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A peace to be won - Hans Lukas Kieser

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  • A peace to be won - Hans Lukas Kieser

    A peace to be won


    http://azadalik.wordpress.com/2011/05/08/a-peace-to-be-won/
    May 8, 2011

    *Hans-Lukas Kieser presented his paper on 29th January 2011 in
    Istanbul, in a meeting organised by Human Rights Association, Turkey,
    Istanbul Branch, Committee Against Racism and Discrimination, with the
    participation of Prof. Fikret Adanir as the discussant.The meeting was
    sponsored by Anadolu Kultur and Iletisim Publishing house.

    Hans ` Lukas Kieser

    A book title like The Missed Peace, as I had entitled my book eleven
    years ago, inevitably raises the question about a peace to be won.

    In this talk, dear audience, I would like to say a few words on the
    sources, topics and the human rights perspective of The Missed Peace,
    and first on how I came to write it.

    While studying history in Basel in the 1980s, I was confronted with
    unrest in Turkey at the time because I met refugees of my own age who
    had fled the military junta of 1980, not a few of whom had been
    tortured. More generally, I met a number of migrant families who had
    fled situations devoid of prospects for the future in eastern Anatolia
    and elsewhere.

    Peace is a huge challenge; something very precious. It has many
    dimensions. One can describe it as the result of good and fair
    interactions based on elementary human rights. Their lack or, on the
    contrary, their functioning are mostly the result of a long history.
    This is what led me to study the history of the country, from where my
    new acquaintances came.

    I soon realized that the roots of many questions went back to the
    early 20th century and thus to the way Turkey was remade in the 1910s
    and 1920s. I learnt the national master narrative of Turkey's
    foundation, and also some counter narratives as articulated, angrily
    and fragmentarily, among the exiles.

    I realized also that behind those turbulent decades stood a century of
    ultimately unsuccessful efforts to reform the Ottoman state and to
    make it a rechtsstaat, i.e. where the rule of law prevails.

    In all this, there was Ottoman, there was European, and there was
    global history. Thus an intriguing challenge to a student of history.

    I ransacked libraries and bookshops, including in Istanbul and Ankara,
    looking after a comprehensive and ` hopefully ` readymade, ultimate
    account. I found a lot of instructive material, but not the account I
    was looking for: a history book that bridged the development from then
    to now; fathomed it both analytically and emotionally; and included
    all involved groups. Both the aporias and the ressources of history
    had to be addressed. They had been, as I began to feel, submerged,
    `buried alive' as it were.

    In those years, I had the chance to meet a number of inspiring
    colleagues, among them a few Türkiyeli, who helped me a lot to develop
    my own approach. As an example I may mention the accidental encounter
    with Hamit Bozarslan in the Kurdish Institute in Paris in July 1990. I
    may als mention a book chapter of 1996 on nationalist history writing
    and the Armenians by Fikret Adanır, or the Tanzimat'tan Cumhuriyet'e
    Türkiye Ansikolopedisi, etc. Historical researches depend on intense
    interactions with colleagues, existing literature, sources and, if
    possible, witnesses.

    Early on I found the writings of missionaries on the spot, which again
    I encountered accidentally, particularly helpful. They gave insights
    into the realities and late Ottoman dramas of a number of the regions
    from where the refugees came. At that first stage I particularly
    remember to have read books by Jakob Künzler, an orderly but de facto
    medical doctor, who lived in Urfa from 1899 to 1922. He gave fresh and
    sober accounts of the life in and around late Ottoman Urfa ` the
    occasional use of neo-pietist language or a few clichés
    notwithstanding.

    1

    Human rights have been formulated in the 18th century in what we are
    used to call `secular language', but in their substance they go back
    thousands of years. Already in antiquity, humanly inspired authors
    criticised slavery. The famous words `you shall love your neighbour as
    yourself' and `treat others as you'd like others to treat yourself'
    are early interactive definitions of what the Enlightenment enshrined
    as a catalogue of positive rights. They were commands as well as
    utopian statements.

