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ANKARA: Nationalists React To Intellectuals' Courgeous Apology

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  • ANKARA: Nationalists React To Intellectuals' Courgeous Apology

    NATIONALISTS REACT TO INTELLECTUALS' COURAGEOUS APOLOGY

    Today's Zaman
    Dec 6 2008
    Turkey

    Turkey's nationalists have been incensed about a group of Turkish
    intellectuals who recently apologized publicly for the "great disaster
    Ottoman Armenians suffered in 1915" in a country where even discussing
    Armenian claims of genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire can
    be cause for arrest.

    The reaction to a petition initiated by a group of intellectuals, led
    by popular professors Baskın Oran and Ahmet İnsel and journalists
    Ali Bayramoglu and Cengiz Aktar, personally apologizing for the forced
    deportation of Armenians from their homes in the Turkish heartland
    in 1915, has shown yet again how courageous one must be to publicly
    announce his or her unorthodox opinions in Turkey, particularly if
    those opinions contradict the official ideology.

    In a phone interview with Today's Zaman, Nationalist Movement Party
    (MHP) deputy for Erzurum Zeki Ertugay accused the signatories of being
    in "a state of hysteria." He stressed that it was not Armenians who
    suffered at the hand of Ottoman Turks, but Turks who were assaulted
    by Armenians. "Erzurum suffered most from that cruelty.

    Every house has memories of people butchered by Armenians. I regard
    apologizing to the Armenians as an insult to the Turkish nation. People
    who call themselves intellectuals have not even been enlightened about
    their own history. A stain of shame like genocide has never taken place
    in the history of the Turkish nation. If there is somebody who needs to
    apologize, it is the Armenians and the Western states that provoked the
    Armenians against the Turks by promising them a state of their own."

    Behic Celik, a MHP deputy from Mersin, was equally enraged. "It is
    impossible to refer to these people as intellectuals. The so-called
    intellectuals trying to apologize to Armenians do not know the
    past. They don't know history. There has never been any genocide in
    the history of the Turkish nation. Apologizing even for the deportation
    is not acceptable, because deportations have been carried out by many
    nations, not just Turkey. The US relocated Native Americans, Russia
    deported the Kazaks and the Crimean Tatars. Their intellectuals never
    apologized to anybody."

    Ultranationalist media outlets and pundits were also furious. The
    Yeni Cag (New Age) daily referred to the petition as a "campaign to
    smear Turkey." Yusuf Halacoglu, a well-known ultranationalist who
    formerly headed the Turkish Historical Society (TTK), said the real
    target here was connected to Turkey's new foreign policy initiative,
    started in early September with President Abdullah Gul and Foreign
    Minister Ali Babacan visiting Yerevan for a soccer match between the
    national teams of Turkey and Armenia. "The aim here is to foment public
    opinion to be able to take that earlier initiative to the next level,"
    Halacoglu said.

    He said only 22,000 people died before 1915, the year of the forced
    deportation. "Will they apologize for those, too? Or will the Armenians
    announce with whom they cooperated when the Ottoman Empire was fighting
    world powers? Are they going to publicly announce how many Armenians
    were part of the French and Russian armies at the time? Armenians, as
    people who cooperated with the enemy in their own countries, have lost
    this war. This is the state of affairs as it stands today," he said.

    Historian Cemalettin TaÅ~_kıran was quoted in nationalist newspapers
    as saying, "This is the biggest betrayal that could be shown to
    our forefathers." TaÅ~_kıran said the campaign was set up to hurt
    the unity of the Turkish nation and to prepare the way for Turkey's
    eventual recognition of Armenian claims of genocide.

    The intellectuals' group is calling on other people to sign
    the petition posted online, which reads as follows: "I cannot
    conscientiously accept the indifference to the great disaster that
    Ottoman Armenians suffered in 1915, and its denial. I reject this
    injustice and, acting of my own will, I share the feelings and pains
    of my Armenian brothers and sisters, and I apologize to them."

    The organizers of the campaign have underlined that first they will
    collect signatures from intellectuals and they will then open a secure
    Web site to collect signatures.

    The Armenian population that was in Turkey before the establishment
    of Turkish Republic was forced to emigrate in 1915, and, according
    to some, the conditions of this expulsion are the basis of Armenian
    claims of genocide.

    --Boundary_(ID_UAG736d8sRrHnz6YQOYC7w)- -

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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