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Legislating truth

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  • Legislating truth

    Houston Chronicle, TX
    Oct 14 2006

    Legislating truth
    French lawmakers strangle their own principles by forbidding anyone
    to deny Armenian genocide



    One of the first weapons against human rights catastrophes is the
    simple act of speaking out. It's simple, but not always safe. Turkish
    novelist Orhan Pamuk found that out last year, when he was prosecuted
    in his homeland for "insulting Turkishness."

    The government of Turkey charged Pamuk in 2005 after Pamuk dared to
    tell a Swiss reporter that Turks were in denial about their country's
    massacre of up to 1.5 million Armenians in 1915. Pamuk's insistence
    on speaking out clearly and persuasively in novels has earned him
    this year's Nobel Prize for literature.

    As works of conscience do, Pamuk's words reverberated far beyond the
    culture he described. His novels, the Nobel Academy's chief said,
    "enlarged the roots of the contemporary novel" by blending Western
    literary tradition with that of the East.

    During the same week, French lawmakers embarrassed themselves by
    seeking to make it a crime to speak freely. The culture whose
    ancestors refined the novel and defined free speech is debating a law
    that would ban denial that Turks committed genocide against the
    Armenians.

    Turkey, unsurprisingly, voiced official outrage at the law. But a
    government that prosecutes its citizens for far less offensive speech
    is in a poor position to complain.

    Turkey's indignation is even more suspect because its officials
    insist on qualifying and rationalizing the Armenian atrocities not as
    a genocide, but as a side effect of war. The harping on semantics,
    rather than on the crime, confirms Pamuk's portrayal of a nation in
    denial.

    In a better world, semantics would be enormously important. The term
    genocide actually was coined after World War I by Raphael Lemkin, a
    lawyer of Polish-Jewish descent, who spent his life trying to
    convince the world that exterminating an ethnic group should be a
    punishable crime. Yet even now, calling such killings genocide does
    little to mobilize the world community.

    Precisely because Turks' resistance to facing their past continues,
    though, the discussion must take place in full detail. Muzzling
    anyone who wants to argue over the definition of genocide also gags
    anyone able to make the opposite case.

    France's new bill emerges in several larger contexts: widespread
    reluctance to let Turkey join the European Union, and an election at
    home in which France's half-million citizens of Armenian descent play
    a big role. Neither situation merits stifling free speech.

    By trying to legislate history, France's parliament might silence
    "genocide doubters." That's different from persuading them. By
    smothering debate, France also silences its best advocates for truth
    - voices, perhaps, like those of Orhan Pamuk.
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