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  • ANKARA: Voltaire in tears

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    May 12 2006

    Voltaire in tears
    Yavuz Baydar

    [email protected] May 2006


    If alive today, the great French thinker, known for his unconditioned
    defense of dissenting opinion no matter what it is, would feel
    absolutely shattered. By the way his countrymen, with a great historic
    achievement in deep values of freedom for humankind, are unable to
    raise their voice against yet another `European' folly...

    New bill, criminalizing denial of `Armenian Genocide' with prison
    sentence, to be debated in French parliament next week, is certainly a
    cloud of shame over that country. I am, not as a Turk, but as a
    journalist, deeply concerned for the mindset that has created it, and
    for consequences, if passed.

    It was also with the same shared anxiety, a group of Turkish
    intellectuals printed an appeal to French politicians and opinion
    makers in Liberation.

    They said, in brief, the following:

    "We, the Turkish citizens, feel all the burden of the inhuman disaster
    faced by the Ottoman Armenians during the last days of Ottoman
    Empire. The agony of Armenians is our agony. The 1915 disaster cannot
    be denied by anyone who claims to be human. Looking for the reasons
    and aims behind such a tragedy is nonsense...'

    "But the democratic process is on in Turkey, as was seen during the
    Istanbul conference held last Sept. 23-24. This process will chip away
    at the darkness confronting the public on that issue. Even though the
    people who struggle for this are branded traitors, we know that these
    are the stages of a democratic process, so we will keep on struggling
    through the issue.'

    "But we have serious concerns about the French Parliament's possible
    approval of the Armenian bill. Whatever its aim, such an initiative
    would destroy joint efforts to investigate the facts. Such an
    initiative would curb free discussion in France and would also create
    a negative impact in Turkey.'

    "Such polarization would encourage monologues, as France should very
    well know. In fact, we need dialogue more than such a vicious
    argument. Freedom of expression is a universal principle, just like
    the struggle for the crimes against humanity. Defending one does not
    mean neglecting the other.

    "But today it's a shame that both sides are unable to communicate
    their understanding to one another. Such a deadlock carries the risk
    of further, more serious conflicts.

    "The pioneers of such initiatives in France or in other places should
    take into consideration those circles who are trying to avoid free
    argument about the 1915 incidents..'

    It is apparent there is something deeply wrong in Europe, in general,
    as the attempts to limit the free speech increase. Take the case of
    David Irving, or Ernst Zündel, holocaust deniers. The more they are
    subjected to trials or prison, the more popular they become.

    Richard Bernstein wrote an article in IHT about the growing anti free
    speech trends in Europe and expressed his concern about it.

    He wrote: `During the uproar over the Prophet Muhammad cartoons,
    Muslims attacked the Holocaust denial laws in several European
    countries as rank hypocrisy because those same countries permitted
    insults to Muslims, and, as the American legal scholar Ronald Dworkin
    observed recently in The New York Review of Books, they had a point.
    But, Dworkin continued, the response should not be to broaden the
    coverage of the laws against insult to religion but to strike them
    down. Free speech, he argues, is an indispensable requirement of a
    democratic society, not something that can be bargained away to
    mollify this or that offended group. And so, as an American in Europe
    and a Jew mightily offended by Holocaust denial, I nonetheless come
    down on the side of free speech rather than on the prohibition of
    offensive speech. One of the cultural differences between America and
    Europe in this regard is that in America this issue is debated. In
    Europe it is not.'

    So true. Perceived arrogance of some Europeans in these matters have
    strong elements of double standards, of hyprocricy.

    Take Setif, a French case. As the subject stil haunts many French, as
    a dark point in their recent history, with some 60.000 civilian
    Algeriennes massacred by the French forces, France still rejects the
    attempts to deal with the issue properly, by not acknowledging that
    it was a crime of humanity.

    Given the broad definition of genocide in 1948, it may even be called
    an `act of genocide'. By saying `let us leave it to historians', it
    is rather easy to conclude that the world will have hard time to
    praise the French political class for championship in righteousness,
    will it not?

    Pushing denialists in any issue into corner, into marginality may be
    a noble task, but, after all, it all comes down to free speech and
    its limits. Civilised societies, such as UK, Canada, USA deal even
    the most loathable, most nonsensical expressions with tolerance. You
    do not put those who say things that may offend some of us, however
    deeply the offense may be, to prison. If you do, you have nothing to
    say against others who do.

    Truly disturbed by what the French bill represents, one certainly
    hopes, as Richard Bernstein does, that Europe really comes to its
    senses about protecting free speech with no ifs and buts. This bill,
    if it becomes law, will definitely pollute, even disrupt (what if
    Turkey criminalises, as a retaliation, acceptance of the 1915 events
    as genocide?) all civil attempts to reach an understanding and
    reconciliation between Armenians and Turks. It will, at the best,
    delay them.

    I call -and expect - all French colleagues to say no this folly.

    What is happening, for the moment, is an insult, an attack to a
    fundamental human right, a right constituted by Voltaire and his
    countrymen.
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