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The Armenian Question: A Snapshot

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  • The Armenian Question: A Snapshot

    THE ARMENIAN QUESTION: A SNAPSHOT

    Huffington Post
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/betwa-sharma/th e-armenian-question-a-s_b_185846.html
    April 13 2009

    Betwa SharmaSharma is a freelance journalist who writes on human
    rights and international relations

    Taner Akcam is one of the first scholars of Turkish origin to speak
    and write about the killing of one and half million Armenians by the
    Ottoman government during the First World War. Many academics and
    historians have been charged under Law 301 - which makes insulting
    "Turkishness" a crime.

    Last year, the Turkish government, driven by its desire of European
    Union membership, amended the law and eased restrictions on free
    speech. Recently, at an event organized by Columbia University's
    Armenian Students Association, Akcam said, "After decades of
    suppression the lid has blown off the Armenian genocide in Turkish
    society."

    Akcam told the emotionally charged audience that the record should
    be set straight: "You cannot solve ethnic problems without facing
    history." Turkish denial of the events is attributed to years of
    government propaganda. The subject, though less taboo today, remains
    shrouded. On a visit to Turkey, President Barack Obama did not use
    the word 'genocide.' Clearly, the matter is far from resolved.

    The moderator at the Armenian Students Association meeting, Andrea
    Kannapell, pointed out that the panel discussion was for people who
    believed that genocide had taken place. It was not to debate its
    occurrence. A student from Columbia Law School, who asked not to
    be named, said that for "academic integrity, the panel should have
    included a historian with an opposite view."

    After the event, the president of the Turkish Initiative at the
    School of International and Public Affairs, Tolga Turan said that
    "They said that this would be an academic discussion. But they
    presented only one view." He was shocked at being asked to step
    away from the microphone by a security guard. According to Turan,
    "Nobody denies that Armenians were killed but there is no archival
    material that proves a centrally planned massacre."

    An Armenian student from Columbia's engineering department said,
    "Turks use these different ideas to justify what happened," he
    said. "It did happen. You can't deny it." The student did not want
    to be named because he has received death threats in the past.

    The word 'genocide' sticks out like a sore thumb. The conversation
    can't seem to move past this label. Turkey contends that the deaths
    resulted from civil war and that their numbers were exaggerated.

    A common sentiment on both sides was to open up the Armenian archives
    in Boston and Paris. "Even if we don't use the word 'genocide' you
    can't justify killing of a million people," said the Armenian student.

    The audience was also addressed by Mark Geragos, a trial lawyer who
    led Federal Class Action law suits against New York Life Insurance and
    AXA Corporation for insurance policies issued during the time of the
    killings in Turkey. The cases were settled for 37.5 million dollars.

    Geragos, an Armenian himself, said that his legal battles had shifted
    from recognition to reparation. "Restitution is a fundamental right
    of a victim." This means possibly getting back the Armenian land and
    money, which was confiscated by Turkish officials.

    Already, Geragos said that he was collecting land deeds. This could
    result in future action. Individual deeds could not be used to claim
    land because the case has to be presented in Turkey, which was a
    problem. The lawyer caused quite a stir to the Turkish part of the
    audience when he said that Mount Ararat, where Noah's Ark lodged
    after the great deluge, should be given back to the Armenians.

    The highest peak in Turkey, holy for the Armenians, lies to the
    extreme northeast and 20 miles south of Armenia. Someone in the
    audience responded, "How fair is it to displace the people who live
    there now?" He added, "Half of this country should be given back to
    the native Americans." Akcam warned that it was unwise to mess with
    the territories and boundaries in the Middle East. "Ararat should be
    open to everyone," he said.

    The scholar also noted that it was important to support Turkey's
    bid for a position in the European Union and encourage diplomatic
    relations with Armenia. "Language" was the key to moving the Armenian
    question forward in Turkish society. "Change our language," he
    said. "The language of conflict is different from the language of
    reconciliation." In September, President Abdullah Gul became the
    first Turkish leader to visit Armenia.

    On April 24, the Armenian Diaspora remembers the night in 1915 when
    around 250 Armenian leaders and intellectuals were rounded up in
    Constantinople. They were taken to a prison in Anatolia and executed.

    Obama called the killings that lasted from 1915 to 1918 genocide
    during his presidential campaign. Turkey is militarily strategic to
    Washington. Will he call it genocide on April 24?

    A journalist in New York, Kahraman Haliscelik, is from Sanliurfa in
    South East Turkey.

    "Sanli" means great. The city was given the title "great" for the
    heroic fight it put up against French occupation. "I did not grow up
    with propaganda. I grew up with stories," he said. These were stories
    that his great grandmother told him of how the Armenians sided with
    the colonizers and killed the Turks.

    Haliscelik compares the march of the Armenians to the desert in
    Syria to the internment of Japanese in the US during the Second
    World War. The memories of the past have been passed on through the
    generations on both sides of the conflict. The talk of peace and
    reconciliation is difficult to achieve. "In our village it was the
    Armenians who killed their Turkish neighbors," he said. "They would
    not be welcome back in the village."

    Photo: Genocide memorial at the Armenian Church is Khartoum.
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