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ANKARA: PM's Dersim Apology To Spur New Look At Republic's Dark Days

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  • ANKARA: PM's Dersim Apology To Spur New Look At Republic's Dark Days

    PM'S DERSIM APOLOGY TO SPUR NEW LOOK AT REPUBLIC'S DARK DAYS

    Today's Zaman
    http://www.todayszaman.com/news-264011-pms-dersim-apology-to-spur-new-look-at-republics-dark-days.html
    Nov 27 2011
    Turkey

    In the wake of Prime Minister Recep Tayip Erdogan's unprecedented
    apology for the 1937 Dersim Massacres last week, rights groups and
    historians say that now is the time for igniting public debate over
    the darkest chapters of Republican history.

    The Wednesday apology, which was the culmination of a debate which
    erupted earlier this month in the ranks of the opposition Republican
    People's Party (CHP), responded to growing calls to "face up to
    the historical legacy of Dersim" among a torrent of major Turkish
    politicians and intellectuals.

    "Erdogan's apology is the first time that these issues have been openly
    discussed and acknowledged at the state level," said Ferhat Kentel,
    sociologist a Å~^ehir University. "This is one of the most important
    steps yet on the path to facing the worst moments of Turkey's past."

    Erdogan apologized on Wednesday for the state killings of 13,806
    people in the southeastern town of Dersim in 1937, stating that
    "Dersim is among the most tragic events in our recent history. It is
    a disaster that should now be questioned with courage." It was the
    first time the Turkish state has offered a public apology to redress
    the events of its past.

    Just as striking as the apology was the suddenness with which public
    debate produced it. The full state apology came just two weeks after
    CHP deputy Huseyin Aygun first called on the state and his party to
    recognize the Dersim massacres in an interview with Sunday's Zaman.

    Aygun, who claims that the Dersim massacre was planned for years by
    high state authorities, including Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, infuriated
    many within CHP ranks but earned a torrent of support among
    intellectuals and politicians looking for recognition of the massacre.

    The willingness of society and the state to so quickly confront Dersim
    now raises the question of whether a powerful precedent has been set.

    "Apologizing for the Dersim tragedy is a historic development in the
    history of republic. It has historic meaning," said Alevi writer and
    chairman of the Confrontation with the Past Association Cafer Solgun.

    Speaking to Sunday's Zaman on Thursday, Solgun stated that the
    apology may provide an important opportunity to petition for more than
    official recognition of the Dersim incident. "As Dersim activists,
    we asked the state to only apologize. That was our priority.

    We now got it. We will now press for other requests from the state.

    Our second demand is to change the name of Tunceli back to Dersim.

    Then state must research the scale of the massacre, find the remains
    of those who were killed. The families of the dead demand this."

    Solgun's calls for further state confrontation with Dersim seemed
    far from wishful thinking after AK Party Deputy Mehmet Metiner's own
    suggestion this week that the government go ahead with such a name
    swap, restoring historic namesake of "Dersim" to the region that was
    the scene of the massacres.

    The momentum which Solgun claims has been won in the Dersim case
    raises the question of how the state will pursue calls to confront
    other events which have faced state silence or outright denial for
    decades. "One absolutely cannot say that early history of this nation
    is free of crimes or without its secrets. In this period so many
    terrible things happened. We are today faced with an Armenian, Greek,
    Kurdish, even an Islamic question, stormy chapters in this country's
    past that we must face," says Sociologist and Taraf Columnist Ferhat
    Kentel. It will be the willingness to investigate such questions,
    says Kentel, which will prove the seriousness of Deputy Prime Minister
    Bulent Arınc's promise earlier this week to investigate the past
    "even if this will be painful for us."

    According to minority rights activist Hasan Saltık, there is
    an encouraging likelihood that Dersim will act as precedent for
    further calls on the state to change its narrative about past
    events. Saltık imagines a state inquiry in the near future for the
    notorious "Independence Tribunals," arbitrary revolutionary courts
    established by Ankara in the 1920s to eliminate political enemies
    and war deserters. "Hundreds of dissidents were executed in those
    tribunals without a fair trial. It is possible to see an incredible
    record of violation of law in the first decades of the republic at
    a time a nation-building process took momentum," Saltık said. The
    activist also believes that other incidents similar to the Dersim
    massacre, specifically the killings of Alevis by ultra nationalists
    and extremists in the MaraÅ~_, Corum and Sivas incidents of the 1970s
    and 1980s or the state sponsored killings in Turkey's East throughout
    the 1990s are likely subjects of state investigation.

    Experts say that such retelling of Turkish history must not stop
    short of the early Turkish state's most chilling excesses, including
    the 1942 wealth tax which intentionally extorted non-Muslims of their
    wealth and forced over 30,000 Jews to emigrate, or the 1955 Ä°stanbul
    pogrom in which mobs incited by the government killed over a dozen and
    precipitated the flight of Ä°stanbul's Greeks. Such events, however,
    will take even more time to face, says Bilgi University sociologist
    Ayhan Aktar. "At the moment I don't expect a dialogue on certain
    events, including the deportations or the Armenian killings. But what
    we have seen has been a very good beginning," Aktar said in a Friday
    interview with Sunday's Zaman.

    "Turkey has two attitudes in relation to history -- one is a defensive,
    state history. But you also have another, unofficial story which
    can come to the fore -- people talk about these events and there is
    a process of collective soul searching. For instance, in Erzurum,
    people are of course talking about happened to Armenians in 1915."

    Coming face to face with events such as the 1915 Armenian massacres,
    Aktar asserts, will necessitate ending the state's denial of historical
    realities and confronting, rather than erasing, the collective memory
    of Turkey's bitterest chapters. Aktar believes that this process begins
    with the government. "When the prime minister challenges the state
    history, people will be more open, more courageous to talk about what
    happened. In this sense, it begins with the government," says Aktar.

    Sociologist Kentel, meanwhile, says that the government must catch up
    with the independent effort to challenge the secretive traditions of
    the state. "It would be wrong to say that the apology was the "first
    step" in challenging the traditions of the past. We have already
    seen the outcry and support in the case of Hrant Dink's murder -- we
    are already moving to rewrite this country's history," Kentel stated,
    referring to the campaign for justice in the wake of Armenian newspaper
    editor Hrant Dink's murder by ultranationalists in 2007.

    Both Kentel and Aktar admit they have their reservations about the
    prime minister's apology. "There is no doubt there is a political
    reason behind his acts. He wants to attack Kemalism," Kentel stated.

    But such politics, the sociologists say, can't cheapen the significance
    of his statement. "I don't think this contradicts the sincerity of
    the apology. It has symbolic importance and value, it is the start
    of something."

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