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  • I Apologize For Not Apologizing

    I APOLOGIZE FOR NOT APOLOGIZING

    The Armenian Weekly
    www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/04/20/i-apolog ize-for-not-apologizing/
    April 20, 2009

    The concept Vergangenheitsbewaltigung, which we first heard from
    Theodor Heuss, the first president of Federal Germany following
    World War II, was difficult to translate to other languages. This
    German term was translated as "coming to terms with the past" to some
    languages, and as "coping with the past" or "dealing with the past"
    to others. Those who wanted to avoid the negative tone in these phrases
    used more neutral terms such as "relationship with the past," "politics
    of the past," "processing the past," and "culture of remembrance."

    Mithat Sencer, who has significant contributions in this field,
    makes his choice in favor of "coming to terms with the past,"
    as the title of his book Coming to Terms with the Past (Iletisim,
    2007) shows. The phrase "coming to terms with the past" (gecmisle
    hesaplasma) captures not only the courage and openness to debate the
    past, bring it to light, and accept its "realities," but also other
    deeds (for instance, legal consequences such as trial, compensation,
    and punishment) related to the past. The term that I prefer is
    "making peace with the past" because of its more positive tone.

    The attractiveness of forgetting

    In Ancient Greece, after the Peloponnesian War, remembering the
    unpleasant events of the past was forbidden. In Rome, after Caesar's
    murder, the great orator Cicero said in the Senate, "All memories
    about this event must be consigned to eternal oblivion." One of the
    conditions of the Peace of Westphalia (1648) that ended the bloody
    Thirty Years' War in Europe was about forgetting the crimes committed
    during the war. After the French Revolution, first Napoleon, and
    then Louis XVIII who acceded to the throne after Napoleon's exile,
    outlawed the remembrance of the revolution. More or less until the
    end of World War II, forgetting bad events of the past and forgiving
    them was the rule.

    Cosmopolitan memory

    At the present, however, a radical change is occurring. Although,
    as happened in Spain, Austria, and Mozambique, some preferred to move
    on to more peaceful relations without much talk about the atrocities
    committed by one generation, the general inclination today is to face
    the past. One of the main reasons for this is that the 20th century
    witnessed the most horrible massacres in history, in particular
    the Holocaust.

    But another reason is that globalization has changed and
    improved the ways in which individuals and societies observe
    others. Today-fortunately-wrongdoings can hardly remain secret. With
    globalization, local and national memory is evolving into global
    (cosmopolitan) memory. Cosmopolitan memory, unlike traditional
    (national, communal, local) collective memory, cannot limit itself
    to what happens on a piece of land. Contrary to national and ethnic
    memories, cosmopolitan memory filters everything that happens
    through the totality of all national memories. This is one of the
    most important components of the modernization project. In this
    sense, genocide is one of the most important sources for cosmopolitan
    memory. Because in genocide we can see all the elements of the ideas
    of good and evil. Because genocide is the most significant breaking
    point of civilization.

    'Virtual' memory

    "Collective memory," the main element of facing the past, became a
    major research topic in the social sciences. In that context, the
    relationship between individual and collective memories are put under
    a lens.

    The more we know about the workings of memory, the better we can
    understand that memory is not a mirror to reflect the exact historical
    reality. No memory can quite preserve the past as it is. On the
    contrary, what remains is what the individual's group is able to
    reconstruct according to its context. For instance, "identities,"
    which cause passionate arguments nowadays, cannot be built without
    appeal to "real" and "made up/created" virtual memory.

    Let's take a quick look at some types of memory. Communicational memory
    covers more recent memories. Some have more communicational memory
    than others. After a period of 40 years or so, communicational memory
    turns into something else and "cultural memory" enters the stage. The
    main components of cultural memory are processes such as symbolization,
    mythologizing, and ritualization. Shamans, priests, teachers, writers,
    philosophers, and other community leaders, pass this memory from
    generation to generation using tools like monuments, sculptures,
    history books, place names, memorial days, and anthems. These two
    types of memory heavily interact with one another.

    Why must we remember?

    Why is the past remembered? For two main reasons: First, in order
    to not diverge from the direction of the past, and second, in order
    to diverge from it. In the first case, what is important is to
    "reconstruct" the past according to the needs of the present. The
    glorious aspects of the past are emphasized and the bad aspects are
    swept under the carpet. Those societies, especially, that want to
    make a fresh start use strategies of "suppression" in an attempt
    to "draw a thick line on the past" and set a "zero point" so that
    they can turn their faces to the future. Suppression sometimes
    occurs as "public silence" and sometimes as an "official ban
    on remembering." "Forgetting" and "remembering" (including the
    remembrance of the past in a different way) are combined because,
    as the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche said, "Man . . . cannot learn
    to forget, but hangs on the past: however far or fast he runs, that
    chain runs with him.

