DEEP MOUNTAIN: AN INTERVIEW WITH ECE TEMELKURAN
Taleen Babayan
http://www.armenianweekly.com/2010/06/04/deep-mountain/
Fri, Jun 4 2010 | Published in Interviews
Ece Temelkuran's latest book Deep Mountain: Across the Turkish-Armenian
Divide explores the history and continuing discussion surrounding
the Armenian Genocide in Armenia, Turkey, France, and the United
States. The project, which was borne from conversations the author
had with Hrant Dink, the late editor of Agos newspaper, probes deeper
into this situation by interviewing a wide range of Armenian writers,
thinkers, and activists including Armenian poet Silva Gaboudikian,
musician Arto Tuncboyajian, and filmmaker Serge Avedikian.
A well-known journalist and political commentator in Turkey, Temelkuran
writes regularly for the Turkish newspaper Haberturk and has won
numerous awards for her work, including the Pen for Peace Award and
Turkish Journalist of the Year.
Temelkuran sat down with Taleen Babayan for an interview about Deep
Mountain, which was recently translated into English by Verso Books.
***
Taleen Babayan: You interview so many amazing and influential
people in this book-politicians, musicians, students, lawyers, and
businessmen-including Arto Tuncboyajian, Silva Gaboudikian, Patrick
Devejian, Vartkes Yeghiayan. And they each have their own way of
looking at not only the Turks but at themselves as Armenians. Was there
a common thread among your subjects and the people you spoke with?
Ece Temelkuran: Although they expressed it in completely different
ways, the main question that was eating them was this: Why don't
Turks feel anything? Even Ara Toranian [editor of Nouvelles d'Armenie
Magazine and alleged former ASALA member] wants to tell his story to
the Turks, not to the French or Americans. But the one who he wants
to tell the story to doesn't want to listen. I think, although the
Armenian community is extremely mature, they have this wounded child
in them, whatever their ages are. That is the common thread I guess.
TB: You interviewed French politician Patrick Devedjian, who was the
architect of the genocide bill in France, which had an amendment that
would criminalize the denial of the Armenian Genocide in France. He
felt Turkey would change under heavy pressure, and you felt the
opposite-that this kind of legislation would cause Turkey to retreat
and make it more difficult for open dialogue to ensue. Do you still
hold this viewpoint? Don't you think the recognition of the genocide
by the world will cause Turkey to finally face its past since the
rest of the world is doing so?
ET: There are two levels of this issue. One of them is the diplomatic
side. Of course Turkey will change under diplomatic pressure, and
it started changing as we all witnessed recently. We have seen the
Turkish prime minister and the Armenian prime minister shaking hands
and two foreign affairs ministers signing protocols. Behind them
were the world leaders, as if these politicians were the children and
the leaders of the world were the parents who are guarding them. But
this is not real. It's something artificial. When people don't feel
it within them, it doesn't matter if diplomatic progress has been made.
If the peoples on both sides aren't genuinely integrated to the process
the diplomatic progress can be easily sabotaged. After Hrant [Dink]
died, Armenians became an easier topic to talk about [in Turkey]. His
death became a human shield on the issue. People even created the
slogan 'We are all Armenians' in his funeral. I always feel as if
Hrant was sacrificed. After his death, it became relatively easier
for people to talk about Armenian issues and openly say they have
Armenian friends. It's tragically ironic. Even the diplomatic progress
would be completely impossible without what people felt after Hrant's
death. Bottom line is, Hrant has done more than any world leader or
any legislation could do.
TB: How has the reception been for Deep Mountain amongst both Armenians
and Turks? Was it written for an Armenian audience?
ET: It was received very well in Turkey, to my surprise. The book
sold over 60,000 copies and [that is a high number] for a country
like Turkey, which clings to amnesia. I think it was because of the
attitude of the book. In most cases, intellectuals are trying to push
and slap this issue into people's faces. They expect people to feel
guilty rather than remember. I tried to make them remember first and
then leave it to them to figure out what they feel about it. Most of
the people felt not necessarily guilty but touched for the first time,
and without even questioning what really happened in 1915, they were
eager to understand the humane side of the history. They admitted that
they have feelings about Armenians which Turks are taught not to have.
