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Davutoglu's Revisionism Targets The Armenian Diaspora

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  • Davutoglu's Revisionism Targets The Armenian Diaspora

    DAVUTOGLU'S REVISIONISM TARGETS THE DIASPORA
    By Ara Khachadourian

    Asbarez
    July 13, 2012
    http://asbarez.com/104196/davutoglu%E2%80%99s-revisionism-targets-the-diaspora/

    Turkish Foreign Minster Ahmet Davutoglu

    Ahead of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide and in its
    continuing efforts to revise history and distort the truth, official
    Ankara has set its eyes on the Armenian Diaspora, this time revising
    the definition of the word to water down the political and legal
    elements that define a diaspora.

    In an interview published in the Turkish Milliyet on July 7, Turkish
    Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu announced that he has sent a directive
    to all Turkish embassies in which he redefined the Turkish diaspora.

    "We consider all those who emigrated from those lands, and not only
    the Turks, to be the diaspora-the Armenians, Jews, Greeks, the people
    called El Turco in Latin America, and the Arabs in Argentina...

    Those are our people... Those are people whose culture and language
    resemble ours."

    Based on these "redefined criteria," Turkish representations around
    the world " will now open their doors to those people who were once
    Ottoman subjects, they will contact them, and they will even invite
    them to national days. The contacts with the Armenian diaspora are
    said to have already started," according to Milliyet.

    Asbarez warned its readers recently of an effort to infiltrate the
    Armenian community. It is a direct by-product of this diplomatic
    directive that has propelled the Turkish Consulate in Los Angeles
    to reach out to well-meaning yet confused community members to open,
    what is potentially a dangerous dialogue.

    According to Wikipedia, a Diaspora is "the movement, migration, or
    scattering of people away from an established or ancestral homeland;
    or "people dispersed by whatever cause to more than one location";
    or "people settled far from their ancestral homelands."

    "In an article published in 1991, William Safran set out six rules
    to distinguish diasporas from migrant communities," Wikipedia goes on
    to explain. "These included criteria that the group maintains a myth
    or collective memory of their homeland; they regard their ancestral
    homeland as their true home, to which they will eventually return;
    being committed to the restoration or maintenance of that homeland;
    and they relate 'personally or vicariously' to the homeland to a
    point where it shapes their identity."

    Davutoglu's redefinition of Diaspora and his blatant perpetuation of
    Turkish revisionism and denial is the second of a three-point outline
    he has concocted-introduced-to advance Turkish-Armenian relations
    ahead of the Genocide Centennial.

    The first point is what Davutoglu says concerns "feelings," whereby the
    Turkish foreign minister wants to assure Armenians that "I understand
    your pain; we will listen to the Armenians." This patronizing approach
    of showing "respect" toward Armenians' feelings, not only diminishes
    the fact of the Genocide, but it waters down the incident, making
    the Genocide seem like an accidental mishap that must be dealt with.

    While he acknowledges that in past Turkey has denied the Genocide,
    his new approach is nothing more that using another euphemism to
    address this matter.

    "The Armenians are not facing a foreign minister who claims that
    nothing happened in 1915. I do not call the incidents genocide. We
    must develop a new language on the issue. We are not denying your
    suffering, we understand it. Let us get together and do whatever is
    necessary. That, however, cannot be a unilateral declaration of guilt,"
    Davutoglu told Milliyet.

    Davutoglu, the newspaper explains, has developed a concept called
    "just memory," which is supposedly based on feeling the pain of the
    Armenians and "not trying to shut them up."

    He either actually believes or wants the entire world to believe that
    the Turks should not be compared to the Nazis, because the Genocide
    was not a systematic effort to annihilate an entire race but rather a
    consequence of events the caused "paranoia in people who feared that
    they would be exiled from Anatolia."

    Davutoglu also claimed that there are efforts to sign a joint
    declaration before 2015 with Armenia that reflects this version of
    the events.

    The third point in this preposterous plan deals directly with the
    provisions of the Armenia-Turkey protocols, whose ratification by
    Turkey is pre-conditioned on a pro-Azeri resolution to the Karabakh
    conflict.

    Armenia's Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian rejected this
    three-pronged solution, saying Thursday at a press conference that
    the international community has already proposed its own three point
    plan, which includes ratifying the Armenian-Turkish protocols without
    preconditions; carrying out the provisions of the agreements, again
    without preconditions; and refraining from linking the Armenian-Turkish
    issue with the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Nalbandian asserted that Turkey has failed to take serious measures
    toward any rapprochement for 97 years, saying "Turkey has been unable
    to face its own history."

    "If Turkey intends to work in the same manner for the next three years
    and proposes 'a combination of some steps' which lead to nowhere,
    the result is obvious," said Nalbandian.

    By redefining what a Diaspora is, Turkey is advancing a dangerous
    policy to change the role of its diplomatic representations into
    centers that can-and have started to-have an impactful role in [our]
    community life.

    Individuals who do not recognize this threat and are actively taking
    part in this divisive tactic, must closely evaluate their personal
    interests and not become pawns in this dangerous effort to diminish
    our national struggle.

    At the same time, the Armenian government must become more assertive
    on this issue and instead of the reactionary and tacit responses to
    Turkey's malicious policies, must aggressively advocate and advance
    the Armenian Cause.

    Less than three years remain to the Centennial of the Armenian
    Genocide. The political aspects of this milestone, perhaps, far
    outweigh the efforts to properly mark this anniversary. Our national
    aspirations that include just reparations and restitution for the
    victims of the Armenian Genocide, as well the territorial demands of
    the Armenian nation are paramount to advancing the Armenian Cause.

    It is high time that we, as a Nation, start speaking the same language
    and acting on the imperatives that will advance justice. The government
    of Turkey began implementing this new approach to its decades-old
    denialist policy long ago by pouring millions of dollars into Turkish
    organizations outside of Turkey and bolstering Turkish presence in
    political life in various countries.

    Davutoglu can redefine terms and concepts as much as he wants. The fact
    remains that Turkey will have to pay for its crimes-current and past.

    EDITOR'S NOTE: The Milliyet article reference above was reported by
    Asli Aydintasbas and translated into English by Katia Peltekian.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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