Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ECONOMIST: The Cost Of Reconstruction

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ECONOMIST: The Cost Of Reconstruction

    THE COST OF RECONSTRUCTION

    Economist
    March 11 2010

    It takes many hands to reconcile two peoples so divided by history

    FOR centuries, a stone bridge spanning the emerald green waters of
    the Akhurian River connected the southern Caucasus to the Anatolian
    plains: a strategic pivot on the Silk Road, running through the ancient
    Armenian kingdom of Ani. Today the bridge would have linked tiny,
    landlocked Armenia to Turkey. But war and natural disasters have
    reduced it to a pair of stubs--a sad commentary on the relations
    between the two states.

    This grim image prompted an Ankara-based think-tank, called Tepav,
    to devise a plan to rebuild the bridge and in so doing to reopen
    the long-sealed land border by stealth. "The idea is to promote
    reconciliation through cross-border tourism," explains Tepav's
    director, Guven Sak. Turkey's doveish president, Abdullah Gul, has
    embraced the plan. The Armenian authorities and diaspora Armenians
    with deep pockets are also interested. If all went to plan, the
    bridge's restoration would only be the start of a broader effort to
    repair hundreds of other Armenian architectural treasures scattered
    across Turkey.

    This semi-official stamp on a relationship in the absence of
    diplomatic ties (foreseen in an accord signed last October, but yet to
    materialise) would be a first. Yet academics, artists and journalists
    are striking peace on their own terms. Hardly a day passes without
    Turks and Armenians hobnobbing at a reconciliation event.

    It is a tricky business because true reconciliation means
    confronting the ghosts of the past. For decades Turkey denied the
    mass extermination of the Ottoman Armenians in 1915. Under Turkey's
    draconian penal code, anyone who dares to describe the Armenian
    tragedy as a genocide can end up in jail or even dead. In 2007 an
    ultra-nationalist teenager murdered Hrant Dink, an Armenian-Turkish
    editor who often wrote about the genocide. Although Ogun Samast pulled
    the trigger it is widely assumed that rogue security officials from
    the "deep state" gave him the gun.

    Dink's death was a turning point. More than 100,000 Turks of all
    stripes showed up at his funeral bearing placards that read: "We are
    all Armenians." Indeed if the murder was intended to stifle debate
    it had the reverse effect. A growing number of Turks are uttering the
    g-word. Ugur Umit Ungor, a young Turkish academic is one of them. His
    research aims to show how many Young Turk cadres involved in the
    massacres continued to thrive after the republic was founded in 1923.

    Others allude to history in more subtle ways. Take Mehmet Binay,
    a Turkish film director. His documentary "Whispering Memories"
    tells the story of ethnic Armenians in a village called Geben, who
    embraced Islam (presumably to avoid death at the hands of Ottoman
    forces). Sobs were heard during a recent screening of the film in
    Yerevan, Armenia's capital.

    Although today's inhabitants of Geben hesitate to call themselves
    Armenians, a growing number of "crypto-Armenians" (people forced
    to change identity) do just that. Their stories were collected and
    recently published by Fethiye Cetin, a Turkish human-rights lawyer,
    whose grandmother revealed her own Armenian roots shortly before
    her death.

    Meanwhile, an army of humble if accidental Armenian ambassadors
    are helping to melt the ice. Turkey says that as many as 70,000
    illegal Armenian migrant workers, mostly women, eke out a living as
    servants and nannies in Istanbul. A recent study by Alin Ozinian,
    an Armenian-Turkish researcher shows that such women arrive full of
    fear of "the Turk" only to return with stories of kindness. If the
    land borders were to be reopened some day, their wages would not have
    to be spent on long, pricey bus rides through Georgia.

    http://www.economist.com/world/internati onal/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15676977
Working...
X