Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Reconciliation Through The Arts: Armenia and Turkey

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Reconciliation Through The Arts: Armenia and Turkey

    Reconciliation Through The Arts: Armenia and Turkey

    NewsBlaze.com
    Published: December 18, 2009

    By Barney Yates

    Following is a conversation between Barney Yates, an American
    journalist, and Nora Armani, an international actor, playwright and
    festival producer, about prospects for healing old wounds between
    Armenia and Turkey through the "soft diplomacy" of cultural exchange.

    Q: There are ongoing negotiations toward protocols for opening the
    borders between Turkey and Armenia for the first time in a long
    time. Why has this peaceful development been so difficult to achieve?

    A: Well, there are many unresolved issues between Armenians and Turks,
    the most important of which is the recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide. Opening borders is a wonderful thing, as it is important for
    all nations under the sun to live peacefully with their neighbors and
    have normal exchanges on the economic, social and human
    levels. However, opening up the borders under the conditions Turkey is
    pushing for would not create the sort of peaceful atmosphere that is
    so desirable between neighboring countries. It would result in
    resentment and further mistrust.

    By pressuring Armenia to accept the protocols with conditions
    attached, and by sliding over the important issue of the recognition
    of the Armenian Genocide, Turkey is not engaging in a peaceful act but
    an act of denial. It is much like denying the Jewish Holocaust during
    World War II.

    Let's ask ourselves why these centuries-old neighbors have not been on
    'talking terms.' If the issue that caused the conflict is not resolved
    at its root, and amends are not made by Turkey as the perpetrator to
    its victims of the Genocide and their offspring, you can open as many
    borders as you want, but that will not create peaceful coexistence.

    This is why the Armenian majority in the Diaspora (yes, there are more
    Armenians in the Diaspora than in Armenia today) is totally opposed to
    the protocols. They are not opposed to dialog with Turkey as such, but
    they are opposed to the way Turkey is approachi e of talks. This is
    not an egalitarian relationship and the gain is totally for Turkey
    here as Armenia presents a market for Turkish goods, excellent
    craftsmen/women for Turkish factories, a source of skilled artisans
    (as it has been in the past, throughout centuries) and more.

    There may be individual gains for some Armenians engaged in this
    commerce, but as a nation the protocols do not do anything but harm to
    the Armenian nation and the offspring of the survivors of the Genocide
    as well as to the memory of its victims.

    Armenians cannot be blamed for being suspicious about Turkey's
    dealings coming from their experience of centuries of duplicity and
    intrigue in the way Turkey has treated Armenians.

    Q: Do you think that the barriers to Turkish acceptance of the
    Armenian genocide are more based on ethnic prejudice, or are they more
    based on financial concerns like reparations, payment of old insurance
    claims etc?

    A: I sincerely believe that the issue here is much more based on
    economic concerns and the "can of worms" Turkey is afraid to open by
    accepting responsibility for the deeds of its ancestral Government for
    the harm done to Armenians. .

    It is true that Armenians and Turks are racially different, but
    through habits, traditions and even cuisine, their daily lives have
    much in common. I am not talking about Armenians living in Switzerland
    compared to Anatolian Turks, but about Armenians living across the
    border from Turkey and Turks living on ancestral Armenian lands that
    are currently occupied by Turks. These peoples are more similar than
    they think. Like Arabs and Jews in Israel and Palestine, Armenians and
    Turks have shared the same part of the world, the same mountains, they
    have trod the same earth and have drunk from the same water for
    centuries. The conflict here is not on the personal human level I
    think, but on the larger political level.

    Q: I know the memory of the 1915 massacre is most alive in Armenia. Is
    there a corresponding memory in Turkey, is there a myth?

    A: Modern Turkey is the creatio rk in 1923. Ataturk was one of the
    Young Turks at the end of the First World War, when Ottoman Turkey was
    defeated and breaking up into its respective countries, much like it
    happened later in the century with the Soviet Union. Ataturk came to
    power and revolutionized Turkey by trying to modernize it and even
    went to the extent of changing the Turkish alphabet (Ottoman Turkish
    used Arabic script) to the Latin alphabet. This is really a huge
    change. His maxim was (and still is in Turkey today), "How lucky is
    the one who says I am Turkish." It is this nationalistic and elitist
    attitude that gave the defeated Turks a new identity to forge ahead
    with. Of course accepting the responsibility of the Armenian Genocide
    and the ethnic cleansing done to the Armenians (who were Ottoman
    citizens) would have marred this idealistic take on Turkish identity.

