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  • Armenian, Turkish communities battle in textbook lawsuit

    Armenian, Turkish communities battle in textbook lawsuit
    Both groups want their historical accounts heard.

    By Michael Doyle

    Fresno Bee
    Bee Washington Bureau
    11/04/06

    WASHINGTON - A textbook battle is pitting Americans of Armenian
    and Turkish descent against one another in a federal courtroom.
    The winner will write history.

    And though the fight may seem far away, it's captivating California's
    politically vocal Armenian-American community.

    "Most people who are interested in Armenian politics know about
    it," said Hygo Ohannessian, chairwoman of the Fresno-based Central
    California chapter of the Armenian National Committee of America.

    Ohannessian and her allies are waiting on U.S. District Judge Mark Wolf
    in Boston. For the past year, Wolf has overseen a lawsuit challenging
    the way Massachusetts high school study guides handle the horrific
    events of 1915-23.

    Genocide, Armenians and many historians call it. By some counts, upward
    of 1.5 million Armenians died at the hands of the Ottoman Empire. Turks
    and Armenians have disputed how to characterize the tragic events.

    "If the Turks win this, they are going to challenge textbooks in
    other states," predicted Ohannes Boghossian, chairman of the Armenian
    National Committee's Sacramento chapter.

    But in its lawsuit filed last October, the Assembly of Turkish American
    Associations claims Massachusetts capitulated to Armenian-American
    pressure and "purged" the state's study guides of any material
    challenging Armenian claims.

    "This case is not about whether there was or was not an Armenian
    genocide," attorney Harvey Silverglate said in an interview this
    week, "but rather, about whether teachers and students are going to
    be able to study and discuss the question without undue political
    interference."

    Undeniably, Armenian-Americans wield political clout, particularly
    in areas such as the San Joaquin Valley, with large ethnic populations.

    The leading Republican author of a commemorative Armenian genocide
    resolution offered this Congress is Rep. George Radanovich, R-Mariposa.

    But Turkey, too, flexes political muscle. While Radanovich's
    current Armenian genocide resolution has 159 House co-sponsors,
    similar resolutions have been consistently blocked by presidents of
    both parties.

    With lifetime tenure and 21 years on the federal bench, Wolf is
    shielded from overt pressure. Still, his next decision remains closely
    watched, as he considers whether to dismiss the lawsuit filed by
    Silverglate on behalf of the Turkish American associations.

    In 1999, an initial version of the Massachusetts study guide cited
    reference materials that reflected Turkish views challenging the
    genocide argument. These were optional references, not required to
    be taught.

    "These viewpoints contend ... that the fate of the Ottoman Armenians
    was the result of a number of factors, including the Ottoman
    government's response to an Armenian revolt in alliance with Russia,
    a tragically flawed deportation policy and mutual wartime massacres,
    which brought great suffering and death to both Ottoman Armenians
    and Muslims," the lawsuit argues.

    But after a Massachusetts state senator complained and the
    Armenian-American community mobilized, the state's education
    commissioner changed course. The state subsequently deleted study
    guide references to Turkish sites, including Georgetown University's
    Institute of Turkish Studies.

    "It's fine for governments to help make history, but not to write
    it," Silverglate said. "The First Amendment is meant to provide a
    free marketplace of ideas to determine truth, and history."

    The Armenian National Committee and the Los Angeles-based Armenian
    Bar Association have both urged Wolf in an amicus brief to toss out
    the case. They argue that Massachusetts acted reasonably in omitting
    the Turkish perspective.

    "It would be like having the Nazi Party coming in and forcing its
    views of the Holocaust," Ohannessian said Tuesday.

    The Armenian-Americans have strong U.S. Supreme Court precedent on
    their side, which may fatally undercut Silverglate's lawsuit. The court
    has ruled repeatedly, as the Armenian groups put it, that "the First
    Amendment places no restraints" on the messages a government conveys

    "Courts," Massachusetts added in its own legal filing, "have no
    authority either to control government speech or to second-guess
    curriculum decisions made by the responsible public officials."

    Armenian-Americans cite, as well, the 37 states - including California
    - whose legislatures have recognized the Armenian genocide. The study
    guide, the groups say, should be appreciated "in the context of this
    widespread official acknowledgment" of the tragedy.

    In California, Ohannessian noted, textbooks refer to the Armenian
    genocide - but she and other Armenian-American activists enhance
    this with yearly seminars offered to Fresno and Clovis high school
    students seeking extra credit.

    The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or (202)
    383-0006.

    http://www.fresnobee.com/263/stor y/11188.html

    www.ancfresno.org
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