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Turkish, Foreign Academics Hold Rare Talks On Armenian Massacres

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  • Turkish, Foreign Academics Hold Rare Talks On Armenian Massacres

    TURKISH, FOREIGN ACADEMICS HOLD RARE TALKS ON ARMENIAN MASSACRES

    Agence France Presse -- English
    March 15, 2006 Wednesday 4:54 PM GMT

    Turkish academics who deny the massacres of Armenians during World
    War I amounted to genocide offered a rare olive branch on Wednesday
    by inviting foreign opponents to Istanbul to discuss the largely
    taboo subject.

    Only a dozen or so foreign academics attended the first day of the
    conference at Istanbul's state university, alongside around 60 Turkish
    historians and officials who defend Ankara's official position on
    the 1915-17 killings.

    But Ara Sarafian, a British historian of Armenian origin, said the
    three-day event was "an important first step", even if genuine dialogue
    was conspicuous by its absence.

    "We established that despite all our differences, which are extreme
    on this subject, we're able to come under the same roof and voice
    our opinions. That's a fundamental shift, rather than staying outside
    and shouting at each other," Sarafian told AFP.

    Turkey categorically denies that Armenian subjects under its
    predecessor, the Ottoman Empire, were victims of a genocide but
    acknowledges that at least 300,000 Armenians and as many Turks died
    in civil strife during the last years of the empire.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
    orchestrated killings.

    The conference was only a timid step towards real debate and involved
    hardly any of the Turkish intellectuals opposed to the official line
    who took part in a ground-breaking conference on the massacres in
    September 2005.

    That meeting, which Turkish nationalists tried to have banned, was
    an attempt not to determine whether the killings amounted to genocide
    but rather to openly study and understand them.

    But Turkey is under pressure to allow more freedom of speech to
    achieve its cherished dream of joining the European Union.

    And, in that sense, this week's event was a watershed, according to
    both Sarafian and Edhem Eldem, a Turkish academic who attended the
    September forum.

    For the first time, books presenting the Armenian view of the killings
    were on display, alongside abundant literature upholding the official
    Turkish view.

    Despite the fact there had been "no real dialogue on the basis of
    these papers", the conference was an important opportunity to let
    the Turkish authorities start a debate, Sarafian said.

    "For me, it's also an opportunity to show the books that we
    published. It's the first time these books appear in Turkey like this,"
    he added.

    Turkish academic Mehmet Saray used the conference to rebuff Armenian
    "propaganda" about the massacres and blamed them on "the imperialist
    Russian, French and British states, who wanted to carve up the Ottoman
    empire and encouraged Armenian nationalism".

    But Yair Auron, an Israel researching the archives of the Jewish
    community in Palestine under Ottoman rule, was permitted to openly
    use the term "genocide" and appeal to Turks to question their past.

    Every civil society has to deal with its past, including the black
    pages of this past," Auron said.

    Eldem said many of the intellectuals who took part in the September
    2005 conference had been loathe to attend this week's meeting because
    the organisers had not told them until Tuesday what its aims were.

    "People were quite reticent to say yes. (They) didn't want to be used
    in the hands of the nationalist establishment," he explained.

    But he praised them for the initiative.

    "The fact they invited people who don't share their opinion is
    important. They've realised they can't play this game alone any more,"
    Eldem said.
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