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Commonality In Struggle

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  • Commonality In Struggle

    COMMONALITY IN STRUGGLE
    by Vache Thomassian

    Haytoug.org
    February 1, 2010

    Below is the text of a speech given by Vache Thomassian, a member of
    the Hollywood "Musa Dagh" AYF Chapter and of the United Human Rights
    Council (UHRC). It was given at the UHRC's second annual "Opposite
    of Silence" event in Glendale, Calif on January 15. The event aimed
    to bring together Armenians and Kurds, and to pay tribute to those
    activists in Turkey who have been targeted, harassed, or murdered for
    their efforts to advance human rights, Armenian Genocide recognition,
    freedom of speech, equality, and democracy. The keynote speaker of
    the event was Kani Xulam, the executive director of the American
    Kurdish Information Network.

    Commonality In Struggle

    BY VACHE THOMASSIAN

    A lot of things are taken for granted. In our daily lives we wake up,
    go to class, go to work, check our emails, check our Facebook, go out,
    live our lives, often times taking the smallest things, usually the
    most important things for granted. Things like our ability to freely
    express ourselves, the ability to have opinions, to make them, argue
    about them. The ability to stand up and speak. The ability to hear
    and be heard.

    Here in the United States, the free speech movement in the 1960's
    was a pivotal time in developing and shaping our country's activist
    spirit. It was a time when students stood up to authority to demand
    their right to express themselves. This spirit was captured by the
    immortal words of Mario Savio on the steps of Sproul Hall in Berkeley
    when he said:

    "There's a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious,
    makes you so sick at heart that you can't take part! You can't even
    passively take part! And you've got to put your bodies upon the gears
    and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus - and
    you've got to make it stop! And you've got to indicate to the people
    who run it, to the people who own it - that unless you're free the
    machine will be prevented from working at all!

    This was the movement that secured free speech and academic freedom
    here in America.

    In a place like Turkey where the call to speak is an invitation to
    prosecution, to harassment, in a place where historical truths do not
    exist, where contemporary human rights are trampled, minority rights
    are unfathomable, women's rights unimaginable it takes courage and it
    takes conscience to speak. That is the common quality spotlighted by
    individuals like Layla Zana, Akin Birdal and Erin Keskin-the courage to
    see a wrong and speak out about it, ignoring the personal consequences.

    There is no better example of the consequences of allowing Turkey to
    get away with Genocide then what is happening to the Kurds today. The
    news headlines about the Kurdish question hits especially close
    to home for Armenians: "Community leaders arrested", "Violence in
    the streets", "Demonstrators beaten or killed", "Political parties
    banned"...all in the name of preserving the Turkish nation...protecting
    Turkishness...sounds all too familiar.

    When we talk about the Armenian Cause we have to talk of it as an
    issue of justice for humanity and we shouldn't limit our vision to
    securing the rights of just Armenians, but instead affirm the idea
    that Turkey as a nation must free its people, end its occupations
    and be saved from itself. Until those who live in exile, those that
    live in fear, those that live in silence, Kurds and Armenians can
    lose the shackles that they still wear.

    Recently, Turkey has tried diplomatically strong-arming the weak
    and inept government of Armenia with protocols that would undermine
    Armenian Genocide recognition efforts. Recently also, deceitful claims
    by Turkey of making peace with the Kurdish Worker's Party have again
    resulted in violence, arrests and killings. The "TheArmenian Issue"and
    "TheKurdish issue" remain top priorities among the list of taboos in
    Turkish society. Taboos that are punished by Article 301.

    Only by confronting these taboos of their society through open, honest
    and meaningful dialogue, without prosecution or arrest, can there be a
    revolution of values in Turkey, when the historic rights of Armenians
    who were slaughtered in Genocide and removed through deportation are
    respected, where the natural rights of the world's largest landless
    minority, the Kurdish people's right to exist is respected.

    Only then, not through any other hollow means can there be a shift
    from Turkish ultanationalist arrogance towards real peace.

    In this world the ideas of power and powerlessness chase each other
    around in a perpetual circle of conflict. One struggles to attain and
    maintain its vise-grip while the other struggles to find a voice and
    fight for its liberty.

    Those of us who have only ever lived in a democracy, however flawed,
    would find it hard to imagine living a state of powerlessness. The
    fear of reprisal for expressing your thoughts, the hesitation felt
    before opening your mouth. Living your life constantly looking over
    your shoulder. Like Hrant Dink said in his last article before being
    murdered, "I am just like a pigeon, equally obsessed by what goes on
    my left, and right, front and back..."

    But Dink wanted to turn the boiling hell that he lived in, into a
    heaven and he saw that the only way to do that was through democracy,
    through free speech and through respect for all humans.

    Our job as activists is to look at the world in its proper
    perspective. In today's interconnected world, we can longer isolate
    ourselves, separate our struggle from the struggles of groups in
    similar circumstances, we can't just preach to ourselves and hope for
    the best. The struggles of oppressed peoples are like the fingers on
    your hand. Although each one is independent, each one moves fluidly
    in its own way they are all connected by the hand that holds them
    together. Their commonalities far outweigh their differences. And
    only when the fingers come together, only when they cooperate and
    work in concert, can they form a fist that can protect their rights
    and ensure their vitality.

    Our job as activists is to open our eyes to the world, to the
    voiceless, to stand when they cannot stand and to speak when they
    are silenced.

    In the memory of Hrant Dink, in solidarity with the likes of Ayse
    Gunaysu, Elif Shafak, Layla Zana, and individuals like Kani Xulam. In
    solidarity with their struggle and making that struggle our own.
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