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ANKARA: Turkish Scholar To Obama: Recognize Genocide, Liberate Turke

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  • ANKARA: Turkish Scholar To Obama: Recognize Genocide, Liberate Turke

    TURKISH SCHOLAR TO OBAMA: RECOGNIZE GENOCIDE, LIBERATE TURKEY

    HULIQ
    March 25 2009
    SC

    U.S. President Barack Obama ahould should stand up to his promise
    and recognize Armenian Genocide, thus liberating Turkey and restoring
    justice.

    One of the promises that the President Obama has made during
    his campaign is to call the tragic events of 1915 as Armenian
    Genocide. Turkey, while has started a process of reconciliation with
    Armenia (details of which are kept secret) has taken active actions
    to prevent President Barack Obama from keeping his promise. Turkey's
    reconition of the Armenian Genocide will not only create justice, but
    will also liberate Turkey from past that has come to haunt the nation.

    According to the Armenian Weekly a prominent Turkish genocide scholar
    Taner Akcam in his lecture titled "Facing History" and delivered
    at the Clark University on March 19 Akcam sent a powerful message
    to U.S. President Barack Obama, asking him to liberate Turks and
    Armenians by properly recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

    Akcam continued, "All of the parties involved know very well what the
    U.S. administration and Congress think about 1915. But Turkey asks them
    to tell a lie only for one day. I have never understood why the Turkish
    government extracts so much joy out of making the United States lie
    for one day. I also find it completely dishonorable. Not only does this
    lie fail to lead to a resolution, it needlessly locks up the debate."

    Hence, Akcam argued, the importance of official U.S. recognition of
    the Armenian Genocide--"if the United States declares what it believes
    to be the truth and stands behind it"--would not only gain it "some
    self-respect on the subject, but it will liberate Turks, Armenians,
    and itself in the process."

    Akcam ended his lecture by asking Obama to stand up for truth. "I
    believe that we will enter a new era where morality and real politik
    will not be considered mutually exclusive, if President Obama should
    put an end to this lingering problem and liberate everybody in the
    process by an official acknowledgment of genocide," he said.

    Professor Akcam grew up in Turkey, where he was imprisoned
    for his participation in and fervent support for free press
    publications. Following a dramatic escape, he later received political
    asylum in Germany, where he earned a Ph.D. from the University of
    Hannover and worked with the Hamburg Institute for Social Research.

    In 2007, the Armenian Bar Association presented the Hrant Dink
    Freedom Award to Professor Akcam as "a champion of historical truth
    about the Armenian Genocide and for his courageous defense of liberty
    and free speech." Akcam's life and work have been featured in four
    critically acclaimed documentary films, and he is the author of 10
    scholarly works, as well as numerous articles. His most recent book,
    "A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish
    Responsibility," (Metropolitan Books), was released in 2006.
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