    In the more recent years, as a form of self-defense, against the
    increasing acceptance and recognition of the Armenian Genocide by many
    governments of the world, Turkey began to react by spreading the rumor
    that Turks too were killed during the 1914-1918 war and that it was
    the Armenians who massacred the Turks and not the other way
    round.. But how could this happen when it was a known fact that
    Armenians living under Ottoman rule were not allowed to bear arms, and
    at the onset of WW I, they were stripped of all ammunition and weapons
    and were left completely helpless and easy to prey on?

    Q: Is the animosity between Turks and Armenians ancient or modern?

    A: The animosity itself goes very far back with constant marauding
    crowds and raids on Armenian villages and farmers by Turkish and
    Kurdish tribes. However, it was not on the organized Government level
    until later in the 19th century going back to Sultan Hamid II, the Red
    Sultan, who in the late 1880's and 90's started sanctioning the
    freedoms that Armenians had as citizens of the Ottoman Empire.
    Armenians up to that point were highly respected members of the
    community and had contributed in many positive ways to the deve d even
    in Turkish encyclopedias that Armenians lay the foundations of Modern
    Turkish theatre, that Armenian actresses were the first to start an
    acting tradition for women (as Moslem women were not allowed on
    stage), in other areas, the famous Architects Balian built of many of
    the beautiful mosques and palaces of the Ottoman Sultans. Another name
    that comes to mind is Sinan, whose Armenian identity is documented
    extensively, in the music department we have Dikran Tchouhadjian whose
    operettas were huge hits and are in the cultural tradition of Turkey
    even to this day. The most important interpreters and high officials
    in the Porte were Armenians for long centuries.

    The beginning of the 20th century, and the deterioration of the
    Ottoman Empire and the loss of its power in the world through ethnic
    resurgences (Balkans, Egypt, etc.) and the separation of its many
    Vilayets (the Governorates), coincided with its changing politics
    towards the Armenians who were also at that time concerned about
    gaining independence as a nation and liberating the occupied Armenian
    lands in Eastern Turkey.

    My paternal great grandmother, feeling unsafe for her four daughters
    and herself following the death of my great grandfather (from an
    infection to his tailbone as a result of traveling on horseback for
    days on end from Egypt to Kaiseri - Ceasaria - in central Turkey) sold
    everything and following her husband's footsteps moved to Egypt. She
    was spared for the 1915 Genocide. However, my maternal grandmother,
    who was the daughter of a priest in Kaiseri, was deported together
    with her three sisters and mother, after my great grandfather was
    hanged.

    Up until the point when Sultan Abdul Hamid II (the Red Sultan) started
    sanctioning their freedoms, Armenians were highly respected Ottoman
    subjects. They were the best craftsmen, architects, intellectuals,
    merchants, politicians and interpreters for the Sultans and the
    Sublime Porte (The Ottoman Empire).

    The inherent conflict was always present, resulting from jealousies,
    economic and social inequalities, marauding Turkish and Kurdish tribes
    in the Eastern Provinces where the life of the local Armenian
    population had become more and more unbearable over the centuries.

    Conflict theories of sociology postulate that any society has an
    inherent degree of conflict even in the most peaceful of times. In
    fact, such conflict is even a healthy ingredient for the well being
    and functi my Masters Degree thesis, using the conflict model of
    social theory that postulates that conflict is an inherent and even a
    necessary ingredient to any healthy social structure, I argue that
    there are certain conditions under which otherwise harmless conflict
    levels can escalate to potentially violent levels giving way to
    Genocide, civil war and other extreme forms of expression of
    conflict. Some of these conditions are economic inequality, some are
    political instability, and in the case of Ottoman Turkey and the
    Armenian Genocide, there is a certain degree of both.

    In my thesis I draw the parallels between the Armenian Genocide and
    the Jewish Holocaust in the light of the conflict theories. In both
    cases the minority that was victimized was one of high visibility,
    success, a certain economic stability, even in the villages as in the
    case of the Armenians. This type of situation triggers jealousy, envy
    and frustration, which when released turns into anger and
    aggression. Add to that the wonderful opportunity of the backdrop of a
    war, and you have the perfect ingredients for conflict to escalate and
    turn into Genocidal violence, specially that in these situations it is
    often 'legitimized' through orders by the the powers that be.

    Suffice it for the threatened ruling elite to 'give the order'
    legitimizing the act, that you have the spark needed to start a major
    Genocide. The examples are abundant in the ethnic cleansing that
    characterized Eastern Europe in more recent decades. The parallels
    here can be stretched further to cover the situation in Rwanda as
    well, where one group is victimized by the other and such
    victimization was somehow legitimized through orders coming from
    'above.'