I guess, for the first time, Turkish people were trying to put
themselves in the place of Armenians.
I wanted the audience, especially the Turkish audience, to put
themselves in this character who in the beginning doesn't feel a
thing about Armenians, who rejects to feel anything, and who by time
understands the reason of his/her numbness. I suppose that numbness
is what intimidates Armenians most, and they have a point. They say,
"We feel so much about this ancient conflict and you feel nothing. How
come you feel nothing?" That's the biggest question of the Armenians.
That is why I wrote the book for both audiences, Armenians and Turks,
just to create a new path of communication. Because there are Turkish
people who feel for Armenians and there are Armenians who are not
just furious.
TB: Have there been any consequences for you or your career since
you wrote and published a book that discusses the Armenian-Turkish
relationship and the Armenian Genocide?
ET: The positive reaction was more of a whispering, not out loud.
Recently, a middle-aged woman stopped me on my way and said that she
thought I was betraying my country and countrymen. I think that's an
exception because most of the people thought that this book tells the
true stories of people. Deep Mountain was never after proving some
historic reality, or never took a side in the genocide discussion. It
was more about a human story. The book is defending that we should
share our stories before labeling the story, and if labeling the story
is an obstacle let's leave it aside and talk our minds. I got some
threats of course but that is...you know, kind of daily life in Turkey.
TB: When was the first time you heard about the Armenian Genocide?
ET: Through Hrant. Even when you are exposed to it, somehow you don't
see it. It's in front of your eyes and you don't see it. Somehow when
it comes to Armenians, you just stop thinking. And if you don't want
to really get involved in the subject, you don't have to because you
can't find information about Armenians. It's not easy to blame Turkish
people about not knowing about 1915 because there are no sources that
are out there and legal in Turkey.
TB: One of my many favorite lines in your book is, "A true journey
doesn't answer a traveler's questions. A true journey changes the
traveler's questions." How long did this journey take you? Is it
still continuing? And how did your questions change over time?
ET: Hrant was killed and that changed everything, for not only me but
his family, friends, and the Turkish people. For the first time, they
saw that this Armenian was an amazing man, so it changed all of our
questions. But on the other hand, after his death, after I finished
the book, my journey continued. He was killed because he was Armenian,
that's for sure. But there's something else. He was a friend of mine.
And all of a sudden you see that a normal friend of yours is killed and
has turned into a symbol and someone you can't define. So it changed
my life in that respect as well. It was the first time I saw a friend
dying. I saw him when he was lying on the ground in the street.
So it changed a lot. But then it became like keeping a promise because
he wanted me to write this book and he wanted the diaspora to read it.
It was a promise to him.
TB: In the postscript of Deep Mountain, you apologize to the Armenians
and invite them to have a glass of raki with you and to visit Turkey.
Don't you think this is a bit idealistic?
ET: That's what Hrant was after, and I know there are people who
take it seriously, which I would love to see. And there are homes
of Armenians in Istanbul so they should really come. Even if it
sounds idealistic or naive, I feel that it's important for Diasporan
Armenians to hear this from Turkish people. What's done is done but
the current psychological problem is feeling homeless, in a way,
even for those wealthy Armenians with big estates in the U.S.
TB: In your opinion, what does the future hold for Armenians and
Turks? You said in your book that neither the Turks nor the Armenians
are homogenous. With this many different viewpoints, will there ever
be a resolution? Will there ever be reconciliation?
ET: I think there will be. There is a crack in the wall of numbness.
We cannot go back. There is a new wave now in Turkey among Turkish
people. They are talking about finding their Armenian roots. It's
everywhere and people are happy about this. It is interesting to
observe this new, deep wave. Since Hrant died two years ago, people
are searching for their Armenian roots.
TB: You encountered many Armenians while you were writing this book.
How did the process change your ideas of Armenians?
