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Gunaysu: Denial Is A Hate Crime And Denialist Discourse Is Hate Spee

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  • Gunaysu: Denial Is A Hate Crime And Denialist Discourse Is Hate Spee

    GUNAYSU: DENIAL IS A HATE CRIME AND DENIALIST DISCOURSE IS HATE SPEECH
    Ayse Gunaysu

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2011/08/11/gunaysu-denial/
    Aug 11 2011

    "It is as if a general orphan-like spirit floats over the [Muslim]
    quarter. Laziness, an apathetic attitude toward life is the character
    that appears among the Muslims. In contrast, if you enter the quarter
    of the Christians, your heart feels happiness; you find superbly
    constructed houses, which testify to the proprietors' interested in
    life, and to their beautiful disposition, and clean and broad streets.

    In contrast to the immobility of the Muslims, the Christians are
    always on the move. In this respect, they enjoy the good things of
    life much more... The difference is even more obvious in regard to
    education. Whereas the Christian citizens generally know how to read
    and write, more or less, the Muslims are very much behind."1

    The jacket of Kieser's 'Nearest East' Ahmet Serif--an Ittihadist
    intellectual, journalist, traveler, and Ottoman government
    official--wrote these words after he visited Marsovan (today's Merzifon
    in the Black Sea region of Turkey); his travel notes were published in
    Tanin, a paper close to the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP). The
    year was 1911--four years before the world's first "modern" genocide
    was set into motion with a carefully designed plan.

    And how did Ahmet Serif feel about the picture he vividly illustrated?

    "From the faces of the schoolgirls and schoolboys, life and vitality
    burst forth. Let us not lie: I did not feel admiration for this, but
    jealousy. I did not want to see this. Men were coming from America
    and I don't know where, and creating in the most remote villages of
    Turkey models of civilization. Sad and ashamed as an Ottoman, I left,"
    he wrote after his visit to the American school in the town of Hajin
    in Adana.2 There was a significant Armenian population in Hajin,
    and the school was established by American Protestant missionaries
    like many others in old Armenia.

    I am thankful to Hans-Lukas Kieser for bringing these quotations to
    light, for showing an Ittihadist intellectual's outrageously blatant,
    audaciously straightforward, and unreservedly heartfelt confession
    of hate for everything good that did not belong to the Ottoman Muslims.

    In his 2010 book Nearest East, Kieser quotes Serif to show how Muslim
    intellectuals and members of Ittihadist circles felt humiliated,
    excluded, and threatened by the American Protestant missionaries'
    export of renaissance to the eastern vilayets of the Ottoman Empire,
    where Armenian communities were ready to absorb and learn for social,
    intellectual, emotional, religious, and historical reasons. What struck
    me the most, however, was that unreserved expression of jealousy that,
    as we know, paved the way to hatred: "I did not feel admiration for
    this, but jealousy. I did not want to see this."

    It was hate, stemming not only from religious or ethnic reasons,
    but for social and economic reasons, that played a great part both
    in the genocidal will among large parts of the establishment and of
    the local population.

    Although I have just started reading Ugur Umit Ungor and Mehmet
    Polatel's groundbreaking book Confiscation and Destruction, which deals
    with the plunder of Armenian property during and after the genocide,
    I have already come across several references to such expressed
    envy. Ungor and Polatel quote Joseph Pomiankowski (1866-1929), the
    Habsburg military attaché who served in the Ottoman Empire during
    World War I. "He noticed--with irony--that after the Young Turks
    ascertained that Armenians 'enriched' themselves, their discourse
    led to 'a violent displacement of the Greeks and Armenians from all
    professions, which offered a possibility of acquisition and enrichment
    (Bereicherung),'" they wrote. "Pomiankowski had seen very clearly
    'that the Turks looked to the flourishing settlements of the Armenians
    in eastern Anatolia and Cilicia with envy and anger (Neid und Wut),
    in comparison with which, the Moslem homes almost everywhere constitute
    a picture of poverty and misery." 3

    At the cost of deviating from the main line, I can't help but
    remember how the Turkish left has always preached that imperialism
    was responsible for Turkey's economic and social backwardness. This
    is a premise shared by nearly all sectors of Turkish society, from
    socialists to nationalists and advocates of Turk-Islam synthesis. The
    majority of the Turkish intelligentsia and left, however, never
    established any link between Turkey's underdevelopment and the
    destruction of a newly flourishing commercial bourgeoisie which would
    have eventually been transformed into an industrial bourgeoisie and
    generated the accumulation of capital to lay the groundwork for a more
    or less healthy capitalist development, overcoming the pre-capitalist
    obstacles to development. Blaming others instead of oneself is always
    more convenient, relieving, and harmless.