    The Missed Peace took a human rights perspective insofar as it
    attempted to consider all human beings involved in its approach as
    bearers of (potential) human rights and to look at history through the
    eyes of ordinary people, not exclusively of elites or particular
    groups, and their preoccupations.

    This was a methodological decision. It served to question situations,
    decisions and developments according to a general, though utopian
    benchmark that was well known also in the late Ottoman Empire. I may
    remind that the Ottoman Reform Edict of 1856 established individual
    and collective rights, abolished torture and banned contemptuous
    speech, including the word gavur.

    The Missed Peace chose the benchmark of human rights, because it
    wanted to be, first of all, a history of human beings and their
    interactions in the eastern provinces, not of abstract forces or
    categories, though it considered those as well.

    Human rights served as a benchmark to clarify how to conceive of a
    human being and of human society. In this vein, the book attempted to
    combine a finding of facts and factors with a lively conscience of the
    often unrealized basic rights, and the human dignity, of the people
    involved.

    The Missed Peace's approach was not naive, but I bore in mind Hannah
    Arendt's words in her book on The Origins of Totalitarianism. There,
    she underlines with regard to Eastern Europe how serious the challenge
    of a fair ethnoreligious cohabitation was; and that a liberal humanism
    could not suffice to meet this challenge. A holy seriousness and a
    horror at human abysses was required. `

    There are multiple categories of historical narratives, the oldest and
    most common probably a narrative that confirms the historical identity
    and legitimacy of particular groups or rulers. Generally, such
    narratives are not possible without devaluing others, in particular
    victims or critics of the rule and of the group to which they are
    addressed.

    The horizon of human rights, on the contrary, is an open, utopian
    horizon which allows to address soberly different actors and groups,
    and to present all kinds of facts.

    Opting for a human rights perspective, The Missed Peace attempted to
    restore a minimum of dignity to people who had been drastically
    deprived of even their most elementary rights, if not their lives, as
    was the case with hundred thousands of them. A fair historiographical
    treatment was this minimum ` if historiography ever was a science that
    had to do with truth(s). Good departments of history insist that it
    has.

    Though it finally amounted to the size of a brick, The Missed Peace
    could not provide an encyclopaedic history of a century. It had to
    make choices and emphasized some places and groups in the history of
    the eastern provinces. It focused in particular on those groups who
    had not only been refused a future in their native home, but ` as I
    just mentioned ` also a minimally fair and dignified place in the
    established, general historiography in and outside Turkey. It
    therefore elaborated on groups, actors and problematic interactions
    that had hitherto been considered only little.

    Coincidently, an over proportional part of victim groups and of their
    offspring respectively came to live as refugees and migrants to
    Switzerland in the 20th, in particular the late 20th century. `

    The Missed Peace attempted not only to provide an overview, but to
    gain a holistic view that included sharp microhistorical insights. It
    looked at particular actors and questioned responsibility on different
    levels.

    It attempted to raise awareness to missed chances, misjudgments,
    conditioned judgments, manipulations and ` at least retrospectively
    speaking ` too easily dismissed potentials for peace. It challenged a
    writing of history that presented war and mass violence as
    unavoidable, if not as functional.

    Misdevelopments and dead-ends in the eastern provinces stood before my
    eyes; and with them the necessity to rethink the situation
    historically.

    Therefore The Missed Peace invited to seriously revisit that course of
    history and the terms used for its description. Even though it
    emphasized responsibility, respectively its lack, it did and could
    however not determine how a definite peace would have been possible.

    In the final analysis, I may add, this final answer does not matter
    today, because change lies only in the future. Writing history is,
    consciously or not, an intervention within today's contexts.

    2

    The challenge for me, 20 years ago, was to write, even if only in
    paradigmatic fragments, a professional history of the eastern
    provinces that encompassed the period from the Tanzimat to the early
    republic. There a human landscape had been destroyed to an extent
    unseen in any other part of the late Ottoman world, not even in the
    Balkans. The eastern provinces were the principal arena of the first
    modern genocide in the so-called Old world of Europe and the Ottoman
    Empire.

    In terms of peace, all historically involved groups had to come to
    terms with lasting damages that had a vast impact upon the present.
    This has become even more manifest in the last twenty years.