ET: People in Turkey are brought up with the idea that there is a
giant monster called "diaspora" and then there are "our Armenians." It
is mostly believed that "the monster" is doing the evil (bringing up
the recognition issue, etc.) and that "our Armenians" are actually
"well behaved" enough to forget about what happened in 1915. After
speaking to the Armenians abroad, I came to know and actually wrote
about how deceiving this perception was. Most of all, seeing that all
those "furious Diaspora Armenians" were actually the ones were most
easy to talk to made me think about the "heart of the Armenians." I
thought about this especially when I talked to Ara Toranian in Paris.
Over all, I never knew that the Armenians, even those whose fathers
were born in the U.S., missed Anatolia with such passion. I think the
Turkish audience was most touched by this reality. Speaking to the
readers in Turkey, I can say that Deep Mountain changed the image of
the diaspora in Turkey in every sense.
TB: While conducting your interviews and research for Deep Mountain,
you spent time in France, the U.S., and Armenia and got to know
the Armenian communities there. Do you now see a difference between
Armenians in Armenia and Diasporan Armenians in terms of how they
perceive Turks?
ET: As you go West, the subjects I met became less emotional, I can
say. Such generalizations never represent the whole truth, though.
Yet, again I can say that in Europe the issues of memory, 1915,
and dialogue are more intellectualized. As for Armenia, I observed
an eagerness to "forgive" Turks, even though there has been no
apology. I even heard a couple of Armenians in Yerevan saying this:
"It wasn't the Turks, it was Jews who killed the Armenians."
TB: As someone who knew and respected Hrant Dink, what do you think
people should do to honor his memory?
ET: Rather than proving that they were killed, Hrant wanted to prove
that the Armenians actually lived in Turkey. So I think putting
this reality forward might be the first thing to do. Besides,
he was saying that "We should learn to talk about today, and then
we can find a way to talk about the past." That is why I tried to
describe the Armenians and Turks of today, rather than going to the
archives. This is an attempt which requires a collective effort. I
hope Deep Mountain can help us start a journey together that Hrant
long dreamed of and sacrificed himself for.
For more information about Ece Temelkuran and Deep Mountain, visit
http://en.ecetemelkuran.com.
From: A. Papazian
Taleen Babayan
http://www.armenianweekly.com/2010/06/04/deep-mountain/
Fri, Jun 4 2010 | Published in Interviews
Ece Temelkuran's latest book Deep Mountain: Across the Turkish-Armenian
Divide explores the history and continuing discussion surrounding
the Armenian Genocide in Armenia, Turkey, France, and the United
States. The project, which was borne from conversations the author
had with Hrant Dink, the late editor of Agos newspaper, probes deeper
into this situation by interviewing a wide range of Armenian writers,
thinkers, and activists including Armenian poet Silva Gaboudikian,
musician Arto Tuncboyajian, and filmmaker Serge Avedikian.
A well-known journalist and political commentator in Turkey, Temelkuran
writes regularly for the Turkish newspaper Haberturk and has won
numerous awards for her work, including the Pen for Peace Award and
Turkish Journalist of the Year.
Temelkuran sat down with Taleen Babayan for an interview about Deep
Mountain, which was recently translated into English by Verso Books.
***
Taleen Babayan: You interview so many amazing and influential
people in this book-politicians, musicians, students, lawyers, and
businessmen-including Arto Tuncboyajian, Silva Gaboudikian, Patrick
Devejian, Vartkes Yeghiayan. And they each have their own way of
looking at not only the Turks but at themselves as Armenians. Was there
a common thread among your subjects and the people you spoke with?
Ece Temelkuran: Although they expressed it in completely different
ways, the main question that was eating them was this: Why don't
Turks feel anything? Even Ara Toranian [editor of Nouvelles d'Armenie
Magazine and alleged former ASALA member] wants to tell his story to
the Turks, not to the French or Americans. But the one who he wants
to tell the story to doesn't want to listen. I think, although the
Armenian community is extremely mature, they have this wounded child
in them, whatever their ages are. That is the common thread I guess.
