Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkish Academics Protest Anti-Armenian Documentary Screening In Tur

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

  • Turkish Academics Protest Anti-Armenian Documentary Screening In Tur

    TURKISH ACADEMICS PROTEST ANTI-ARMENIAN DOCUMENTARY SCREENING IN TURKISH SCHOOLS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    19.02.2009 16:10 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Academics and Armenian citizens in Turkey are angered
    at the Ministry of Education's decision to screen an anti-Armenian
    documentary in Turkish schools.

    Sari Galin documentary was criticized by academics for reflecting the
    official ideology of the Turkish Republic about Armenian Genocide. It
    is mostly criticized as unscientific and weak in its claims because
    it exaggerated the deaths of Turks.

    "The students were forced to watch that documentary, which indeed
    had no scientific background. That would only increase hatred and
    discrimination against the Armenians," the History Foundation of
    Turkey said in a written statement on Tuesday.

    For academics, involving children in a conflicting situation is wrong,
    according to Ali Bayramoglu, a columnist at daily Yenisafak, "this is
    to make the official ideology and the public opinion exactly the same."

    "This is similar to the practices of a totalitarian state," Bayramoglu
    said, adding that it is undemocratic that Armenian schools and
    Armenian students attending the same classes with Turks were told
    to watch the documentary. "Imagine if Turks living in Bulgaria were
    forced to watch a documentary saying that 'Turks have been cruel
    toward Bulgarians in history.' Would you accept that?" Bayramoglu said.

    Mensur Akgun, an academic from Istanbul Kultur University, said
    although he did not watch the documentary, he guessed it was a type of
    propaganda. "In a period when relations between Armenia and Turkey are
    improving, it is wrong to distribute propaganda materials, especially
    to children," said Akgun, Hurriyet Daily News reports.

    500 Armenians and intellectuals have sent an open letter to the
    Turkish Prime Minister to protest the Education Ministry's decision.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X