    In a strange logical correlation with this matter of fact however, the
    history of that region had remained under-articulated. And the
    responsibility for this situation, 20 years ago, lay mainly with
    political and academic Turkey. This again had reasons of its own that
    needed to be grasped.

    For my research a variety of sources was required in order to achieve
    dense descriptions and multiple perspectives. As mentioned, in
    particular missionary sources, especially of Americans, proved to be
    useful. The missionaries were both insiders and outsiders in late
    Ottoman society, in touch both with different internal and external
    actors, which made them privileged participative observers. More
    intensely than others they questioned existing conditions.

    Let me say a few words more about those missionaries, in particular
    the Americans.

    They were insiders, insofar as, after a higher education in the US,
    they came to remain, at least many of them, and not to turn back after
    a few years of work on the ground. There were a few families of which
    several generations settled down in the Ottoman world. They knew its
    languages, life and social realities.

    They were outsiders, because they came from quite another world. In
    1819, when the first missionaries arrived from Boston, the Americans
    and the Ottomans knew very little about each other. The people sent
    from Boston had only read a couple of books on the Ottoman world
    available at that time.

    Most Protestant missionaries were part of a network that historians
    call the Protestant International. This informal NGO network ` in
    contrast to the more formal catholic organizations under the control
    of Rome ` emerged from Calvinist and Huguenot networks of the 16th and
    17th centuries. In the 18th century it began to establish first
    Protestant missions. The first American overseas mission, the American
    Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, the ABCFM, was founded in
    1810 in Boston.

    The ABCFM men and women brought with them strong notions of what we
    can call a modern millennialism. The notion of a millennium, or global
    kingdom of Jesus to be established, was particularly strong among
    Americans. This had to do with the own experience of a history that
    led, within 250 years, from first migrant settlements to the
    foundation of a propserous and modern US-American republic that was
    widely seen as a model for the future. As this achievement had been
    possible, surely much more was possible still.

    For the ABCFM community, the young US was clearly not the fulfilment
    of history; it left them unsatisfied and unsettled, namely because it
    lacked fair and equal interactions with the native Americans, or
    Indians, and the Afro-Americans. Thus it remained far from what the
    ABCFM community wished to be a modern society in accordance with the
    Gospel.

    This, in short, was the historical starting point for an American
    overseas mission. This mission was a project beyond the new republic,
    and it was inspired by a modern, prophetic reading of the Gospel and
    by contemporary progresses in science, industry and democratic
    thought.

    All this informed the missionaries' projection of a better future. To
    this new future they wanted to contribute at the forefront and become
    agents of an educational and spiritual globalization ` in the Ottoman
    eastern provinces, beginning with the early Tanzimat.

    In a way they were utopian activists, and, compared with most
    continental Europeans, optimists with regard to historical progress.
    However, they combined their visions with a strong pragmatism. They
    founded seminal institutions in the Ottoman world.

    In rare moments of outspokenness, ABCFM members in the early 19th
    century gave voice to the vision that within a further 200 years
    science and technology would have transformed the material conditions
    on the globe, while the Gospel, understood in a modern fashion, would
    then have reached its remotest corners. They concluded that then the
    earth would be ready for the millennium, that is for the establishment
    of peace and justice on earth, in other words for Jesus' omnipresence.

    For those in the ABCFM community who were rather optimistic, this
    would happen in a more or less linear evolution; others saw
    apocalyptical breakdowns on the road to what they believed to be the
    goal of humanity. They did not, however, promote breakdowns in order
    to reach this goal.

    In contrast, e.g., to the Socialist International. What Karl Marx a
    few decades later called the classless society, which would put an end
    to human alienation, reminds of course of the prophetic millennial
    vision. Marx elaborated his vision in the secular language of a
    dialectical, class-struggle-centered materialism. Religious legacy he
    dismissed as useless or even detrimental. For him the French
    Revolution was as a seminal paradigm to be developed and to become a
    global social revolution wherefrom the road would lead to that
    classless society.