TB: You interviewed French politician Patrick Devedjian, who was the
architect of the genocide bill in France, which had an amendment that
would criminalize the denial of the Armenian Genocide in France. He
felt Turkey would change under heavy pressure, and you felt the
opposite-that this kind of legislation would cause Turkey to retreat
and make it more difficult for open dialogue to ensue. Do you still
hold this viewpoint? Don't you think the recognition of the genocide
by the world will cause Turkey to finally face its past since the
rest of the world is doing so?
ET: There are two levels of this issue. One of them is the diplomatic
side. Of course Turkey will change under diplomatic pressure, and
it started changing as we all witnessed recently. We have seen the
Turkish prime minister and the Armenian prime minister shaking hands
and two foreign affairs ministers signing protocols. Behind them
were the world leaders, as if these politicians were the children and
the leaders of the world were the parents who are guarding them. But
this is not real. It's something artificial. When people don't feel
it within them, it doesn't matter if diplomatic progress has been made.
If the peoples on both sides aren't genuinely integrated to the process
the diplomatic progress can be easily sabotaged. After Hrant [Dink]
died, Armenians became an easier topic to talk about [in Turkey]. His
death became a human shield on the issue. People even created the
slogan 'We are all Armenians' in his funeral. I always feel as if
Hrant was sacrificed. After his death, it became relatively easier
for people to talk about Armenian issues and openly say they have
Armenian friends. It's tragically ironic. Even the diplomatic progress
would be completely impossible without what people felt after Hrant's
death. Bottom line is, Hrant has done more than any world leader or
any legislation could do.
TB: How has the reception been for Deep Mountain amongst both Armenians
and Turks? Was it written for an Armenian audience?
ET: It was received very well in Turkey, to my surprise. The book
sold over 60,000 copies and [that is a high number] for a country
like Turkey, which clings to amnesia. I think it was because of the
attitude of the book. In most cases, intellectuals are trying to push
and slap this issue into people's faces. They expect people to feel
guilty rather than remember. I tried to make them remember first and
then leave it to them to figure out what they feel about it. Most of
the people felt not necessarily guilty but touched for the first time,
and without even questioning what really happened in 1915, they were
eager to understand the humane side of the history. They admitted that
they have feelings about Armenians which Turks are taught not to have.
I guess, for the first time, Turkish people were trying to put
themselves in the place of Armenians.
I wanted the audience, especially the Turkish audience, to put
themselves in this character who in the beginning doesn't feel a
thing about Armenians, who rejects to feel anything, and who by time
understands the reason of his/her numbness. I suppose that numbness
is what intimidates Armenians most, and they have a point. They say,
"We feel so much about this ancient conflict and you feel nothing. How
come you feel nothing?" That's the biggest question of the Armenians.
That is why I wrote the book for both audiences, Armenians and Turks,
just to create a new path of communication. Because there are Turkish
people who feel for Armenians and there are Armenians who are not
just furious.
TB: Have there been any consequences for you or your career since
you wrote and published a book that discusses the Armenian-Turkish
relationship and the Armenian Genocide?
ET: The positive reaction was more of a whispering, not out loud.
Recently, a middle-aged woman stopped me on my way and said that she
thought I was betraying my country and countrymen. I think that's an
exception because most of the people thought that this book tells the
true stories of people. Deep Mountain was never after proving some
historic reality, or never took a side in the genocide discussion. It
was more about a human story. The book is defending that we should
share our stories before labeling the story, and if labeling the story
is an obstacle let's leave it aside and talk our minds. I got some
threats of course but that is...you know, kind of daily life in Turkey.
TB: When was the first time you heard about the Armenian Genocide?
ET: Through Hrant. Even when you are exposed to it, somehow you don't
see it. It's in front of your eyes and you don't see it. Somehow when
it comes to Armenians, you just stop thinking. And if you don't want
to really get involved in the subject, you don't have to because you
can't find information about Armenians. It's not easy to blame Turkish
people about not knowing about 1915 because there are no sources that
are out there and legal in Turkey.
TB: One of my many favorite lines in your book is, "A true journey
doesn't answer a traveler's questions. A true journey changes the
traveler's questions." How long did this journey take you? Is it
still continuing? And how did your questions change over time?
