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  • Wikileaks: Turkey's Armenians Fearful of `Violent Backlash,' ...

    Wikileaks: Turkey's Armenians Fearful of `Violent Backlash,' Facing
    `Uncertain Future'

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2011/09/10/wikileaks-turkey-armenians/
    Sat, Sep 10 2011

    By: Nanore Barsoumian

    (A.W.)-Turkey's Armenians are fearful of a `violent backlash' if the
    Armenian Genocide Resolution passes, according to Armenian Patriarch
    in Istanbul Mesrob II Mutafian, as revealed in a recently released
    Wikileaks cable. In 2007, the Patriarch purportedly told the then
    Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs
    Matthew Bryza that Turkey's Armenian population would be safer if it
    kept a low profile, although that might prove difficult after Agos
    editor Hrant Dink's January 2006 murder at the hands of a Turkish
    ultranationalist youth. `My community is not a friend of the
    resolution. It won't make life easy,' the Patriarch was quoted as
    saying.


    Patriarch Mesrob II Mutafyan
    According to Mesrob II, in the eve of Dink's funeral - where thousands
    of leftists joined the procession of mourners on the streets of
    Istanbul, chanting, `We are all Armenians! We are all Hrant Dink!' - the
    Armenian community was left isolated and vulnerable, reminiscent of a
    time in history `when Armenians in Turkey had been given arms and told
    to rebel, only to be left with the aftermath.'

    The Patriarch allegedly told Bryza that instead of `nationalism and
    racism' a dialogue was necessary to surmount the tensions. And if the
    Turkish government would say `it was sorry' and if it acknowledged
    that `they helped cause these sufferings,' that would suffice, he
    continued.

    Consul General Deborah Jones who authored the cable on Feb. 23, 2007,
    observed that the Patriarch was quite cautious in `defending his
    flock.' She noted that as a leader of the small Armenian
    population - who roughly numbered one in 1,000 Turks - the Patriarch had
    to be careful in his public statements, adding, `For Mesrob, there is
    continuity from the Ottoman into the republican government of Turkey
    where, for successive generations, minorities have carried the burden
    of their initially de jure and now de facto second class citizenship.'

    Despite the Patriarch's request that his comments remain private,
    Jones' cable became public when Wikileaks released it on Aug. 30,
    2011, without any redactions in place. (See this cable below).

    A separate cable also authored by Jones on the same date as the cable
    discussed above, reflects on a meeting Bryza had with the spiritual
    leader of Turkey's Greek Orthodox community, Ecumenical Patriarch
    Bartholomew. During the meeting that took place also on February 8,
    Bartholomew expressed his frustration at the Turkish government's
    `unresponsiveness to the Patriarchate on nearly every issue.' The
    conversation then turned to `the crucial issue' of reopening Halki
    Seminary, an institution that was founded in 1844 and trained
    generations of Greek Orthodox patriarchs and which was closed to new
    students in 1971 due to a law that placed all private colleges under
    state control. Halki's Board of Trustees refused to allow the Seminary
    become part of Istanbul University. The Seminary, which is located on
    the island of Halki (renamed Heybeliada) in the Sea of Marmara, closed
    its doors in 1985 when its last students graduated.

    Bryza presented a four-step `game plan' to get the Seminary opened.
    Both the EU and the US have been calling on the Turkish government to
    reopen the Seminary. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reportedly
    brought the issue up with the Turkish government during her July trip
    to Turkey.

    In its concluding comment Jones stated, `Although in no way linked to
    this issue in the U.S., the consideration of an Armenia resolution by
    the Congress later this Spring may hamper our ability to work with the
    typically nationalist-leaning Interior Ministry, which controls the
    Governor's office.'

    Patriarch Mesrob II's and Patriarch Bartholomew's meeting with Bryza
    came a month after House Representative Adam Schiff (Democratic Party
    representative from California) introduced the Armenian Genocide
    Resolution (House Resolution 106) to the U.S. House of
    Representatives, and eight months before the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee passed it. The Resolution is still under consideration by
    the House.

    Patriarch Mesrob II was incapacitated at the end of 2007 from
    dementia, and in 2008 Archbishop Aram Atesyan became acting patriarch.
    In a Jan. 8, 2010, cable originating in the U.S. Consulate in
    Istanbul, and titled `Armenian Patriarchate: An Uncertain Future,'
    Consul General Sharon Wiener described the difficulties the Armenian
    Patriarchate faced, its petition to the Turkish Ministry of Interior
    to receive permission to elect a co-Patriarch, and lamented that
    Atesyan who had accepted a nomination for the position `is viewed by
    many in the community as being too complacent and lacking the
    necessary diplomatic skills for the religious and political
    representational role of patriarch.'

    `During such a sensitive political period in relations between Armenia
    and Turkey, the community's leadership is a decisive variable in the
    outlook for its future,' added Wiener, and noted that according to two
    members of the Turkish Armenian community, the community was `entering
    a dark period.'

    Weiner then remembered the words of Turkish-Armenian academic and
    journalist Sevan Nisanyan in an interview with Hurriyet Daily news,
    where `[He] said that Mesrob II changed the general perception among
    the community that `being afraid of one's own shadow was a commendable
    trait.''

    `[Nisanyan] expressed the hope that the community and new patriarch'
    will not prefer the old policy of succumbing and silence in the name
    of peace and accord in the country,'' noted Weiner.