    " What must we remember?

    An overwhelming majority of scientists working in this area emphasize
    the need to remember past injustices and victimizations, because
    suppressing and not remembering the past constitutes a second
    victimization of the victims. This is a very new approach in the
    history of humanity, because until today collective/national memory
    was constructed either by taking a heroic past as a reference point, or
    by the actual perpetrator's embracing the role of the victim. Today's
    politics of "facing the past," however, suggests that a nation define
    itself in terms of its wrongdoings.

    Germany, which built its official political identity on rejecting
    and condemning the Nazi regime, is the first example of what we may
    call "negative memory." To be sure, Germany did not do this wholly
    voluntarily. In fact, if there hadn't been a "caught red-handed"
    situation, perhaps they would have kept their old ways. Nevertheless,
    given the fact that hundreds of crimes have been swept under the
    carpet in Turkey since the 1970's, we cannot but admit that the German
    experience deserves praise despite everything.

    Looking through the eyes of the victim

    At this point, I want to draw attention to something, especially the
    attention of those who immediately think of trials and punishments
    (as in the Germany case) when they hear the phrase "coming to terms
    with the past": The point here is not to declare some people to be
    guilty, but to put an end to human suffering and victimization.

    The best way to stop such suffering is to look at the past through the
    eyes of the victim and mourn with them. In this way, the dignity of the
    victims, which has been trampled on by the perpetrators, is restored to
    some extent. And there arises a stronger sense of trust and solidarity
    between the individuals, generations, and societies, who are now ready
    to talk. Establishing social peace and understanding becomes easier
    between people who trust one another. Moreover, learning from the
    experiences of the past helps us in preventing the same evils from
    occurring again.

    Collective guilt/collective apology

    Here, I will turn to the "I apologize to Armenians" campaign,
    which was started by a group of intellectuals in Turkey. I did not
    put my signature on this statement, which was signed by some 30,000
    people. Before explaining why I didn't, I want to summarize my views
    about collective apologies in general. Although many scientists
    claim that apologizing is a rhetoric aimed at fixing one's image,
    I wholeheartedly believe in its virtue. I never hesitate for a second
    to apologize for my mistakes. Collective apology, on the other hand,
    has its merits as well as defects. In order to understand collective
    apology, we must understand collective guilt.

    Collective guilt, which is a concept from social science rather
    than law, can be understood as the society's collaborating with the
    perpetrator of a crime and then taking responsibility for the crime.

    Collaboration may be overt and direct, as well as covert and
    indirect. In a society whose past contains events that can be regarded
    as "crimes against humanity," coming to terms with the past may be
    the way to prevent the crime from turning into a collective burden
    carried from generation to generation. Thus, collective apology
    has a very important function in "coming to terms with the past" or
    "making peace with the past/history."

    Original sin

    Some claim that this new "culture of apology" is closely related to
    the Judeo-Christian concept of "original sin" and the practice of
    "confessing," and argue that it may lead to an escapist attitude that
    may be summarized as "confess and be done with it." Some draw attention
    to such examples as the United States' and NATO's legitimization of
    their intervention in Kosovo through appeal to Auschwitz, and Israel's
    legitimization of its strategies in Palestine through appeal to the
    Holocaust, and point out that memory politics aimed at forming a
    universal morality can be misused.

    Others, on the other hand, do not dwell on such analyses and see an
    apology by the highest representatives of a society for the crimes
    committed by its members in a positive light, because of the collective
    responsibility that lies behind it. However, everyone agrees that
    great care must be taken in order to avoid the trivialization of
    these apologies.

    Dialogical process

    What has to be done is to consider an apology in its context, as
    part of a certain process. What experts describe as a "legitimate,"
    "consummate," or "perfect" apology (or similar terms) must satisfy
    certain conditions. First of all, "apologizing" must be dialogical
    rather than one-sided. An "apology" is meaningful when seen as part
    of a process of correcting an injustice or putting a peaceful end
    to a dispute. Experts call such a process "coming to terms with the
    past" or "making peace with the past." In the terms that I favor,
    this process of making peace with the past has political, scientific,
    cultural, psychological, and legal dimensions and stages. When these
    stages are disregarded, apology does not serve its purpose, and even
    results in unwanted consequences.

    Who is the Subject?

    Here are my views on issuing a collective apology:

    1) A collective apology must be based on the demands of a determinate,
    defined victim group.

