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Bardakjian And Suny Undermine Interests Of Armenia And Diaspora

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  • Bardakjian And Suny Undermine Interests Of Armenia And Diaspora

    BARDAKJIAN AND SUNY UNDERMINE INTERESTS OF ARMENIA AND DIASPORA
    By Appo Jabarian

    Executive Publisher/Managing Editor
    USA Armenian Life Magazine
    July 6, 2011

    On the Diaspora Front

    In an effort to inject confusion about the timely concept of getting
    the Armenian Diaspora better organized, Kevork Bardakjian, Professor
    of Armenian Studies at the University of Michigan, attempted to throw
    the monkey wrench in the visionary process of "Elective Diaspora
    Leadership."

    In a July 1 interview with Azg.am, referring to the democratic
    representation of the Diaspora and Armenians as a whole, Prof. Suny
    stated: "It's an eternal problem [as to] who shall speak first,
    who last. They're saying, let's hold elections. Harut Sassounian was
    proposing, let every 20 thousand Armenians have one representative;
    let them form a central council. In my opinion, that is utopia. ... No
    such thing is possible. The [political] parties would not allow [it].

    If the parties do not have a ruling position, they would oppose
    anything."

    But Prof. Suny contradicts himself by cheerleading its necessity,
    saying: "For example, they're saying, if Turkey acknowledges the
    Genocide, we will seek the defense of our rights. Who is going to
    present our demands? Who is going to speak on Diaspora's behalf?

    Through such questions, answers are created, that we need to unify.

    But how?"

    On the Home Front

    In an interview with Azerbaijan's propaganda mouthpiece az.apa.az,
    Professor Ronald Grigor Suny of Michigan University and Director
    of Eisenberg Institute of Historical Studies, sounded more like a
    political operative than a scholar.

    Injecting the Armenian psyche with a sense of self-defeatism, Prof.

    Suny said: "The facts that Armenians are the majority and ought to
    be able to rule themselves in Karabakh has to be reconciled with the
    territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, possibly though a federal status
    that is real, gives Karabakh full autonomy but maintains a de jure
    association with Azerbaijan."

    By propagating "a de jure association with Azerbaijan," Suny shamefully
    chooses to ignore the facts of history relating to Stalin-era carving
    of Armenian territories of Artsakh (Karabagh) and Nakhitchevan from
    then newly Sovietized Armenia; and forcibly ceding them to the then
    newly Sovietized Azerbaijan.

    Adding insult to injury, Suny added: "How those attitudes will be
    overcome is very difficult to say, but it is a first important step
    toward integration into the Euro-Atlantic structure, which is based
    on forgetting the negative aspects of the past."

    A study of Prof. Suny's biography points to the fact that during
    the Soviet era, when it was needed to weaken the Soviet Empire,
    certain academics amplified the need to recognize the "nationalist
    movements of the non-Russian Soviet peoples" such as Armenians,
    Azeris and Georgians.

    After the demise of the Soviet Union in 1991, several nationalist
    movements propelled the soviet republics to independent statehood.

    Many of the newly freed states became the "darlings" of some circles
    in the West for petroleum considerations, except for Armenia and
    others. Georgia and Azerbaijan led the pack of "darling" nations. And
    as such, they continue to "benefit" from the support lent by professors
    such as Ronald Grigor Suny. In Suny's interview, the beneficiary
    continues to be none other than war-mongering Azerbaijan.

    Twin "Open-minded" Professors

    Suny has no qualms about obstructing justice for freedom-seeking
    Armenians in Artsakh (Karabagh) seeking self-determination in a
    reversal of unjust and forcible Armenian land giveaway by Stalin. And
    Bardakjian does not hesitate to filibuster the right of Diaspora
    Armenians seeking to be better organized through democratically-held
    elections.

    Both are very knowledgeable academics, but they put their expertise to
    counter-productive uses, effectively seeking to demoralize Armenians
    both in the Homeland and Diaspora; and to undermine the interests of
    both Armenia and Diaspora.


    From: Baghdasarian
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