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Binghamton University Professor Resigns Over Dispute On Armenian Gen

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  • Binghamton University Professor Resigns Over Dispute On Armenian Gen

    BINGHAMTON UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR RESIGNS OVER DISPUTE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    07.07.2008 17:49 GMT+04:00

    The issue that has roiled U.S.-Turkish relations in recent months "how
    to characterize the mass killings of Armenians in 1915" has set off
    a dispute over politics and academic freedom at an institute housed
    at Georgetown University. Several board members of the Institute of
    Turkish Studies have resigned this summer, protesting the ouster of a
    board chairman who wrote that scholars should research, rather than
    avoid, what he characterized as Armenian Genocide, The Washington
    Post reports.

    "Within weeks of writing about the matter in late 2006, Binghamton
    University professor Donald Quataert resigned from the board of
    Governors, saying the Turkish ambassador to the United States told
    him he had angered some political leaders in Ankara and that they
    had threatened to revoke the institute's funding.

    After a prominent association of Middle Eastern scholars learned
    about it, they wrote a letter in May to the institute, the Turkish
    prime minister and other leaders asking that Quataert be reinstated
    and money for the institute be put in an irrevocable trust to avoid
    political influence.

    The ambassador of the Republic of Turkey, H.E. Nabi Sensoy, denied that
    he had any role in Quataert's resignation. In a written statement,
    he said that claims that he urged Quataert to leave are unfounded
    and misleading.

    The dispute shows the tensions between money and scholarship, and
    the impact language can have on historical understanding.

    Hundreds of thousands of Armenians were killed when the Ottoman Empire
    collapsed after World War I. Armenians and Turks bitterly disagree
    over whether it was a campaign of genocide, or a civil war in which
    many Turks were also killed," the edition says.

    The Turkish studies institute, founded in 1983, is independent from
    Georgetown University, but Executive Director David Cuthell teaches
    a course there in exchange for space on campus.

    Julie Green Bataille, a university spokeswoman, wrote in an e-mail,
    "We will review this matter consistent with the importance of academic
    freedom and the fact that the institute is independently funded and
    governed." The institute's funding, a $3 million grant, is entirely
    from Turkey.
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