    2) A collective apology must be constituted by the apologies of the
    representatives of the groups who played a role in the crimes, not
    by the apologies of those who identify with such groups.

    3) Those who apologize by saying "we" must be saying that they identify
    with that "we" of the past, that they belong to the same politics,
    that they once approved of these crimes, or that they at least could
    not prevent the crimes from being committed.

    4) Those who apologize by saying "we" must not speak for those who
    do not want to apologize.

    5) Those who say "we" must not apply contemporary moral criteria to
    the past, and they must not apologize in the name of the dead who
    committed the crimes and regarded them as moral or legal.

    6) Those who say "we" must not merely express regret and sympathy
    for the victims; they must at the same time express a collective
    responsibility for the continuing effects of the crimes on the victims
    and their descendants.

    7) The apology must be supplied with a firm, clear, and determinate
    commitment. Those who say "we" must be ready to take every
    compensatory, reparatory, and restorative step, including tangible
    and/or symbolic wrongs.

    The apology campaign in Turkey

    In my view, the "I apologize to Armenians" campaign did not satisfy
    the above conditions. The apology did not seem to be part of a proper,
    well-thought out, and comprehensive "facing the past" campaign. If
    there was such a background, I was not aware of it.

    Who?

    Who were those that "apologize[d] on [their] part"? Those, whose
    conscience cannot accept the indifference towards the "Great
    Catastrophe" (Medz Yeghern, in Armenian) that Ottoman Armenians
    suffered in 1915 and its denial, and who reject this injustice?

    Are they the Turks, the intellectuals, the citizens of Turkey? If
    we are apologizing as Turks, why should I apologize in the name of
    an ethnic group that I have never seen myself as belonging to? If we
    are apologizing as intellectuals, wouldn't it be insincere for me to
    apologize, given that I do everything I can to fight the injustices
    that Armenians suffer? If we are apologizing as Turkish citizens,
    would Turkish citizens of Armenian descent apologize too? If yes,
    to whom and for what?

    To Whom?

    It was not clear from the text to whom the apology was extended. Does
    "my Armenian brothers and sisters" mean those who are alive or those
    who have passed away, those who were personally subjected to the
    terrible crimes, or those who were badly affected by them? It was
    hard to tell. Why were we apologizing only for 1915? Did the Great
    Catastrophe happen only in 1915? What about the things that Armenians
    were subjected to between 1915 and 1923, and throughout the republican
    history? Did the aforementioned conscience accept them? Was there no
    need to apologize to Assyrians and Yezidis who were deported along
    with Armenians?

    For what?

    It was not clear for what the apology was offered. I don't think
    that the term Great Catastrophe is the right term for what Armenians
    were subjected to in 1915. Unless this term is meant to replace
    the term "genocide," which causes negative reactions in Turkey for
    understandable reasons-if, that is, this new terminology is only a
    suggestion-then the text should have included other alternatives such
    as massacre, slaughter, elimination, and genocide, or the terminology
    should have been left blank to be filled in by those who signed the
    statement. If, on the other hand, the terminology was the public
    declaration of a decision by the group that started the campaign,
    then it amounted to an imposition and did not fit the dialogical
    nature of peace processes.

    Who is the Perpetrator?

    It was also a shortcoming of the text that it wasn't clear who the
    perpetrator of this Great Catastrophe was: the Ottoman state? The
    Ittihadist (CUP) government? The Ittihadists? Turks, Kurds,
    Circassians, others, all of the above?

    What is our commitment?

    In the text, we only apologized "on [our] part."As a general principle,
    those who deal with human rights violations in the past must have
    the following two aims: first, to make sure that such violations and
    injustices do not happen again in the future; and second, to repair the
    damages that these injustices have caused. There was no such promise
    in the text. For instance, why weren't we demanding reparations for
    the material and moral damages that our Armenian brothers and sisters
    suffered after 1915? Why weren't we asking the people who appropriated
    Armenian properties and accounts, and destroyed their cultural
    inheritance, to compensate for these material and moral damages?

    Conclusion

    Wouldn't I have to apologize also to Kurds, inhabitants of Dersim,
    Alawites, Assyrians, Yezidis, Gypsies, communists, Islamists, and
    many other groups who have suffered in front of my eyes? Where does
    it end? Might there be groups that I was forgetting about? Would
    it be best to play it safe and say mea culpa!, in accordance with
    the Judeo-Christian tradition that considers even being human as
    sinful? In the end, I thought it would be insincere to sign such a
    document that I disagreed with in many respects.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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