fighting Armenians and Russians.

    Demir Delen, a Turkish writer who now lives in Canada, has been
    trying for years to counter the claim of an Armenian genocide.
    According to Delen, Armenian revolutionaries joined forces with the
    Russians in an attempt to take advantage of a chaotic political
    situation during the final years of the Ottoman Empire.

    Delan says the attempt to relocate the Armenians was an attempt
    to create some order and stability inside Turkey.

    Like other Turks writing about the early 20th century history,
    Delen claims many of the sources and documents supporting the claim
    of an Armenian genocide are fake.

    "Armenians, in their attempts to convince the world opinion about
    the existence of a genocide perpetrated against them during the First
    World War, resort to forgeries and falsifications," he writes.

    "It is ironic that Armenians accuse anyone who opposes their
    allegations of a so-called genocide by exposing the historical facts,
    as 'rewriting history,'" says Delen. "Yet Armenians are rewriting
    history more than 80 years later, in parliaments of western countries
    and in the legislatures of several states and provinces in the U.S.
    and Canada where they have a considerable population, by lobbying,
    donating to election campaigns and influencing politicians."
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