THE STALINIST LOGIC OF THE ACTIVISTS OF THE ARMENIAN PAN-NATIONAL MOVEMENT
Armen Tsatouryan
Hayots Ashkhar Daily
Published on June 03, 2008
Armenia
When, at the most heated moment of the electoral campaign,
L. Ter-Petrosyan put into circulation the expression "Mongol-Tatars"
with the purpose of compromising his political rivals, it seemed to
some people that he was still under the impression of the "Crusaders
of Kilikia", that's why, recalling the plunders of the Mongol-Tatars
(XIII-XIV centuries), he is now making lame attempts of associating
them with the present-day reality.
However, when L. Ter-Petrosyan's co-thinkers use concepts
characteristic of the medieval age, one begins to remember when and
by whom the term "Mongol-Tatar Fascism" was first used on the pages
of "Hayk" newspaper, the official organ of the Armenian Pan-National
Movement.
The thing is that the propaganda technology laying the foundations
of the "science of hatred" with the help of drawing parallels between
the Mongol-Tatars and the Fascists has a concrete author.
And that person is Joseph Visaryonovich Stalin, the "Great Father" of
the peoples. In a speech delivered on the radio at the very beginning
of the Great Patriotic War, he advanced the idea that the fascists'
attack on the Soviet Union was fraught with the prospect of reinstating
the century-old Mongol-Tatar yoke in the country.
The propaganda method of attributing the archetype of the "Golden
Horde" (well-known to almost all the peoples of the Soviet Union,
especially the Russians) to the German Fascists worked perfectly well,
serving as a basis for numerous literary works, including songs,
in which the idea of leading a deadly struggle against the "horde -
the evil fascist force", was represented as a sacred task.
By trying to develop and "enrich" the archetype of the "Mongol-Tatar"
state, the proponents of L. Ter-Petrosyan are actually putting
J. Stalin's well-known ideas into circulation.
A question arises as to what relationship all this bears to the
present-day reality and who currently poses a threat to the physical
existence of our people to make us ignore the concepts "space" and
"time" and artificially link together the characteristic features of
the XIII-XIV century Mongol-Tatar khans and the XX century fascists
and shift them to the political arena of the Third Armenian Republic
with the purpose of instilling unlimited hatred in our people.
And the "criminal-police" system which has inherited the structure
of the Mongol-Tatar khanate and the ideology of fascism turns out to
be the 'hated organization' in our reality.
However, our country really has a system engaged in intimidating
the citizens and creating an atmosphere of fear, how come that the
correspondent of "Hayk" dares to call the things by their real
names? If we really lived in the era of "Mongol Tatar Fascism",
the authors of such characterizations would be forced to sit on
stakes or, at best, be moved to "gas chambers" by the use of fascist
methods. Whereas, the theorists of "Mongol-Tatar" fascism are currently
free and are able to preach not only democracy but also the Stalinism.
The main peculiarity of Stalinism is the instilment of universal
hatred not only in the external but also the "internal enemy". The
unlimited hatred which the proponents of L. Ter-Petrosyan are currently
trying to instill in society is like an ordinary boomerang. Therefore,
the expression "Mongol-Tatar fascism" produces the boomerang effect,
returning to them in the form of the "science of hatred" characteristic
to the Stalinist period. And this is no longer a "science fiction"
dividing the two phenomena (the Mongol-Tatar yoke and fascism)
from each other by a long interval of 7 centuries; it is rather the
present-day perception of the in-depth unity of the Soviet Stalinism
and the German Fascism, ideologies that existed in the middle of the
XX century.
Thus, the propaganda of universal hatred is gradually transforming
the pro-Ter-Petrosyan democrats into pro-Stalin activists, bringing
them closer to fascism.
From: Baghdasarian
Armen Tsatouryan
Hayots Ashkhar Daily
Published on June 03, 2008
Armenia
When, at the most heated moment of the electoral campaign,
L. Ter-Petrosyan put into circulation the expression "Mongol-Tatars"
with the purpose of compromising his political rivals, it seemed to
some people that he was still under the impression of the "Crusaders
of Kilikia", that's why, recalling the plunders of the Mongol-Tatars
(XIII-XIV centuries), he is now making lame attempts of associating
them with the present-day reality.
However, when L. Ter-Petrosyan's co-thinkers use concepts
characteristic of the medieval age, one begins to remember when and
by whom the term "Mongol-Tatar Fascism" was first used on the pages
of "Hayk" newspaper, the official organ of the Armenian Pan-National
Movement.
The thing is that the propaganda technology laying the foundations
of the "science of hatred" with the help of drawing parallels between
the Mongol-Tatars and the Fascists has a concrete author.
And that person is Joseph Visaryonovich Stalin, the "Great Father" of
the peoples. In a speech delivered on the radio at the very beginning
of the Great Patriotic War, he advanced the idea that the fascists'
attack on the Soviet Union was fraught with the prospect of reinstating
the century-old Mongol-Tatar yoke in the country.
The propaganda method of attributing the archetype of the "Golden
Horde" (well-known to almost all the peoples of the Soviet Union,
especially the Russians) to the German Fascists worked perfectly well,
serving as a basis for numerous literary works, including songs,
in which the idea of leading a deadly struggle against the "horde -
the evil fascist force", was represented as a sacred task.
By trying to develop and "enrich" the archetype of the "Mongol-Tatar"
state, the proponents of L. Ter-Petrosyan are actually putting
J. Stalin's well-known ideas into circulation.
A question arises as to what relationship all this bears to the
present-day reality and who currently poses a threat to the physical
existence of our people to make us ignore the concepts "space" and
"time" and artificially link together the characteristic features of
the XIII-XIV century Mongol-Tatar khans and the XX century fascists
and shift them to the political arena of the Third Armenian Republic
with the purpose of instilling unlimited hatred in our people.
And the "criminal-police" system which has inherited the structure
of the Mongol-Tatar khanate and the ideology of fascism turns out to
be the 'hated organization' in our reality.
However, our country really has a system engaged in intimidating
the citizens and creating an atmosphere of fear, how come that the
correspondent of "Hayk" dares to call the things by their real
names? If we really lived in the era of "Mongol Tatar Fascism",
the authors of such characterizations would be forced to sit on
stakes or, at best, be moved to "gas chambers" by the use of fascist
methods. Whereas, the theorists of "Mongol-Tatar" fascism are currently
free and are able to preach not only democracy but also the Stalinism.
The main peculiarity of Stalinism is the instilment of universal
hatred not only in the external but also the "internal enemy". The
unlimited hatred which the proponents of L. Ter-Petrosyan are currently
trying to instill in society is like an ordinary boomerang. Therefore,
the expression "Mongol-Tatar fascism" produces the boomerang effect,
returning to them in the form of the "science of hatred" characteristic
to the Stalinist period. And this is no longer a "science fiction"
dividing the two phenomena (the Mongol-Tatar yoke and fascism)
from each other by a long interval of 7 centuries; it is rather the
present-day perception of the in-depth unity of the Soviet Stalinism
and the German Fascism, ideologies that existed in the middle of the
XX century.
Thus, the propaganda of universal hatred is gradually transforming
the pro-Ter-Petrosyan democrats into pro-Stalin activists, bringing
them closer to fascism.
From: Baghdasarian