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  • Destined To Disappear

    DESTINED TO DISAPPEAR
    by Sunanda K Datta-Ray

    Daily Pioneer
    http://www.dailypioneer.com/241035/Destined-to-di sappear.html
    March 9 2010
    New Delhi, India

    Turkey's outburst of wrath against the United States takes me back to
    my schooldays and the tragedy that some of my classmates personified
    without anyone suspecting it. Those Armenian boys were members of
    a diaspora of some eight million people, about 6,000 of whom still
    live in Kolkata.

    Our class prefect was a ruddy youth called Minos Ohan. Since
    initials and not first names were used then, the geography mistress,
    an Englishwoman, thought M Ohan was an Indian "Mohan". No one could
    have looked less like Mohan than this stockily muscled boy with heavy
    features and tightly curled reddish hair but how was anyone to know
    his father or grandfather had abbreviated Ohanian to Ohan? They didn't
    insert an apostrophe between O and H but didn't object if the name
    was mistaken for an Irish-sounding O'Han.

    Though their candlelit procession on All Soul's Night hinted at a
    distant identity, most Armenians tried to camouflage giveaway names.

    Such are the complexes from which people without a land to call their
    own suffer. There were the Mackertich (another Anglicised version)
    brothers and the two unrelated Gaspers. Mr Sarkies taught Physics
    and married Amy Avdall from the sister school. Our Chemistry master,
    Mr Catchatoor, must have been, I now think, Kachaturian and may have
    stuck to the original had the composer been famous then.

    We thrived on the legend of Sir Paul Chater, a school dropout who
    made a fortune in Hong Kong (where a Chater Street still exists though
    Hong Kongers think of him as Parsi or Jewish) and left some of it to
    La Martiniere. "We thank thee for Claude Martin our founder and for
    Paul Chater our benefactor" we dutifully intoned in the school prayer.

    Galstaun was probably Kolkata's best known Armenian, builder of
    palaces and mansions, owner of strings of race horses and a figure
    in Rumer Godden's novel, The Dark Horse. The British never knew how
    to treat him.

    Many years later a British journalist I knew in Tehran turned up
    to write about the community and Armenian College. There was a
    sizable number of Armenians in Iran and the Shah's Government sent
    some to study in Kolkata. I doubt if the ayatollahs continued that
    non-denominational generosity.

    Armenians hovered on the fringe. When I visited a Georgian magazine
    editor in Tbilisi in 1990 with a Soviet diplomat of Armenian origin,
    the editor burst out as soon as my companion had left the room, "He's
    not a loyal Soviet citizen. The only reason they stay is because
    they know the Turks will massacre them the moment they leave the
    Soviet Union!"

    The Ottoman Turks did just that during World War I. However, when
    Armenians set up an independent republic in 1918, it was annexed not
    by Turkey but the Soviet Union. But it's the Turkish killings the
    Georgian had in mind. Argentina, Belgium, Canada, France, Georgia,
    Italy, Russia and Uruguay are among the more than 20 countries that
    recognise the bloodshed as genocide. So does the European Parliament
    and the UN Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection
    of Minorities. But Britain doesn't. Neither does the US though sections
    of American opinion come perilously close at times to doing so.

    This is one of those times. The House of Representatives Foreign
    Affairs Committee recently supported a resolution by 23 votes to 22
    calling the death of 1.5 million Armenians in 1915 genocide. Turkey saw
    red and is at the time of writing going through a verbal equivalent of
    sending a gunboat. It is threatening not to allow American troops use
    of Turkey's Incirlik air base as a staging post for Iraq, to withdraw
    the Turkish contingent from Afghanistan and not to support the US over
    stiffer sanctions against Iran at the Security Council where Turkey
    is a member. Turkey might create a crisis for Nato by carrying out
    its threats if the entire House of Representatives follows the FAC.

    But though 215 out of 435 House members have publicly supported the
    resolution, the US is bound to draw back from the brink, leaving
    the Armenian National Committee of America gnashing its teeth. The
    committee may have spent $ 750,000 on lobbying members but Turkey
    has reportedly spent $ 1 million and there's more where that came from.

    The FAC adopted the same resolution in 2007 but the Bush
    Administration's intense lobbying killed it.

    No great power can afford to let idealism run away with self-interest.

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton supported the Armenian cause while
    on the stump. President Barack Obama did so even more resoundingly.

    "The Armenian genocide is not an allegation, a personal opinion
    or a point of view," he thundered, "but rather a widely documented
    fact supported by an overwhelming body of historical evidence." But
    visiting Istanbul last year, he downplayed the genocide -- a word
    that makes Turkish politicians reach for their revolvers -- to "one
    of the great atrocities of the 20th century."

    Turkey might tacitly concede that. It says nothing about Armenians
    being forcibly relocated and deported in 1915 but maintains there was
    no systematic pogrom. About 300,000 Armenians may have perished but
    they did so from disease and exposure and at the hands of Syrians and
    Palestinians. In fact, Armenians killed a large number of Turks with
    Tsarist Russian backing, according to Turkey.

    Between 40,000 and 70,000 Armenians still remain in Turkey. Another
    140,000 constitute the majority in the disputed province of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia itself has a population of about three
    million. There are no diplomatic relations between Armenia and Turkey.

    Under American pressure they signed a protocol in Geneva last October
    but it has not been ratified. However, as the International Crisis
    Group acknowledges, Armenia does not make normalisation of relations
    conditional on Turkey's admission of genocide.

    Despite modest public relations campaigns in Paris and Washington, and
    though an independent Armenia now exists, Armenians do not have the
    international reach of Zionists or even Tibetans. Few in India have
    heard of their plight and Kolkata's once thriving Armenian community
    is now vanishing. Galstaun's residence is the desolate Nizam palace
    congested with shoddy Government flats; Galstaun Mansions is Queen's
    Mansions. With canny prescience, Hitler asked when he was preparing
    his anti-Jew campaign, "Who speaks today of the annihilation of
    Armenians?" Ohanian's transformation into Ohan and being mistaken for
    Mohan confirms that the Armenian diaspora's destiny is to disappear.

    -- [email protected]
    From: Baghdasarian
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