Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey And Armenia: Can They Shake That Hand?

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

  • Turkey And Armenia: Can They Shake That Hand?

    TURKEY AND ARMENIA: CAN THEY SHAKE THAT HAND?

    Forbes
    Sept 4 2009

    On television they look just like my people--cynical, gloomy and
    forever complaining.

    I am talking about Armenians--street interviews with residents of
    Yerevan, Armenia's capital, who sound just as skeptical as Turks about
    this week's sudden announcement by the two neighbors to "normalize"
    relations.

    That normalcy, of course, is arriving about a century after the
    two peoples faced each other in a brutal civil war. Hundreds of
    thousands of Armenian citizens of the Ottoman Empire were deported
    and massacred in 1915 in what is now eastern Turkey, in a period of
    turmoil and violence that Armenians call "genocide" and Turks insist
    was "killing by both sides."

    Anatolia was "ethnically cleansed" of its Armenian heritage early
    last century, but the ghosts of unspeakable deeds have never quite
    left the crime scene. Since the founding of modern Turkey in 1923 by
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, Turks have been grappling with "the Armenian
    issue" one way or another, facing in recent years an ever-widening
    international campaign to recognize and condemn.

    For Turks and Armenians, the issue has always been semantics--whether
    or not to use the g-word in describing 1915. The majority of Turks
    believe, and were taught in school, that the killings were not
    officially sanctioned and do not amount to genocide. To Armenians on
    the other hand, 1915 is what the Holocaust is to Jews--the single most
    defining moment in establishing a national identity and a nation-state.

    So it made great sense this week for the official announcement to
    avoid the question of genocide altogether. Similarly left out was the
    issue of Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed enclave that Armenians seized
    from Turkey's close ally Azerbaijan.
Working...
X