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Some Brave Turks Understand The Need To Recognize Armenian Genocide

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  • Some Brave Turks Understand The Need To Recognize Armenian Genocide

    SOME BRAVE TURKS UNDERSTAND THE NEED TO RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    The Fresno Bee
    http://www.fresnobee.com/opinion/story/1080288 .html
    Dec 17 2008
    CA

    An encouraging small sign emerged this week in the decades-long Turkish
    denial of the Armenian genocide: A group of Turkish intellectuals
    published a letter of apology for the World War I-era massacres of
    Armenians in Turkey.

    The apology, posted on the Internet, reads in part: "My conscience
    does not accept that [Turkey] remain[s] insensitive toward and deny
    the Great Catastrophe that the Ottoman Armenians were subjected in
    1915. I reject this injustice, share in the feelings and pain of my
    Armenian brothers, and apologize to them."

    It isn't the official recognition of the genocide that Armenians
    have long sought -- in fact, the apology doesn't use the word
    "genocide." But making the gesture comes at some risk to the signers --
    others have been prosecuted for similar statements, and Hrant Dink,
    an ethnic Armenian journalist, was killed in 2007 for expressing
    the truth.

    And truth it is: Some 1.5 million Armenians were murdered in the
    waning years of World War I and thereafter, as the Ottoman Empire
    collapsed. The killings were planned and orchestrated, the 20th
    century's first genocide. Armenians and others who value truth and
    justice have sought recognition of those crimes for years.

    Turkey has resisted, even though the blame for the genocide doesn't lie
    with today's Turkish government or its people. That denial has come
    with a price; Turkey is still struggling to join the European Union,
    and its intransigence on the genocide question is a major obstacle
    to that effort.

    Some small thaws have recently been seen in relations Turkey's
    relations with neighboring Armenia. The Turkish president joined his
    Armenian counterpart in Armenia's capital in September to watch the
    two nations' soccer teams play for a spot in the World Cup.

    There is still a strong nationalist sentiment in Turkey to deny the
    genocide, and that won't be overcome easily. But the courageous step
    of these Turkish intellectuals -- and some 2,500 other Turkish citizens
    who signed the apology -- is welcome.

    Out of such small steps great strides are sometimes fashioned. In
    time, we hope, a full reconciliation will be possible based on an
    honest acknowledgment of historical facts and a determination to work
    together for a peaceful future.
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