    We have to remember that the Ottoman Empire was already deteriorating
    during the Hamidian Massacres, during the 1906 Adana Massacres and
    during the 1915-18 mass Genocide, and the only way the Turks could see
    a redemption for themselves and a preservation of their power, was the
    substitution of their multi-ethnic and culturally dive ic and cultural
    unity, therefore their Par-Turanistic Ideals of a Turkic Empire
    Extending from The Bosphorus all the way to the Central Asian Turkic
    Republics was nourished.

    Of course, there were many obstacles to such a plan, one such 'minor'
    obstacle being the Armenians who were in the middle of it, and who in
    turn had begin to entertain ideas of independence. This 'minor'
    obstacle could be handled through Genocide. The bigger obstacle was
    Communism and that is what really decapitated the Turks and put an end
    to their Imperial dreams.

    Armenian ideals of independence did not exit during the Hamidian
    era. They were a much more rencent culminating of reactions to the
    unbearable conditions of the Armenian peasants in the Eastern Turkish
    provinces and an inevitable necessity to securing better living
    conditions. But Turkey had a war to fight, a deteriorating Empire to
    patch up, and a new Pan Turanistic dream to chase. In all respects
    Armenians were in the way.

    And since fear breeds agression as is widely postulated in the body of
    sociopsychological theories, the fear of defeat and loss caused the
    escalation of the inherent levels of conflict attainging the levels of
    violence characteristic of any Genocide.

    If we were to ask whether this could have been foreseen and prevented,
    let me respond by ask whether the Jewish Holocause could have been
    foreseen and prevented. You know that Adolf Hitler, on the eve of his
    Invasion of Poland said, "I have given orders to my Death Units to
    exterminate, without mercy or pity men, women and children belonging
    to the Polish speaking race. It only in this manner that we can
    acquire the vital territory which we need. After all who remembers
    today the extermination of the Armenians?"

    It is only by remembering and doing something about it that Genocides
    and Holocausts can actually be prevented. Not by 'eradicating the
    causes,' and certainly not by denying them or covering up for the
    denialists for whatever reason and regardless for what gain.

    Q: How can cultural exchange between T ated?

    A: Over the last few years, more than ever before, it has become
    common to see Armenian films, film makers and prizes at Turkish film
    festivals, and vice versa. The same is also happening in the fields of
    music and theatre. This is a natural process because, as I explained
    above, there is more in common between these peoples than not. One of
    the most well known figures of Turkish Operettas (a style) is Dikran
    Tchouhadjian Armenian composer 1860 c. whose first opera, Arsace II
    had a World Premiere 130 years after its composition, at the San
    Francisco Opera in 2001, to a great extent thanks to Gerald Papasian's
    efforts. Tchouhadjian's other operetta, "Leblebidji Hor Hor" (Hor Hor
    the chick pea vendor) was so successful that it has infiltrated the
    Turkish repertory and even today, you find older actors or artists who
    remember some of these tunes. Currently, Gerald is working on a French
    version of this operetta and collaboration with Turkish theatres
    around this project is not impossible.

    I would love to take the theater piece I developed with Gerald
    Papasian, "Sojourn at Ararat," or my one-woman show, "On the Couch
    with Nora Armani," to Turkey in the near future. An Armenian colleague
    from France has already taken his one-man show to Diarbekir
    (predominantly Kurdish populated town in Turkey). Now this is possible
    even more than before.

    I think the two countries should make an effort to facilitate this
    type of exchange before even thinking of the border issues or the
    protocols. It is only through mutual acquaintance that conflict issues
    may be resolved.

    Q: Is there any discussion of cultural exchange in the negotiations
    leading to the protocols for opening the borders?

    A: Personally for me, I find it hard to imagine negotiations, any
    negotiations, between nations without accompanying cultural
    exchange. The Soviets were really good at this and they infiltrated
    into the Western World (almost) in a way through Russian (and to a
    lesser extent Soviet) art. The US does the same thing through its
    cinema. Why do you think the whole world is dying to come to the US
    and believes in the American dream? What they see in the movies makes
    them think that this is the land of milk and honey. Of course, you and
    I know the difference between normal American life and a Hollywood
    film set!!!

    Q: Will there be a language barrier to cultural exchange between
    Turkey and Armenia?

