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ANKARA: 'Politicized Discourse Distorts Debate Over Armenians'

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  • ANKARA: 'Politicized Discourse Distorts Debate Over Armenians'

    'POLITICIZED DISCOURSE DISTORTS DEBATE OVER ARMENIANS'

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 25 2010

    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hayko Bagdat has said the air of negativity
    that exists within the mentality of many in Turkey regarding Armenians
    is obscuring the true identity of that people.

    Bagdat is a spokesperson for the Friends of Hrant Group, established
    in the memory of slain Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink.

    "There is a concrete definition of 'Armenian' in our minds -- and
    there's a negative emphasis that has been attached to it. It must be
    asked, just who are these Armenians?" he commented in an interview
    with Today's Zaman, questioning whether this negative perception is
    a result of experience or a willful attempt to create such an attitude.

    Armenians are a group of people who have a civilization and who have
    lived in Anatolia for a long time, and who until recently had no other
    homeland, Bagdat said, adding that a century of mental manipulation
    has led many to forget this.

    "Let's not forget with the Armenian issue that first and foremost we're
    talking about people. States can do this, but I don't understand how
    everyday people can view the Armenian issue from the point of view of
    an official, dominant ideology. People aren't states. We should set
    everything aside and just feel upset over the people who died. Right
    now, Turkey is the [regional] country in which the least Christians
    live. But it wasn't like that a century ago," he said.

    Bagdat said that the state tried to designate the Armenian issue
    as one that involves foreigners, recalling that in fact there
    are Armenians native to places like Malatya and Trabzon who are
    citizens of this country. He also criticized the state for focusing
    all of its concentration on what US President Barack Obama might say
    regarding the issue on April 24 -- touted by defenders of the Armenian
    "genocide" position as a day of remembrance -- instead of the Armenians
    here. Calling the influential Armenian diaspora important for Armenians
    worldwide but not exciting to him personally, Bagdat commented:
    "You can't do this by getting an invitation to a dinner held by
    George Bush's Republican Party, and attending and then investing in
    his campaign and getting him to say 'genocide.' Bush recently killed
    1.5 million people. Is calling what Bush did a genocide or not calling
    it a genocide going to be of any benefit to humanity whatsoever?"

    Bagdat also spoke about the recently uncovered Cage plan -- an alleged
    military plan to destroy the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK
    Party) through the assassination of prominent non-Muslim figures in
    Turkey -- saying that the current dominant ideology in Turkey wanted
    to perpetuate its own existence through killing Christians. Bagdat
    said that the assassination of Dink brought down this sort of official
    state ideology in part because the Turkish people for the first time
    grieved over a fellow citizen who was an Armenian. Bagdat called for
    an abolishment of political and academic language on such issues,
    saying that a "mentality initiative" was necessary to change minds. He
    also commented on the ongoing Ergenekon trial, saying it would be an
    important test of where the nation stands and in which direction it
    is heading.
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