    The French revolution and the Napoleonic wars, including the invasion
    of Egypt and Palestine, were important too for the Protestant
    International, because in its eyes they proved that history was
    greatly in motion and had to be actively shaped.

    The Missed Peace, in short, has profited a great deal from missionary
    reports and from analysing the new interactions and perspectives these
    outsider-insiders brought into the Ottoman world. At the same time,
    however, it used sources from Catholic missionaries, natives on the
    ground, diplomats and the Ottoman archives.

    Id' much have liked to use sources like those recently published by
    Arsen Yarman, or the postcards published by Osman Köker, or relevant
    new researches like that by Ohannes KılıçdaÄ?ı who went through
    Armenian newspapers in the eastern provinces, or the research by Edip
    GölbaÅ? on Hamidian Yezidi policy, or by Selim Deringil on mass
    conversions of Armenians in the 1890s, etc. But they were not yet
    available. Let me also mention the substantial recent research outside
    Turkey on late Ottoman history and on the Armenian genocide. In fact,
    a fair amount of relevant research has been done in and outside Turkey
    since The Missed Peace was published.

    3

    My new book The Nearest East, if I may shortly mention it, adopts a
    different approach. It is more concerned with the American side about
    which I have now just spoken. Moreover it focuses on the whole Middle
    East. It locates the American religious and educational experience
    within a history of American interaction with the Middle East from the
    late 18th century up to the late 20th century.

    It is in that book that I emphasize the notion of a modern American
    millennialism which I understand as a powerful, arguably the most
    powerful modern ideology. Those motivated by its ideas have achieved a
    lot. They founded lasting institutions. They have often demonstrated a
    tremendous capacity of spiritual and material recreation after trial
    and error. Turkey has appropriated a lot of that American imput, last
    not least the private universities based on the American model.

    However, American millennialism, as explored in The Nearest East, also
    included risks, blind spots, too hasty logics, too much trial and
    error, too less patience, and in particular, as I'd argue, an
    insufficient fathoming of the Ottoman destruction in the 1910s as
    measured by its own, again and again optimistic language.

    After 1917, President Wilson's `missionary Near East diplomacy', as
    the historian Grabill has called it, was refused the opportunity to
    implement any of its goals, namely an Armenian autonomy. The
    missionaries, by the way, favoured federal models rather than
    independent nation-states. In retrospective, it is easy to argue that
    they were not realistic enough. Their part of truth at least has today
    also to be taken into account ` and, if we want to be realistic, the
    high price political Turkey has paid up to the early 21st century for
    the inauspicious way that it chose in the 1910s and 1920s to reign
    over the eastern provinces.

    The experience of the World Wars, President Wilson's unfulfilled
    visions, and the American exercise of super power since World War II
    induced a change: in the second half of the 20th century it was often
    no longer the peacefully evolutive, but an apocalypticist
    millennialism that prevailed, especially with regard to the Middle
    East.

    This kind of millennialism reflected the experience of National
    Socialist Germany. Thus it anticipated global clashes in which sides
    had to be taken timely for strategical reasons. Since 1948, and even
    more so since the end of the Soviet Union, this American attitude
    again centres clearly on the Middle East.

    More than any other region of the world the Middle East, we may argue,
    has experienced visionary, peacefully constructive as well as
    strategically calculated, partly destructive US attitudes during the
    last 200 years.

    Desirous to be peacemakers, the ABCFM missionaries and a president
    like Jimmy Carter certainly made important positive contributions. Up
    to now, nevertheless, the American presidents could not become the
    ultimate brokers of peace in the Middle East though most of them
    aspired very much to do so.

    4

    Peace, we may conclude from this, has first of all to be won by those
    on the ground. To achieve it, all actors on the ground bear
    responsibility according to their strength. The benchmark of this
    responsibility are, again, the human rights.

    This leads us back to the question of how to win peace in the eastern provinces.

    The Missed Peace had focused on how the set goal of a plural,
    ethnically heterogenous Ottoman rechtsstaat remained unachieved.
    Related to this it focused on three persistent problems in the eastern
    provinces: a so-called Kurdish, a so-called Armenian, and what we may
    call an eastern-Alevi question.