    A: I don't know about Turks, but myself included, most Diaspora
    Armenians specially those who come from Turkey (or whose ancestors do)
    speak Turkish already. Maybe it's a bit antiquated and Ottoman, but
    it's Turkish. Let me tell you an anecdote. I was being interviewed on
    Turkish radio RFI ('Radio France Internationale' in Paris) and I was
    speaking such good Turkish that the host was surprised and asked how
    come. I said I had learned it from my grandmother, who was, of course,
    100% Armenian. She spoke Armenian normally and only spoke Turkish when
    she needed to say something the children were not supposed to children
    ended up learning it. We then coined an interesting term, "grandmother
    tongue." So, I can say my mother tongue is Armenian, and my
    "grandmother tongue" (symbolically, of course, as she came from
    Turkey) is Turkish!!!

    In another historical incident, Gerald Papasian's maternal great
    grandfather was Mihran Damadian, who was the 'one day president' of
    the French Mandated Armenia in Cilicia (Southern Turkey) right after
    the First World War. The French had promised Armenians a homeland
    (much like the British did for Israel) so in 1919, many Armenians
    picked up and went to Adana to establish the new home rule under the
    French mandate. Gerald's grandmother was 17 at the time and
    accompanied her father. In her eyewitness account, she used to tell us
    how overnight the Turkish local merchants had learned Armenian
    sentences to cater for the newly returning Armenian population.

    Q: What kinds of Turkish art are Armenian people exposed to now?

    A: As I mentioned earlier, throughout the centuries Armenians have had
    a major influence on the development of art and culture in Turkey. But
    as a result of the Genocide, this development was
    interrupted. Unfortunately, the lack of proper channels of artistic
    communication at the present day, go both ways. Armenians are not
    exposed to the best of Turkish art, and all they get is pop music and
    the B-grade TV series that they can pick up due to the proximity of
    the border. A dialogue of the cultural kind should be engaged in two
    ways. I am sure there are a lot of good writers, such as Orhan Pamuk,
    the Nobel Prize winning author of "Snow." Another incident comes to
    mind: I was reading "Snow" and was amazed how the descriptions of Kars
    in Eastern Turkey, the town where the main part of the action takes
    place, resembles the villages and towns right across the border in
    Armenia. It was inevitable to see that the traditions and life styles
    (minus of course the Moslem elements, as Armenians are Christian) were
    so very similar between the two peoples.

    But there is a certain degree of ignorance even among most educated
    Armenians. I was visiting with friends in Los Angeles, who are
    originally from Armenia and intellectuals, and they were so
    dismissive; they could not accept that there is a similarity. To go
    even further, they were surprised that I was even reading a Turkish
    author. But Orhan Pamuk is not a Turkish author in the narrow sense,
    just like our play in not an Armenian play, but one with a universal
    message. Pamuk's work is universal, and in fact he is even persecuted
    in Turkey for having spoken against the Turkish identity in 2005 and
    for saying a million Armenians had died. In his novel, "Snow" Pamuk
    mentions the pre-Genocide Armenian presence in Kars indirectly every
    time he gets an opportunity to describe the Armenian craftsmanship in
    the architecture and ironworks, etc. There has to be a mutual interest
    of knowing more about the other. When I met Orhan Pamuk at PEN, he
    asked me about the Armenian Diaspora. On the intellectuals' level
    there is more proximity than we think. Other Turkish intellectual, who
    defend the cause of the Recognition of the Armenian Genocide, are
    Taner Akcam and Recip Zarakolu. One of the first Turks to break the
    taboo was the historian Halil Berktay. Fethiye Cetin, the Turkish
    lawyer talks about her grandmother's Armenian identity in My
    Grandmother openly. I am not mentioning the Armenian intellectuals,
    because they are far too many to cite.

    Q: When the soft diplomacy of cultural engagement is carried on in
    foreign capitals, does it have any effect on the home countries of
    Armenia and Turkey?

    A: Of course. In today's world, heavily governed by communications, it
    is inevitable that the effects of one rub off on the other. So the
    more there are efforts of rapprochement on the cultural and artistic
    levels, the more the effects of this are felt both in the two
    Homelands and in the respective Diasporas.

    Q: Wallace Shawn writes "Artists who create works of art that inspire
    sympathy and good values do not change the life of the poor." Will
    political art be polarizing, neutral or healing in this context?

    A: I do not know much about radical and militant political art,
    because that is not what I do. Militancy usually preaches to the
    converted and is marginalized by the mainstream. I am not interested
    in preaching to converts. Otherwise, I would perform in Armenian for
    Armenians. I am quite well known in Armenia, having done may films and
    plays there as well as TV appearances. It is so easy for me to spread
    a message there, but who would I be telling these things to? To people
    who already know it and are in agreement with me. The trick is to
    reach uninitiated people and change the way they think.

