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Book: Rebel Land

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  • Book: Rebel Land

    REBEL LAND B

    A.V. Club New York
    http://www.avclub.com/articles/christopher-de -bellaigue-rebel-land,39084/
    March 11 2010

    Review by Vadim Rizov March 11, 2010
    Author: Christopher de Bellaigue
    Publisher: Penguin Press

    Rebel Land: Unraveling The Riddle Of History In A Turkish Town
    originated from an error. In a 2001 New York Review Of Books piece
    about Turkey's history, Christopher de Bellaigue stated in passing
    that the deaths of Armenians in Turkey during the 1890s and the
    infamous genocides of 1915 were aberrations rather than a calculated,
    coordinated, state-endorsed effort. Many letters of outrage later, he
    realized he'd gotten his information "only from Turkish or pro-Turkish
    authors." Mortified, de Ballaigue pulled up stakes and decided to
    move to one place where he could learn about Turkey's 20th century
    of ethnic conflict in microcosm. He ended up in the town of Varto,
    where he spent more than two years piecing together the narratives
    he heard, slowly gaining local trust. The result is Rebel Land,
    a rich but problematic history.

    De Bellaigue reaches back, briefly, to Varto's origins, but really gets
    down to business (some 60 pages in) in the 1890s, with the formation
    of Hamidiye regiments--auxiliary cavalry regiments composed of Sunni
    Kurds whose harassment of Armenians was the opening governmental salvo
    in a long history of repression. The many struggles frequently centered
    around the same questions: What does it mean to be Turkish, what past
    wrongs can be redressed, and what can be done? What de Bellaigue
    sees is often depressing: An early interview with Varto's district
    governor yields the flat assertion "We have no minorities in Turkey."

    Rebel Land is thorough, serious, and informative, a scholarly
    investigation that pieces together histories the country itself could
    never officially acknowledge. It's also often confusing. Though de
    Bellaigue eventually minimizes the number of personal interjections,
    already-hard-to-follow stories are interrupted by walks, observations,
    and reflections that tend to stop the book dead rather than enriching
    it. His exhaustive research is all there on the page, and his
    admirable unwillingness to simplify anything can make things impossibly
    opaque. (Typical sentence: "According to people I spoke to in Varto,
    the Kurdish response to the firman was founded on expectations of
    pillage... and not on sectarian hatred, for the Sunni Kurds did not
    generally hate the Armenians, certainly not as intensely as they hated
    the Alevis.") Tribes and terms are introduced with dizzying speed,
    often out of order: De Bellaigue alludes to PKK leader Apo many,
    many times before explaining (some 200 pages in) that Apo is actually
    Abdullah Ocalan, and what he did. Much of this is fascinating and
    comprehensive, but the way he presents it is often a mess; it's a
    valuable correction, but getting through is a task for the patient.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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