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ANKARA: Armenian Archive Digitalization Might Not Shed Light On 1915

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  • ANKARA: Armenian Archive Digitalization Might Not Shed Light On 1915

    ARMENIAN ARCHIVE DIGITALIZATION MIGHT NOT SHED LIGHT ON 1915, SCHOLARS SAY

    Hurriyet
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=the-national-archives-of-armenia-goes-online-in-may-2011-04-28
    May 2 2011
    Turkey

    Armenia's National Archives will begin posting hundreds of thousands
    of documents online this month, yet some researches have cautioned
    against optimists who say the primary sources will shed light on the
    events of 1915.

    "Armenia was not a center of anything in 1915," historian Ara Sarafyan,
    the director of the London-based Gomidas Institute, recently told the
    Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review. "The administrative center of
    the Russian military and civil governments was in Tbilisi.

    That is the place to look for original records. Armenia has bits
    and pieces but I doubt members of the Turkish Historical Society
    [which hotly disputes Armenian genocide claims] even know where to
    begin looking."

    Nonetheless, Amatuni Virabyan, the director of the National Archives
    of Armenia, said the documents will include many from 1915 - the year
    in which Armenians claim the Ottomans committed a genocide against
    their kin during World War I.

    "The biggest reason we are transferring our archive to digital format
    is to present it to the attention of international researchers; the
    complete collection will be online by 2015," said Virabyan, adding
    that their archives were already open to anyone, including a number
    of researchers who have already come to visit from Turkey.

    Kemal Cicek, an expert on the Armenian Desk of the state-established
    Turkish Historical Society, said Turkish historians and researchers
    were working on the Armenian archives but added that the documents
    there contained little information about 1915.

    "It is not important that Armenia has opened their archives. The
    documents they have are not originals but copies brought from Russia.

    Let the Tashnak archives at the Jerusalem Patriarchate and Boston be
    opened. The mentioned archives will reveal the cooperation Tashnaks
    had with Great Britain, the United States and other allies [during
    World War I]," he said in reference to Turkish claims that rebel
    Ottoman Armenians were colluding with the empire's war-time enemies.

    Sarafyan also suggested 1915-related material was to be found in
    Jerusalem. "Armenian archives related to the genocide issue are in
    Jerusalem. It is where a great deal of the Istanbul Patriarchate's
    records can also be found today regarding the genocide issue. These
    materials have been cited by some Armenian historians who had
    privileged access to these records in the past. They are therefore
    relevant because of their actual content and the fact they have
    already been cited by some authors."

    The Gomidas Institute academic also suggested Armenian scholars conduct
    research at important Turkish archives such as the military archives
    or the Prime Ministry Ottoman Archives.

    "Who in Armenia [has worked on] those archives? I am not aware
    of anyone from Armenia working in Turkey. If you want to see good
    research on the genocide issue based on the Prime Ministry archives,
    look at the work of Hilmar Kaiser, Fuat Dundar or Ugur Ungör. Frankly,
    the level of scholarship on the Armenian genocide is very poor in
    Armenia," said Sarafyan, who has been working at the State Archives
    of the Turkish Prime Ministry.

    'Boston archives limited'

    But Sarafyan also disputed Cicek's assertion that the Boston archives
    could shed light on genocide claims.

    "The Boston materials are archives of the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation, or ARF. Turkish historians who claim they are relevant
    to 1915 are fishing," he said. "They do not know what is in there,
    but it suits them to make such claims. ARF archives in Boston are
    limited in terms of the information on 1915. Their organization in
    the Ottoman Empire was paralyzed by the Ottoman government, who also
    had informants within Armenian ranks. However it would be good to
    see what these archives hold."

    The Zoryan Institute collected the private papers of people related
    to the events of 1915 in Boston in the 1980s, said Sarafyan.

    "A lot of people gave Zoryan their private papers but they have been
    kept under lock and key. As a historian and an Armenian, I have always
    stated the inaccessibility of these records, especially as they have
    been collected from private individuals, is a disgrace," he said.

    The National Archives of Armenia can be viewed online starting in
    May at www.armarchives.am.




    From: A. Papazian
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