    Ungor and Polatel mention the extent of the Armenians' economic
    destruction as follows: "In this process of persecution, the ethnically
    heterogeneous Ottoman economic universe was subjected to comprehensive
    and violent forms of ethnic homogenization. The distribution of
    Armenian wealth was a central part of this process.

    The genocide ripped and tore apart the fabric of urban, provincial,
    and national economies, destroying market relationships and maiming
    economic patterns that had endured for many centuries in the Empire."

    4

    Just to give a few statistics to remind the readers what the
    extermination of Christian trade and business people meant for the
    national economy of the Ottoman Empire, I will once more quote from
    Confiscation and Destruction: "Commerce in the interior was heavily
    Armenian in the east (and Greek in the west), even though Turks were
    also involved in domestic trade. For example, in 1884, of the 110
    merchants in the north-eastern provincial capital Trabzon, for domestic
    and international trade a vital port city, 40 were Armenian and 42,
    Pontic Greek. According to a 1913 study on Anatolia by the Armenian
    parliamentarian and writer Krikor Zohrab, of the 166 importers, 141
    were Armenians and 13, Turks. Of the 9,800 shopowners and craftsmen,
    6,800 were Armenians and 2,550, Turks; of the 150 exporters, 127
    were Armenians and 23Turks; of the 153 industrialists, 130 were
    Armenians and 20 were Turks; and finally, of the 37 bankers, 32 were
    Armenians. In the six eastern provinces, 32 Armenian moneylenders plied
    their trade versus only 5 Turkish ones. On the eve of the genocide,
    in early 1915, of the 264 Ottoman industrial establishments, only 42
    belonged to Muslims and 172 to non-Muslims." 5

    These figures alone indicate the extent of economic destruction
    willfully carried out by the Ottoman government, which put the
    country's development back a century--a fact overlooked by the heated
    antagonists of imperialism in Turkey who are, of course, against
    nationalism but are unable to look and see beyond the horizon of
    Turkish nationalism.

    Now, returning to Marsovan, only four years after Ahmet Serif confessed
    his jealousy of Armenian life there, the Armenians of Marsovan were
    wiped out and their wealth plundered. Nothing was left for Ahmet
    Serif to be jealous of. Islam reigned everywhere.

    The extermination of the Armenians of Marsovan--half of the total
    population of 25,000 in 1915--began in early May with searches of
    arms, accompanied by arrests and tortures. "On Saturday 26th June,
    about 1 p.m., the gendarmes went through the town gathering up all the
    Armenian men they could find--old and young, rich and poor, sick and
    well. In some cases houses were broken into, and sick men dragged from
    their beds. They were imprisoned in the barracks, and during the next
    few days were sent off towards Amasia in batches of from thirty to one
    hundred and fifty. They were sent on foot and many were robbed of shoes
    and other articles of clothing. Some were in chains." 6 On July 3 or 4,
    the women and children of the town were ordered to get ready to leave
    on the following Wednesday. But it started even earlier. On Tuesday,
    at about 3:30 a.m., people were ordered to start moving at once. "Some
    were dragged from their beds without even sufficient clothing." The
    deportation continued at intervals for about two weeks.

    It was estimated that only a few hundred Armenians were left out of
    some 12,000. Even the Armenian girl students, teachers, and officials
    of the American College were sent away. The bulk of the deportees
    were massacred on their way to Amasya shortly after their departure.

