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  • Now you remembered

    January 22, 2010
    Haaretz

    Now you remembered?

    By Yossi Sarid

    The defense minister paid a visit to Turkey this week. They say it was
    a success. If so, it is possible to renew the conspiracy of silence
    and the silencing.

    This is what happened a few months ago after Recep Tayyip Erdogan once
    again poured bitter words upon us. An important Israeli personality
    telephoned me and said the following: "Now you have to hit back at the
    Turks, to denounce them for the crimes they committed against the
    Armenians. You, Yossi, have the right to do so. Today you are a
    private citizen, but even when you were a public figure you did not
    hold yourself back. You expressed yourself often, in writing and
    orally, against the way they shirked responsibility for the genocide."

    I was filled with revulsion and my soul wanted to puke. The person who
    telephoned me was an example of the ugly Israeli who had disgracefully
    been at the forefront of those who denied the Armenian holocaust. He
    was the one who had joined those who lashed out at the education
    minister at the time, who visited a church in Jerusalem ten years ago
    and told those gathered there: "The value of a human life, no matter
    who the human is - Jew, Arab, Armenian, Gypsy, Bosnian, Albanian,
    Rwandan - this is the value I want to inculcate all our pupils
    with. In the new history curriculum I want to include a central
    chapter on genocide, and as part of that, a broad reference to the
    Armenian genocide. This is our duty to you, this is our duty to
    ourselves."

    The country was astir, and ministers began to sweat. Ehud Barak and
    Shimon Peres were the first to express reservations. This declaration,
    they quickly announced, was not made at the government's initiative;
    it was the initiative solely of the education minister and was his
    responsibility. I was ashamed.

    New tunes have recently been heard in Jerusalem: "The Turks are the
    last ones who have the right to teach us ethics." It would be
    interesting to know who the first ones are. There obviously are not
    any when referring to the "most moral" state and army "in the world."
    If the Turks try to teach us, we shall slap them - and hard.

    I never understood why young Turkey, which had no hand in that
    bloodshed, insists on defending the blood of its forefathers. Would
    too deep an exploration of the past reveal signs of the present? When
    someone tries forcibly to erase history, that history will usually
    insist on being rewritten, and in blood.

    But it is not only the politicians. Experts in public and political
    affairs are also clamoring to take the skeletons out of the Turkish
    closet, more than one million skeletons, to be exact.

    Those who never wasted a word on the first genocide of the 20th
    century have suddenly remembered it. This is the genocide that Henry
    Morgenthau, Sr. defined as "the greatest crime in modern history." He
    was the American ambassador to Ankara during those black years, and he
    was a Jew.

    I shall reveal to you what my response was to the agitated
    caller. "Now you remembered? Only now, when they attribute crimes to
    you as if you were Turks? I do not believe in a firing squad, so deal
    with Erdogan yourselves; you deserve him. How sad it is that you
    conceded a moral position for other interests that are brought about
    by time and finished also by time."

    And now I have an addendum to that response of mine: Let us assume
    that Turkey will renew its ties with Israel to what they were in the
    past. Then what? What then? Will we also renew our contribution to the
    denial of the Armenian holocaust?
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