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Armenians Display Amazing Naivety By Cherishing Hopes On The Armenia

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  • Armenians Display Amazing Naivety By Cherishing Hopes On The Armenia

    ARMENIANS DISPLAY AMAZING NAIVETY BY CHERISHING HOPES ON THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION BY WASHINGTON
    Karine Ter-Sahakyan

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    09.12.2008 GMT+04:00

    Seemingly today's Turkey isn't going to repeat the massacre but there
    exists Azerbaijan which has become the worthy successor of the Ottoman
    Empire in the Armenian issue.

    A group of Turkish intellectuals recently sent a petition letter
    to Armenians, apologizing publicly for the Armenian Genocide in
    the Ottoman Turkey in 1915. The fact itself is already unique
    if taking into account Article 301 of Turkish Penal Code, which
    "promises" to arrest those who will openly discuss the Armenian
    Genocide. Nevertheless, professors BaskÑ~Mn Oran and Ahmet Эnsel,
    journalists Ali BayramoÑ~@lu and Cengiz Aktar personally apologized
    for the "great disaster Ottoman Armenians suffered in 1915".

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ According to Today's Zaman, 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."

    "We are apologizing for not being able to discuss the "Great Calamity"
    that the Armenian nation suffered in 1915, for not talking about
    it openly for such a long time, nearly one hundred years," said
    Turkish journalist Cengiz Aktar. Meanwhile, Turkish nationalists
    and historians demand that the people "supporting Armenian claims of
    Genocide be arrested."

    In unison with this statement Armenian intellectuals sent an open
    letter to Turkish President Abdullah Gul, suggesting once again
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide. The letter particularly states
    that the issue baffled the collective awareness of the Armenian and
    Turkish nations, and caused actions irrespective of various demands
    of everyday policy.

    "We all should accept that the Ottoman Empire is guilty of the massacre
    of the Armenian people, and modern-day Turkey bears "hereditary
    responsibility" for what they consider a "monumental crime against
    humanity". Present-day Turkish diplomacy and propaganda machine
    can't cover this dark page of history. The historic memory of our
    nations is deep and restless. Your generation of Turkish leaders must
    accept the undeniable truth and recognize the fact of the Armenian
    Genocide. Recognition of this indisputable fact is first of all
    essential for the Turkish people. Relieving this burden of history,
    they can turn this dark page and launch a sincere dialogue for true
    reconciliation," Armenian intellectuals said in the letter.

    Such addresses are, of course, necessary but they are made for
    no political or time-serving reason; they are dictated by human
    heart. However, the mournful experience should have long sobered up
    that part of Armenian nation, who still, despite of the Genocide and
    the Nagorno Karabakh war, consider that petitions or pleas are capable
    of solving a problem. The European diplomats, who were witnesses
    of massacre in 1915-1916, acted exactly the same way. They wrote
    to Berlin, London, Washington and St. Petersburg, but it produced
    no results. They proved to be unable to change anything, and there
    miraculously remained only several hundred thousand Armenians in the
    world. And though, most likely, today's Turkey isn't going to repeat
    the massacre, there exists Azerbaijan which has become the worthy
    successor of the Ottoman Empire in the Armenian issue. At least,
    anti-Armenian articles in the Azeri press are much more than they are
    in Turkish papers. And it suggests much. Moreover, Baku has begun
    to speak of Turkey's possible Â"betrayalÂ" against her brother and
    her probable normalization of relations with Armenia, which in Azeri
    politicians' opinion goes against the strategic goals of Official Baku.

    It is evident that present-day Turkey will never voluntarily recognize
    the Armenian Genocide. It is also difficult to say what or who can
    make her do it. Seemingly, the European Union would be unable to do
    it, as to all appearances Erdogan's Government is no more eager to
    enter into the EU. It would be at least naive to stake on the Islamic
    countries too. As for Russia, it would never press on Turkey in such
    a complicated issue, since it is now essential for Russia to move
    Turkey away from the USA and attract her to her side.

    Not at all belittling the work done by the Office of Â"Hay DatÂ"
    towards the international recognition of the Armenian Genocide,
    we nevertheless consider that Armenians are amazingly naive in this
    issue, especially towards the new US Administration. In case Barack
    Obama officially recognizes the Armenian Genocide, he will have to
    deal not with Turkey herself, but with the Jewish and Turkish lobby
    that will immediately make it clear for the President that he hurried
    with his decision. Thus, "Hay Dat" Office Director Kiro Manoyan's
    statement saying that "Recognition by the new U.S. Administration
    seems quite possible now" is a bit premature.

    --Boundary_(ID_mFHXssPraYAEbwpcpHDCWQ) --

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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