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'Dinner With The President, Back To The Wall': A Conversation With O

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  • 'Dinner With The President, Back To The Wall': A Conversation With O

    DINNER WITH THE PRESIDENT, BACK TO THE WALL': A CONVERSATION WITH ORAL CALISLAR
    By Andy Turpin

    www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/04/16/%e2%80% 98dinner-with-the-president-back-to-the-wall%e2%80 %99-a-conversation-with-oral-calislar/
    April 16, 2009

    ISTANBUL, Turkey (A.W.)-On March 16, Radikal columnist and Turkish
    journalist Oral Calislar spoke to the Weekly about the current state
    of Armenian Genocide politics in Turkey just prior to President Barack
    Obama's recent visit to Turkey and Iraq.

    Speaking about Turkey's current ruling government under Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Calislar stated, "Turkey is now in a changing
    position with the AKP in power but there are many Kemalists still in
    the army. They wanted to prevent the AKP from taking power but they
    couldn't. Now the AKP has brought Turkey closer to Western standards."

    Of his own record as a voice of Turkish dissent, incarcerated by the
    state in the 1970's alongside historian Taner Akcam for his views in
    support of Armenians and Kurds, Calislar said, "For many years I was
    a Maoist. I spent 10 years underground and 7 years in jail. At this
    point, though, I'm closer to the Islamic party on many issues. It
    is a pity, but it is true. On the Armenian issue this government is
    closer to my views."

    He expanded, "This government is not in favor of the apology campaign
    [initiated in December 2008], but they do want to do something on
    the Armenian issue. But if recognition [of the genocide] comes from
    the U.S. this year, it will affect Turkish policies negatively. The
    problem now is relations."

    Asked whether Turkey and Armenia should open their common border for
    commerce and passage, Calislar stated, "I am very supportive of Turkey
    and Armenia opening up the borders. I went to Armenia several times in
    favor of this. I was also one of the first signers of the apology. I
    think 90 percent of the world believes it was genocide, but in Turkey
    there was a total blackout period. Now books are being written here
    on the subject but we need time. The Turkish people need time."

    Commenting on the role Hrant Dink's assassination has played since
    2007, he said, "Millions of people cried for him. He was a very
    effective and important figure and we used to travel around Anatolia
    speaking in many panels together."

    Asked whether he feels safer today from ultra-nationalists in Turkey
    who seek to silence dissenters through violence, he noted, "Well
    tonight, for example, I will eat dinner at a function with President
    Abdullah Gul and I will bring my bodyguard. But in general I do feel
    safer than I have before."

    Much of this feeling of increasing safety is from the ongoing Ergenekon
    trials, in which Turkish security forces have made sweeping dragnet
    arrests of political figures and intellectuals they have alleged
    are members of the "Deep State," seeking a coup of Turkey's present
    government.

    He added, "Many of these people are killers and the majority of the
    bad killers have been put in jail. My name was on their list of people
    to kill, too."

    Asked whether he was currently under any indictments or in any court
    proceedings involving the infamous Article 301 statute that had made
    it a crime to "insult Turkishness," Calislar said, "I was before,
    because of my articles and declarations [regarding the Armenian
    Genocide] but not today. Although now the state wants to open up
    cases against the signers of the apology. But 30,000 people signed
    the apology. What can they do?"

    The number of those in Turkey that recognize the genocide is
    increasing, he said, and "step by step things are changing. Now at
    least 10 percent of Turkish people think it was genocide. That's a
    huge improvement."

    Of his own projects, Calislar has written a new book called Alevi Lands
    that will come out this year in Turkish. "The Alevis [ethnic Kurdish
    minority] are about 10 million in Turkey and have hidden their identity
    for so many years but are now looking to secure minority rights,"
    he explained. "My wife, Ipek Calislar, also has a new book coming
    out called, Mrs. Ataturk, about Ataturk's wife Latife Hanim or Latife
    Hanimefendi, that will be published in English, German, and French."

    "They tried to open a case against her, too," he said of the Article
    301 prosecutors, "because she recounts a story of how Ataturk once
    disguised himself as a woman during the war to escape capture by the
    Allies. But what can you do, this is reality."
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