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  • U.S. Turks aim to change image

    Washington Times, DC
    Feb 17 2008


    U.S. Turks aim to change image

    By Svitlana Korenovska
    February 17, 2008

    A Washington-based organization is spearheading a drive to correct
    what it sees as common misconceptions about Turkey, hoping to change
    how Americans see the massacre of Armenians in World War I and
    educate them about Turkey's role in rebuilding Iraq.

    The Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA) already has
    organized meetings in 11 cities and will continue to tour the United
    States with meetings and lectures in an additional 19 cities.

    The program, inspired by ATAA President Nurten Ural, aims to teach
    Turkish Americans how to be more active citizens and how to defend
    and promote themselves in American society.

    According to a Turkish Embassy registry, there are about 150,000
    Turks living in the United States. ATAA puts the number at 250,000,
    counting ethnic-Turkish immigrants from countries other than Turkey.

    The assembly, representing more than 60 leading Turkish-American
    organizations across the country, sees its main goals as explaining
    Turkey's account of the Armenian massacres and overcoming common
    prejudices against Turks.

    The effort by the Turkish-American assembly will have to counter a
    strong Armenian lobby in the United States. Several U.S. cities -
    especially in California, Michigan and Massachusetts - have large
    Armenian populations with considerable political influence. One
    estimate put the number of Armenian Americans at 1.5 million.

    The Armenian lobby won a significant victory in October when, despite
    an appeal from President Bush, the House Foreign Affairs Committee
    passed a resolution describing the killing of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks as genocide.

    As many as 1 million Armenians died at the hands of the Ottoman
    Empire during World War I, according to the Armenians, who describe
    the deaths as genocide. Turks acknowledge that large numbers of
    people died, but they object to the use of the word genocide.

    "We are seeking dialogue with Armenian Americans. Rather than
    monologue on the Armenian perspective, we want broad and deep debate
    regarding all the facts and the law," said Gunay Evinch, the
    president-elect of the ATAA.

    "I would like to be clear that in no way does the Turkish-American
    community or Turkey deny the massacres of Armenians," Mr. Evinch
    said.

    "We also call for sincere attention to the 1.1 million Muslims and
    Jews who perished during the Armenian Revolt, 1885-1919, in the same
    area of eastern Ottoman Anatolia and under the same conditions under
    which Armenians died. The truth we seek is the complete truth."

    The organization also wants Americans and their government to better
    understand what Turkey is doing to help the United States in Iraq.

    The ATAA points out that Turkey has made large donations to Iraq for
    humanitarian purposes and construction work, while helping with
    military training and in establishing a dialogue among Iraq groups
    and factions.

    Mr. Evinch said he worries that the image of Turkish Americans will
    be hurt by television shows that depict people of Turkish heritage as
    Islamic terrorists.

    "There wasn't one [event] in American history, let alone European
    history, when we had Turkish people engaged in Islamic terrorism," he
    said.

    http://washingtontimes.com/article/20080 217/FOREIGN/44180980/1003
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