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Armenian Genocide And Modern Memory

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  • Armenian Genocide And Modern Memory

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AND MODERN MEMORY

    GetReligion
    Sept 14 2011

    The Daily Beast, a news and opinion website published by Tina Brown in
    conjunction with Newsweek magazine, has weighed in on the diplomatic
    spat between Israel and Turkey. In a piece entitled "The Erdogan
    Doctrine", columnist Owen Matthews argues President Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan and his ruling AK Party have been unfairly characterized as
    villainous Islamist thugs. They have actually sought to build bridges
    with Turkey's minority faiths, Matthews argues.

    Yet the notion of Erdogan as a Jew-hating jihadi doesn't really fit.

    Just before the current standoff, Erdogan sat down to dinner with
    the leaders of Turkey's religious minorities, including the Chief
    Rabbi of Istanbul, and promised to return thousands of properties the
    Turkish state had confiscated from Christians and Jews in the past
    century. He also made a point of praising the "vast diversity of the
    people that have peacefully coexisted" in Istanbul. "In this city the
    [Muslim] call to prayer and church bells sound together," said Erdogan.

    "Mosques, churches, and synagogues have stood side by side on the
    same street for centuries."

    The Daily Beast is also somewhat overgenerous in describing what
    Erdogan has offered: only the properties of Christian and Jewish
    institutions seized since 1936 are under discussion. Neither the
    property of individual Christians and Jews confiscated by the state
    nor the wholesale expropriations of the 1920's are being reviewed.

    The Daily Beast also uncritically relates Erdogan's words of religious
    peace and harmony .. queue the video .. without offering context. The
    prime minister is able to speak of religious harmony because Turkey's
    religious minorities are all but extinct. In the home city of the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople it would have been just as
    easy for Erdogan to sit down to dine with all of the city's remaining
    Orthodox Christians as with its minority religious leaders. An op-ed
    in The Hill, "Religious Freedom for Turkey?" penned by members of
    US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) is less
    sanguine about the prospects for Christians, Jews, and members of
    minority Muslim sects, especially the Alawites than The Daily Beast.

    Turkey's Christian minority has dwindled to just 0.15 percent of the
    country. In the words of one church leader, it is an "endangered
    species." In past centuries, violence exacted a horrific toll on
    Turkey's Christians and their churches. This provides a frightening
    context and familiar continuity to a number of recent high-profile
    murders by ultranationalists.

    Turkey's Jewish community also fears a reprise of past violence, such
    as the 2003 al Qaeda-linked Istanbul synagogue bombings. Societal
    anti-Semitism has been fueled in recent years by Erdogan's rhetoric
    against Israel's activity in the Middle East and by negative portrayals
    in Turkey's state-run media.

    Today, however, it is the state's dense web of regulations that most
    threatens Turkey's religious minorities.

    And this brings me to the articles under examination. The
    English-language editions of Turkey's two major daily newspapers, the
    Hurriyet Daily News and Today's Zaman, offer stories on the re-opening
    an ancient Armenian church located on an island on Lake Van in Eastern
    Turkey. The Hurriyet Daily News has "Historical Armenian church hosts
    service" from the Anatolia News Agency, the Turkish state wire service,
    while Today's Zaman prepared an in-house version entitled "Armenians
    hold second religious ceremony at Akdamar church."

    Both pieces present a straight forward if slight account of the
    festivities. The Church of the Holy Cross, a tenth century Armenian
    Apostolic Church located on Akdamar Island in Lake Van, hosted its
    second religious service since it was renovated in 2007. Between
    2000-3000 attended the service and the reports note the island drew
    30,000 tourists in 2010 (or are they pilgrims?) after the Turkish
    government reopened the building as a museum.

    Where things go wrong is when the Turkish correspondents attempt
    to give some historical context to the story. The Hurriyet Daily
    News states:

    The church remained as part of a monastic complex until the beginning
    of the 20th century. It was abandoned during World War I due to
    fighting along the Russian border and was left in a bad condition
    for many years.

    While Today's Zaman notes:

    The Armenian Church of the Holy Cross was a monastic complex until
    1920s, but deteriorated in condition after being abandoned during World
    War I. Upon a proposal by the Governor's Office of Van and approval
    of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, the church is expected to
    now host annual religious services.

    Armenians who lived in this province, located on the eastern shore
    of Lake Van and in eastern Anatolia, were deported by Ottoman forces
    in 1915. Armenians say 1.5 million Armenians were killed during a
    systematic campaign in eastern Anatolia, while Turkey strongly rejects
    the claims of genocide, saying the killings came as the Ottoman
    Empire was trying to quell civil strife and that Muslim Turks were
    also killed in the conflict. There are only around 60,000 Armenians
    left living in Turkey, mostly in Istanbul.

    Yes, the Church of the Holy Cross was abandoned during World War I.

    The reason why it was abandoned was because the Turkish Army sacked the
    monastery, killed the monks and drove off, or murdered, the Armenian
    population in the region. Today's Zaman makes note of the Armenian
    genocide, but states it is a contested point in history.

    I very much doubt the heavy hand of the censor massaged these
    passages. The Daily Hurriet is the principle opposition newspaper,
    while Today's Zaman backs the Islamist government. What we see here
    is a loss of memory. The genocide is not mentioned because its memory
    has not been preserved in Turkey.

    Journalism is a craft, a learned trade that has a pragmatic and moral
    end. It informs while it also educates. If the press does not speak
    the truth about the past, no matter how unpalatable this past may be
    to nationalistic or religious sensibilities, it fails in its mission.

    The bottom line: The absence of the Armenian Genocide from this
    story, whether through ignorance, accident or design, means that
    these articles fail the test of good journalism.

    In his 1986 Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech, Elie Wiesel wrote:
    "That I have tried to keep memory alive, that I have tried to fight
    those who would forget. Because if we forget, we are guilty, we are
    accomplices."

    Buildings may survive, but memory of peoples fades away. A free press
    should not be an accomplice.

    Nota bene: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty's Yerevan bureau filed a
    report that fills in the blanks. "Thousands Attend Armenian Church
    Mass In Turkey"

    Written by: geoconger on September 14, 2011.

    http://www.getreligion.org/2011/09/armenian-genocide-and-modern-memory/

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