    I think what Wallace Shawn is saying, if I am not mistaken (and taken
    out of context this sentence can be interpreted in many ways), is that
    the change comes not from sympathy but from actual knowledge and
    wanting to do something about a situation. Although, I must confess
    that sympath g. Because if we are not sympathetic to a cause we are
    not even inclined to listen to it, let alone do anything about it.

    Forms of political art that are too crude can be polarizing. You can
    fall into a trap of fundamentalism and extremism; before you know it,
    polarization is created. Neutral is not good either, because it is
    sitting on the fence, neither here nor there. I think political art,
    if it is to be really effective, should have a healing and
    instructional (educating) effect on the audiences. The strength of
    "Sojourn at Ararat" lies in the fact that it is based on poetry, which
    in itself is an art form with much healing capacity. Then the way
    these poems are put together brings forward messages that have healing
    effects particular to specific themes and issues.

    Q: Your show "Sojourn At Ararat" seems to make great works of
    literature speak for themselves, but that raises another issue. Why
    would we expect Armenian literature have credibility in Turkey or vise
    versa. Would you expect Turkish literature to have credibility in
    Armenia?

    Yes, the credibility is very easy to establish once the two sides hear
    about their respective literatures because deep inside they are
    soooooooo similar! In another show called "Nannto Nannto" (the last
    line from a Japanese Haiku), I have used works from Nazim Hikmet, one
    of the (if not the) greatest Turkish poet of the 20th century, and
    juxtaposed it with Gevork Emin's work. He is a poet from Soviet
    Armenia who died recently. The particular poems were called
    "Memleketim" (My country in the case of Hikmet) and "Yes Hay Em" (I am
    Armenian). In the case of Emin, and when you hear his descriptive
    passages, you would think either it is the continuation of a Hikmet
    poem, or at best that both poets were inspired and wrote about the
    same thing, place... their homeland!!!! It was eerie!

    Q: Don't events of today sort of "call the question" of this play?

    A: Of course, now more than ever it is time to hear this play out. The
    play is an answer to the negationists in Turkey and its al d deny the
    very fact of the Armenian Genocide, just as there are those who would
    deny the World War II Holocaust against the Jews.

    But the sad truth is that Armenians have not yet had their
    Nuremburg. Turkey owes Armenians an apology, in order for normal
    relations to be established and survive.. Turkey needs to apologize
    for its own peace of mind and for the well being of the future
    generations. There are lots of young progressive Turks and slightly
    older progressive intellectuals in Turkey as I mentioned earlier who
    favor rapprochement on the human and intellectual level. These people
    are all severely persecuted in Turkey and even killed, as was the case
    with the Armenian journalist Hrant Dink a couple of years ago. He was
    gunned down in mid day in front of his office. There is a whole
    generation in Turkey that is conscious of the burden of the Genocide
    and wants to get rid of it by coming out and accepting responsibility
    for it, by making amends and proceeding to a peaceful existence. It is
    the powers that be, and the dirty political considerations that are in
    the way of all this. Also, it is not easy to reverse decades of denial
    and suddenly say, "OK, OK we did it!!!" Although when you owe a person
    an apology, sometimes the simplest thing to do is just to say, "I am
    sorry."

    Just as "Schindler's List" speaks eloquently against denial of the
    Jewish Holocaust, we hope that plays like ours can deflect denial of
    the Armenian Genocide now, at this crucial time, when normalization of
    relations between Turks and Armenians seems a real possibility. The
    more the world is educated, the more it is difficult to feed it lies
    and at some point or another the truth has to emerge..


    ABOUT NORA ARMANI

    Nora Armani is an actor and playwright who has represented the
    Ministry of Culture of Armenia in Cinema (from 1991-93) and organizes
    events with International Film festivals as a guest curator, promoting
    Armenian Cinema wordwide (at AFI film fest, Kennedy Center Washington
    D.C., Portland, Denver, Paris, London, other parts of the UK.). She
    and Gerald Papasian are the authors and performers of "Sojourn to
    Ararat," the world stage's leading performance of Armenian poetry in
    English.
    See: www.sojournatararat.org.

    Armani is also author-performer of a one woman show, "On the Couch
    with Nora Armani," which also deals with issues of Armenian history
    though grandmother's story. See: http://noraarmani.com..


    http://newsblaze.com/sto ry/20091218171644jnyc.nb/topstory.html
Working...
X