    In her concluding remarks, Wiener said that it was a `sensitive' time
    for the Armenian Orthodox community, especially considering the
    Turkey-Armenia protocols of Oct. 2009. `'The Armenian Genocide
    Resolution' may be more heatedly debated in Congress in light of
    Turkey's relationship with Israel and its impact on previous amicable
    relationships with the Jewish population in the United States; and,
    more open discussion about the tragic events of 1915 heightens
    resentment among some Turks even if it is a healthy development in the
    long run,' added Wiener.

    Below is the Feb. 2007 cable on the meeting between Patriarch Mesrob
    II and Matthew Bryza.

    VZCZCXRO5540

    OO RUEHDBU RUEHFL RUEHKW RUEHLA RUEHROV RUEHSR

    DE RUEHIT #0137/01 0540659

    ZNY CCCCC ZZH

    O 230659Z FEB 07

    FM AMCONSUL ISTANBUL

    TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 6650

    INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE PRIORITY

    C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ISTANBUL 000137

    SIPDIS

    DEPARTMENT FOR EUR/SE

    E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/15/2017

    TAGS: PGOV, PHUM, PREL, TU

    SUBJECT: TURKEY'S ARMENIAN PATRIARCH ON THE GENOCIDE

    RESOLUTION, NATIONALISM



    REF: 06 ISTANBUL 596

    Classified By: Consul General Deborah K. Jones for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

    1. (C) Summary. In a February 8 meeting with EUR DAS Matthew Bryza,
    Armenian Patriarch for Istanbul and all of Turkey Mesrob II (please
    protect) and who asked not to be quoted on this point, said he feared
    that passage of the Armenian genocide resolution (H.R. 106) could lead
    to `violent backlash' against Armenians in Turkey. Mesrob also said
    the `disaster of 1915 should be examined on separate platforms by
    politicians, historians, diplomats, and sociologists. This would be
    very helpful in terms of creating empathy and understanding, rather
    than enmity.' End summary.

    2. (C) On the question of the pending resolution, Mesrob referred to
    the 260 articles that day in the national press commenting and
    reporting on the Dink murder. Turkish Armenians were intimidated by
    all the attention. Armenians' security, he said, would be improved
    with a much lower profile. The response to the Dink tragedy had been
    positive for a couple of days at the time of the funeral; now there
    was a strong, nationalist backlash. Armenians felt they were in the
    spotlight. It had been leftists in the funeral parade who shouted,
    `We are all Armenians!' Now, the community felt isolated. The
    patriarch noted an historical parallel in history when Armenians in
    Turkey had been given arms and told to rebel, only to be left with the
    aftermath.

    3. (C) Particularly in this atmosphere the U.S. Congress' Armenian
    genocide resolution would not help. Emphasizing his request not to be
    quoted on this point, he stated that passage of the resolution could
    lead to a `violent backlash' against the community. Mesrob told Bryza
    he instead encouraged public use of his April 2006 address at Kayseri
    University where he urged review and translation of untapped primary
    sources as well as mutual respect leading to dialogue. (Text faxed to
    EUR/SE.) The Patriarch had also said in his speech at Kayseri
    University, `Turks and Armenians must break out of the straitjacket of
    exclusive nationalism and racism. Otherwise...the results are always
    bloody wars, tears, and hate campaigns. Instead of nationalism and
    racism, it is much more in line with our religious and ethical values
    to practice a love and appreciation for our national cultures.'

    4. (C) Mesrob summarized his hope on the subject, saying healing
    would come to the community if the government could say it was sorry.
    Even the Nationalist Action Party's (MHP's) extreme nationalist
    founder, Alparslan Turkes, came close, he claimed, contacting the
    president of Armenia some four times. If Turkey could somehow
    acknowledge that they helped cause these sufferings, `I believe that
    will be enough,' he stated.

    5. (C) DAS Bryza also asked the patriarch about progress in the
    community's efforts to open an institution of higher learning for
    Armenians in Turkey and how re-opening Halki Seminary might affect
    these efforts. Without responding directly to the possibility of
    Halki opening, Mesrob said he was meeting with NSC Secretary General
    Yigit Alpogan in the next few days and hoped for a `universal'
    resolution to the need for minority community higher education. As
    previously noted (reftel), the solution envisioned a faculty at
    Istanbul University offering seminary courses as well as minority
    language classes. Each minority, including the Jewish community,
    would have its own subunit in the faculty. Practical instruction in
    the liturgy would be taught at the respective places of worship.
    Mesrob said this solution would also further intercommunal dialogue by
    making courses in Christian theology available to interested Turkish
    Muslim students. Mesrob was keen to find a solution before possible
    passage of a resolution, which he realized could derail this effort.
    `My community is not a friend of the resolution. It won't make life
    easy.'

    6. (C) Comment. By nature, the Patriarch is inclined to take the
    high road in defending his flock and the community; circumstances of
    the Armenian minority that number less than one in one thousand Turks
    make it imperative that he shape his public message with care. For
    Mesrob, there is continuity from the Ottoman into the republican
    government of Turkey where, for successive generations, minorities
    have carried the burden of their initially de jure and now de facto
    second class citizenship. End comment.

    7. (U) This cable was cleared by EUR DAS Matthew Bryza.

    ISTANBUL 00000137 002 OF 002

    JONES




    From: A. Papazian
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