ET: Hrant was killed and that changed everything, for not only me but
his family, friends, and the Turkish people. For the first time, they
saw that this Armenian was an amazing man, so it changed all of our
questions. But on the other hand, after his death, after I finished
the book, my journey continued. He was killed because he was Armenian,
that's for sure. But there's something else. He was a friend of mine.
And all of a sudden you see that a normal friend of yours is killed and
has turned into a symbol and someone you can't define. So it changed
my life in that respect as well. It was the first time I saw a friend
dying. I saw him when he was lying on the ground in the street.
So it changed a lot. But then it became like keeping a promise because
he wanted me to write this book and he wanted the diaspora to read it.
It was a promise to him.
TB: In the postscript of Deep Mountain, you apologize to the Armenians
and invite them to have a glass of raki with you and to visit Turkey.
Don't you think this is a bit idealistic?
ET: That's what Hrant was after, and I know there are people who
take it seriously, which I would love to see. And there are homes
of Armenians in Istanbul so they should really come. Even if it
sounds idealistic or naive, I feel that it's important for Diasporan
Armenians to hear this from Turkish people. What's done is done but
the current psychological problem is feeling homeless, in a way,
even for those wealthy Armenians with big estates in the U.S.
TB: In your opinion, what does the future hold for Armenians and
Turks? You said in your book that neither the Turks nor the Armenians
are homogenous. With this many different viewpoints, will there ever
be a resolution? Will there ever be reconciliation?
ET: I think there will be. There is a crack in the wall of numbness.
We cannot go back. There is a new wave now in Turkey among Turkish
people. They are talking about finding their Armenian roots. It's
everywhere and people are happy about this. It is interesting to
observe this new, deep wave. Since Hrant died two years ago, people
are searching for their Armenian roots.
TB: You encountered many Armenians while you were writing this book.
How did the process change your ideas of Armenians?
ET: People in Turkey are brought up with the idea that there is a
giant monster called "diaspora" and then there are "our Armenians." It
is mostly believed that "the monster" is doing the evil (bringing up
the recognition issue, etc.) and that "our Armenians" are actually
"well behaved" enough to forget about what happened in 1915. After
speaking to the Armenians abroad, I came to know and actually wrote
about how deceiving this perception was. Most of all, seeing that all
those "furious Diaspora Armenians" were actually the ones were most
easy to talk to made me think about the "heart of the Armenians." I
thought about this especially when I talked to Ara Toranian in Paris.
Over all, I never knew that the Armenians, even those whose fathers
were born in the U.S., missed Anatolia with such passion. I think the
Turkish audience was most touched by this reality. Speaking to the
readers in Turkey, I can say that Deep Mountain changed the image of
the diaspora in Turkey in every sense.
TB: While conducting your interviews and research for Deep Mountain,
you spent time in France, the U.S., and Armenia and got to know
the Armenian communities there. Do you now see a difference between
Armenians in Armenia and Diasporan Armenians in terms of how they
perceive Turks?
ET: As you go West, the subjects I met became less emotional, I can
say. Such generalizations never represent the whole truth, though.
Yet, again I can say that in Europe the issues of memory, 1915,
and dialogue are more intellectualized. As for Armenia, I observed
an eagerness to "forgive" Turks, even though there has been no
apology. I even heard a couple of Armenians in Yerevan saying this:
"It wasn't the Turks, it was Jews who killed the Armenians."
TB: As someone who knew and respected Hrant Dink, what do you think
people should do to honor his memory?
ET: Rather than proving that they were killed, Hrant wanted to prove
that the Armenians actually lived in Turkey. So I think putting
this reality forward might be the first thing to do. Besides,
he was saying that "We should learn to talk about today, and then
we can find a way to talk about the past." That is why I tried to
describe the Armenians and Turks of today, rather than going to the
archives. This is an attempt which requires a collective effort. I
hope Deep Mountain can help us start a journey together that Hrant
long dreamed of and sacrificed himself for.
For more information about Ece Temelkuran and Deep Mountain, visit
http://en.ecetemelkuran.com.
From: A. Papazian