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Dark memories rekindled in Lebanon: Armenians irked by Turk presence

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  • Dark memories rekindled in Lebanon: Armenians irked by Turk presence

    Houston Chronicle, TX
    Oct 7 2006

    Dark memories rekindled in Lebanon
    Armenians irked by Turk presence in U.N. troops


    By GREGORY KATZ
    Middle East Bureau

    BOURJ HAMMOUD, LEBANON - After a 90-year absence, Turkish forces are
    returning to Lebanon this weekend, but their impending arrival as
    U.N. peacekeepers is opening up old wounds in this Armenian community
    on the edge of Beirut.

    Turkey will contribute about 800 ground troops plus a naval
    contingent to the U.N. protection force known as UNIFIL. It was
    established as part of the cease-fire that ended the 34-day war
    between Hezbollah and Israel in mid-August.

    The 222 Turkish sailors are expected to arrive in Lebanese waters
    Sunday aboard a frigate. They will join a German-led force tasked
    with preventing seaborne weapons deliveries to Hezbollah. Diplomats
    said Friday that the frigate was already steaming toward Lebanon.

    The return of the Turks - an odd postscript to the war - has sparked
    little debate inside Lebanon. But the Armenian community in Bourj
    Hammoud seems deeply troubled by their inclusion in the 15,000-member
    U.N. force.

    "The Turks are our first enemy, and if I see any Turkish army coming
    in here I will kill them," said Manushat Ekmejian, practically
    spitting her words as she left a food market.


    Ancestors fled Turkey
    Bourj Hammoud is home to about 60,000 Armenians whose ancestors fled
    eastern Turkey in 1915 to escape the killings of their countrymen at
    the hands of the Ottoman Turks. The deployment of the Turks, who were
    Lebanon's colonial rulers until World War I, is rekindling memories
    of what the Armenians in this tightly knit Christian community call
    the genocide, the darkest chapter in their history.

    In every household, people remember how their ancestors were
    slaughtered, said Jack Mandalian, owner of a gift shop filled with
    carvings and portraits of Jesus Christ.

    The Ottoman Turks would not allow them to practice their religion and
    tried instead to force them into adopting Islam, Mandalian said.

    "They said if you become Muslim, you could live in peace," said
    Mandalian, 63. "We could not become Muslim, and we said we would die
    but we won't become Muslim for your sake. And they collected our
    people and killed them."

    Mandalian and other Armenians in Bourj Hammoud assert that 1.5
    million Armenians were massacred. The figure has been disputed, but a
    growing number of countries have denounced the Turks' actions.

    Survivors fled on foot, and many ended up in Lebanon where they were
    welcomed and allowed to practice Christianity without repression,
    Mandalian said.

    "We want to be honest about the genocide," he said. ''We want (the
    Turks) to apologize for what they did and pay a penalty, like Germany
    and the Jews. You have to accept the truth, and they deny it."

    The Turkish government steadfastly denies that anything resembling a
    genocide took place. Speaking in Washington this summer, Deputy Prime
    Minister Abdullah Gul called the charges "baseless" and said Turkey
    wants a joint committee of historians to address the matter in depth.

    A Turkish diplomat in London said Friday that the Armenian charges
    should have no impact on the Turkish deployment.

    "The Armenian claims are quite irrelevant to the UNIFIL deployment,"
    he said. "We want to contribute to peace and stability in the region,
    and all the Lebanese political parties agree with that position."

    The diplomat said Turkey is "extremely opposed" to the use of the
    word genocide to describe the events of 1915 and 1916.

    "According to our interpretation, there were mutual killings, there
    was a civil war in progress, and the Armenian elements fomented
    insurgencies and collaborated with the invading army," he said. "And
    measures had to be taken."

    U.N. officials in Lebanon maintain that the Turkish presence, and the
    addition of troops from other predominantly Muslim countries, will
    give the expanded armed force added credibility. The U.N. force is a
    centerpiece of the cease-fire reached in August between Israel and
    Hezbollah. The soldiers are expected to demilitarize the border
    region and prevent more fighting.

    "It's very good to have them," U.N. spokesman Khaled Mansour said of
    the Turkish contingent. "We didn't want this to be only a European
    force, or only Asian or African, but a U.N. force so people have
    confidence in it."

    Not all the Armenians are critical of the Turks' role in the U.N.
    force. Sarkis Kournajian, owner of a video and electronics store in
    Bourj Hammoud, said he is not troubled by their arrival.

    "Attitudes are changing in the long run," he said. "We are Armenian,
    but we are also Lebanese. In 50 years, we won't be Armenians. If I
    meet a Turk I will not kill him. I have them as customers. They are
    very much like us ... I don't see that much difference."


    'We will never forget'
    The return of the Turks is a hot topic in Bourj Hammoud, said Rafi
    Bogosian, a 34-year-old policeman who spends most days directing
    traffic in the city center.

    "My grandmother told my father what they did, and he told me what
    happened," Bogosian said. "She said they killed my grandfather and
    threw him into the sea. We have taught our children that the Turks
    never respect any human being. And now they are coming back. How can
    we forget if they killed our parents? We will never forget."

    He is chafing to take action against the Turkish soldiers but does
    not want to jeopardize his job.

    "I would like to do something to the Turks, but I can't because I'm
    in the Lebanese police," he said. "But inside I feel so bad about
    this."

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story .mpl/world/4242332.html
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