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Balakian: Remembering Hrant Dink

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  • Balakian: Remembering Hrant Dink

    Balakian: Remembering Hrant Dink

    http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/08/08/ba lakian-remembering-hrant-dink/?ec3_listing=posts
    B y Contributor - on August 8, 2009

    The article below is based on a speech delivered by Prof. Peter
    Balakian during a panel discussion on the legacy of Hrant Dink held at
    MIT on Feb. 1, 2009.

    George Santayana, the philosopher who taught at Harvard for decades,
    wrote, `Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat
    it.' It seems like an axiomatic enough assertion, yet what happens to
    those who don't know history, who have been locked out of history, for
    whom the past is a manipulated narrative constructed by the state? The
    idea of repeating a past you don't know is fraught with another kind
    of tragedy.

    It's a kind of blind legacy that one might see in various cultures,
    but one that we see in Turkish society that hasn't been allowed to
    know its history, in particular its dark histories of which the
    Armenian Genocide of 1915 is one. Blind history will beget a blind and
    violent present.

    Hrant Dink's assassination in broad daylight, carried out by Turkish
    nationalists, is one manifestation of blind history. Dink was a man of
    unusual courage, and dedication to the complex process of creating a
    ground upon which Turks could come together with Armenians in order to
    know the true history of 1915. Hrant forged complicated roads and
    narrow alleyways to make this journey; he spoke openly in a country
    where to speak openly is done at great risk and to speak openly as any
    minority, an Armenian, a Kurd, is done at even greater risk.

    Hrant was an Armenian citizen of Istanbul who was writing and speaking
    about the Armenian Genocide openly in Turkey. He was inhabiting a
    delicate civic space in Turkey's complex society. In one of his final
    essays, he told us he felt like a pigeon - at once vulnerable, yet
    free, he so hoped. But he was gunned down, apparently by the Deep
    State, by forces of repression and violence against free expression
    and thought, having been demonized and made a pariah by Article 301 of
    Turkey's penal code.
    ***
    Stephan Deadalus, in Joyce's `Ulysseus,' says: `History is a nightmare
    from which I am trying to awake.' It's a phrase that hits any Armenian
    in vulnerable places. It's a notion that is embedded in the traumatic
    life of the legacy of genocide. For Armenians, whether of the diaspora
    or the Republic, that legacy remains poisoned by ongoing Turkish state
    denial. The assassination of Hrant Dink is in some way emblematic of
    that nightmare.

    Hrant's murder resonated with Armenians for many reasons, but not
    least because it evoked the murder of thousands of intellectuals and
    cultural leaders in 1915. There was a genocidal taint to his
    assassination in broad daylight in downtown Istanbul. It reenacted our
    history.

    The killing of Armenian intellectuals and cultural leaders goes back
    well into the 19th century and before, but it was this killing of
    intellectuals on April 24 that marked the beginning of the genocidal
    process in 1915.

    In the end, thousands of Armenian cultural leaders and intellectuals
    were killed by Turkey's Ittihad government. In the end, more than
    5,000 churches, monasteries, and schools were destroyed. In the end, a
    civilization, not only its people but its many layers of history and
    culture, which had evolved for 3,000 years, was gone. In the wake of
    this, it is not surprising that Raphael Lemkin, the Polish-Jewish
    legal scholar who invented the concept of genocide as a crime in
    international law, relied quite heavily on the Armenian case in
    developing the concept of genocide. It was Lemkin who first used the
    term `genocide' in relation to the Armenians on U.S. national TV, on
    Feb. 13, 1949.

    So affected by the Armenian Genocide was Lemkin, that he noted as the
    UN Genocide Convention was being ratified: `...A bold plan was
    formulated in my mind. This consisted [of] obtaining the ratification
    by Turkey [of the proposed UN Convention on Genocide] among the first
    twenty founding nations. This would be an atonement for genocide of
    the Armenians.'
    ***
    Hrant Dink's death opened up positive forces in the democracy movement
    in Turkey; in this sense he was a martyr for democracy. His death
    forced an inquiry into intellectual freedom in Turkey and into the
    Armenian past.

    For me, Hrant's legacy is emblematic of a new climate of
    Armenian-Turkish intellectual dialogue and colleagueship and
    friendship. Where once there was a black hole of abstraction about
    Turkey for many of us, now there is a more visible and complex
    world. In the past decade, Turkish intellectuals and others have made
    great inroads that are now visible to us and have given us a deeper
    understanding of Turkey as a place of many layers and nuances, a place
    not simply defined by ultra-nationalism and Deep State forces.
    Armenians need to embrace the new sense of complexity they have given
    us - of our shared history, of our shared humanity, of the
    understanding that there is no future in denying the past. Our Turkish
    friends are vital to our sense of a future.

    I feel it is also important for Turks and Armenians to de-ethnicize
    the Armenian past. The idea that this is a debate between two cultures
    is wrong and ahistorical. It is not `Armenians say' and then `Turks
    say.' The genocide is a fact of modern history, and here, there is an
    important place for the international scholarly community. Rather than
    defending or rejecting a particular national narrative, scholars are
    able to see the anatomy of such events in a comparative context across
    a global expanse. They are able to show us that the Armenian Genocide
    is part of a human history that involves many perpetrators and many
    victims. Turkey is not alone in its crimes against humanity; most
    countries have built themselves from violence done to other ethnic
    groups and peoples.

    It seems as if there has never been a more open moment for bonds to be
    forged between Turks and Armenians on the issue that haunts both their
    cultures. Hrant Dink was concerned that pressure on Turkey from the
    outside world would backfire or endanger the lives of people inside
    Turkey, and his perspective I respect deeply; he paid the highest
    price for it. And yet, I think he was wrong here. While his fears were
    a genuine response to the mechanisms of terror and repression inside
    Turkey, the fact remains that the process of education about the
    history of the Armenian Genocide is an inexorable force, and a litmus
    test of intellectual freedom and democracy for Turkey. The process of
    education can't be stopped, or controlled, by any entity. It is part
    of world knowledge. We cannot allow the accepted history of the
    Armenian Genocide to be falsified by the blackmail and threats of the
    Turkish state. And the Turkish state will have to come to accept that
    the moral reality of the Armenian Genocide is not controversia
    l anywhere else in the world but in Turkey. And, even there, the taboo
    is crumbling.

    In this new era, Armenians I hope will find ways of joining hands with
    their new Turkish colleagues and friends to work for change - in
    whatever ways - in creative ways and pragmatic ways. Not rigid,
    ideological, or romantic. There are new openings in this landscape and
    there are new pitfalls and fears. There is anger, frustration, and
    paranoia among Armenians after decades of Turkish state violence,
    denial, and continued racism. There are threats of violence against
    progressive Turks from the new wave of Turkish ultra-nationalists; and
    there are many people inside Turkey asking for broad, democratic
    change, so that religious and ethnic minorities can achieve equality,
    and intellectual freedom and free speech can be realized. Two years
    ago, more than a hundred students at Bogazici University in Istanbul
    staged a protest with the slogan `against the darkness,' and they
    chanted Hrant Dink's name and their solidarity with Armenians. These
    are the forces that Armenians want to join with and work with in
    pursuit of an open and free society in Turkey.

    Peter Balakian is Donald M. and Constance H. Rebar Professor of the
    Humanities at Colgate University and the author of many books
    including The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America's
    Response, winner of the 2005 Raphael Lemkin Prize.
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