    An Ottoman rechtsstaat would have demanded strong convictions and
    compromises from all sides for a common political project. It is
    intriguing to see, e.g., in the sources that many Armenians in the
    late Ottoman provinces supported the state much more than many of
    their Muslim neighbours because, as the weaker part, they had to put
    their hopes in a rechtsstaat. Therefore the general problem was not
    simply strained interactions between the state on the one hand and
    large parts of the Kurds, the Armenians and the eastern Alevis on the
    other ` but first of all the absence of equal law and of clarified,
    inclusionary political perspectives.

    In short, the hierarchical plural society could not be reformed to an
    egalitarian plural society during the last Ottoman century. In a
    general way, the problems had been addressed in the Ottoman reform
    edict of 1856. More concrete was the reform plan for the eastern
    provinces of February 8th 1914. It was based upon a similar plan of
    October 1895 and proposed elaborate and monitored solutions. In
    particular, it prescribed to implement under the control of two
    foreign inspectors an egalitarian ethnoreligious participation in the
    regional councils and the security forces as well as the official use
    of the regional languages.

    Against such reform proposals, the main players in Turkey, to put it
    shortly, reacted with the fist, and they coopted those forces on the
    ground which were ready to lend the fist, but not to share a common
    political vision. In contrast, the Committee of Union and Progress had
    begun to share in 1907 a common, though fragile and short-lived
    political project with the main Armenian political party.

    The Missed Peace argued that, in the final analysis, the Young Turks
    wanted, once fully in power in 1913, firstly, unchecked political
    sovereignty and, secondly, a modern, industrial society. Shared
    democratic sovereignty, however, and thus a functioning, participatory
    society of the people living on the ground were unfamiliar notions to
    them.

    Instead, they embraced Turkism. Radical ethnonationalism is, as again
    Hannah Arendt has lucidly stated, an escape from the difficult
    responsibilities a heterogenous, participatory society entails. The
    Turkism of those decades was like an ideology of salvation in the face
    of imperial depression. (I have tried to describe this in another book
    translated into Turkish, TürklüÄ?e Ä°htida.)

    The leaders of the 1910s and 1920s succeeded finally in establishing a
    republican project that combined sovereignty, Turkism and the
    aspiration to modernity. This was no mean achievement in those
    turbulent times. But it did not succeed in integrating even the people
    remaining on the ground ` after more than three million non-Muslim
    Ottoman citizens had been killed or expulsed.

    An attitude that reclaimed such a course of history as unavoidable and
    necessary was and is vertiginous, because it inscribes mass violence
    into its own project. It closes the door to a salutary, humble and
    frank historical revisiting. Instead of being exposed, crime remains
    inscribed like a bad seed.

    The Missed Peace called to other scripts and notions and, between its
    lines, to a conception of citizenship that had been missed a hundred
    years ago: a Türkiyeli citizenship beyond the ethnoreligious
    boundaries that were functional in times of bloodshed.

    Better wisdom includes bitter truths. In The Missed Peace I have tried
    to omit all what seemed me to be false and cheap compromise in history
    writing. But even if I used vivid and strong language, I did not
    pretend to be a judge. The late Ottoman challenges were huge, and the
    European powers, the main global players at that time, inconsistent,
    to say the least, toward the Ottoman world.

    Let me conclude. Peace today means to come solidly to terms with
    dead-end notions and, above all, with unsolved crimes. They are a
    toxin to any society. Peace requires the strength and courage to look
    back to committed horrors for them not to continue to haunt the
    future. Turkey is stronger today than it was 20 years ago; imminent
    crises and inner weakness can no longer serve as an excuse against
    fresh and accurate terms. In fact, the last ten years have seen
    important openings.

    Thus peace means to find new terms; to establish these in the academic
    and political discourse; in monuments, museums and memorial
    landscapes; and, hopefully, in humble acts of disarming frankness and
    generosity. Peace can be won, it can even be won with the main victims
    of chaos and mass crime; necessarily it includes horror at human
    abysses.




    From: A. Papazian
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