    What Ahmet Serif admired and hated at the same time was destroyed,
    with property changing hands, as well. The much-envied was theirs at
    last. "In Merzifon the houses of Armenian deportees were occupied
    by Ottoman government officials. The furniture was often stolen to
    furnish private homes as well as government buildings. In as much as
    the Abandoned Properties Commission could function properly, it stored
    unlooted furniture in the Armenian church. The more common things
    are thrown into an empty square and auctioned or sold for a song." 7

    Yes, we don't need any formal legal framework to acknowledge that
    denial is a hate crime and that denialist discourse is hate speech,
    but let's nevertheless remember what the European Union--at whose
    door Turkey has been knocking for years, furious at the hosts' lack of
    hospitality when the door is not opened wide--has laid down about hate
    speech and hate crime. In 2009, the Council of Europe published the
    "Manual on Hate Speech" by Anne Weber. The aim of the manual was "to
    clarify the concept of hate speech and guide policy makers, experts,
    and society as a whole on the criteria followed by the European Court
    of Human Rights in its case law relating to the right to freedom
    of expression," and to single out what should not be considered
    within the boundaries of the right to freedom of expression. In
    doing that, the manual refers to Recommendation No.7 released by the
    European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI), covering
    recommendations for the national legislation of European Council
    Member States (which includes Turkey) to combat racist expression.

    "Public expression, with a racist aim, of a racist ideology, or the
    public denial, with a racist aim, of crimes of genocide or crimes
    against humanity or war crimes should also be penalized by law," read
    Recommendation No. 7. Reference is made in the manual to Article 4
    of the proposal for a council framework decision on combating racism
    and xenophobia, where the intentional committed acts are listed as
    punishable criminal offense. One such offense reads as the "public
    condoning for a racist or xenophobic purpose of crimes of genocide,
    crimes against humanity, and war crimes as defined in Articles 6,
    7 and 8 of the Statute of the International Criminal Court." 8

    Now, such a punishable criminal offense occurs in one's every-day life
    in Turkey--at schools, in the street, on mainstream TV channels and
    dailies, by reputable professors, well-known journalists, historians,
    politicians, and even parliament members. Giving examples would be
    another topic to be dealt with in another article.

    Genocide is not only killing, is not only plunder, is not only rape;
    it is the condemnation to death under unimaginably inhuman conditions,
    and being made to witness that condemnation. Here is an account of
    an eye-witness in Aleppo, one of the destinations designated for
    the deportees: "One sees them in Aleppo on pieces of waste ground,
    in old buildings, courtyards and alleyways, and their condition is
    simply indescribable. They are totally without food and are dying
    of starvation. If one looks into these places where they are living
    one simply sees a huddled mass of dying and dead, all mixed up with
    discarded, ragged clothing, refuse and human excrement, and it is
    impossible to pick out any one portion and describe it as being a
    living person. A number of open carts used to parade the streets,
    looking out for corpses, and it was a common sight to see one of
    these carts pass containing anything up to ten or twelve human bodies,
    all terribly emaciated."9

    These people were the ones Ahmet Serif had admired, envied, and
    hated--for their faces from which "life and vitality burst forth,"
    and for their capacity to enjoy "the good things of life much more."

    Denial of what happened to them is a hate crime, and every word that
    serves to demean the crime is hate speech.

    ***

    1. Hans-Lukas Kieser, Nearest East-American Millennialism and Mission
    to the Middle East, Temple University Press, Philadelphia, Pa., 2010,
    p. 77. The quotation is from Tanin, July 27, 1911; transliterated ed.,
    Ahmet Å~^erif, Tanin, ed. Mehmed C. Börekci (Ankara, Turkey: TTK,
    1999), vol. 1, 257-58, "A Turkish Correspondent's Views" in the Orient
    (April 27, 1910).

    2. Kieser, Nearest East, pp. 76-77. Serif, Tanin, vol. 1, 186-87.

    3. Ugur Umit Ungor and Mehmet Polatel, Confiscation and Destruction:
    The Young Turk Seizure of Armenian Property, Continuum International
    Publishing Group, London, New York, 2011, p.26.

    4. ibid., preface, p. X.

    5. ibid., pp. 18-19.

    6. Toynbee and Bryce, The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire,
    1915-1916, ed., Ara Sarafian, Gomidas Institute, 2005.

    "Marsovan: Narrative of the Principal of the College at Marsovan,"
    communicated by the American Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief,
    p. 354.

    7. Ungor and Polatel, p. 26.

    8. See http://book.coe.int/ftp/3342.pdf.

    9. Toynbee and Bryce, p. 559.


    From: Baghdasarian
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