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Ankara: 1915: Heroes And Murderers

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  • Ankara: 1915: Heroes And Murderers

    1915: HEROES AND MURDERERS

    Cihan News Agency (CNA)
    November 2, 2012 Friday
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL (CIHAN)- "Heroes are totalitarian." It has been a long
    time since I first read the book "Cehenneme Ovgu, Gundelik Hayatta
    Totalitarizm" (Prisoners of Ourselves: Totalitarianism in Everyday
    Life) by Gunduz Vassaf, but I still remember this sentence from it.

    Whenever I hear the word "hero," I cannot help but affix "totalitarian"
    to it.

    Vassaf narrates how we escape from freedom via heroes and recreate
    the order again and again. Heroes are presented to us as men of
    sacrifice who show courage and no human weakness. They are leaders,
    military servicemen, religious clerics, revolutionaries, freedom
    fighters and others.

    Every group of people has their own heroes. As we try to become like
    these heroes, we turn into men which the order we are in desires. I
    recently explored a hero who is not totalitarian. This hero does not
    look like the others. And we, the people of Turkey, do not know him
    because knowing him requires going through an unusual cognitive and
    spiritual process, remorse and a huge confrontation.

    There is a huge paradox there. If we get to know him, we will become
    richer and our souls will become more at ease. However, to become
    familiar with him, we first have to go through a spiritual turbulence
    and a state of discomfort. We know that he exists thanks to foreign
    movies. Watching "Schindler's List" by Steven Spielberg or "Hotel
    Rwanda" by Terry George, we actually witness his life. However, the
    culture we grew up in prevents us from getting to know him better. We
    do not know the meaning of rejecting to participate in a campaign of
    murder based on individual remorse and conscience while society and
    the state were committing a huge crime and that crime was becoming
    a part of daily life and the symbol of a new status quo.

    We have Hollywood Schindlers, but movies have not been made for
    them in this country. Their names are not in history books. From
    the perspective of our formal history, they are traitors. I believe
    that one of the big losses associated with our failure to confront
    the 1915 tragedy is being deprived of not knowing them. In fact,
    we hold a sense of guilt in our subconscious. But we do not know the
    stories of those people who did not participate in heinous acts while
    the entire community was being involved, who refused to comply with
    orders and harbored their Armenian neighbors in their houses.

    We do not know them. We are not aware of how Urfali Haci Halil, who
    hid his Armenian neighbors in his home for one year, bought bread for
    eight extra people, what he felt about the outer world when he closed
    the doors of his home, how his relations with the community changed or
    how he was afraid of the death decrees for those who harbored Armenians
    in their homes. For us to know and feel all these, we should first
    address the lies in our history and feel the atmosphere of massacre
    and tragedies in this country.

    If we could pass these stages, we will know about not only Haci
    Halil but also the Ottoman bureaucrats who did not obey orders to
    deport Armenians and were executed or exiled for non-compliance. Konya
    Governor Celal, Ankara Governor Hasan Mazhar, Kastamonu Governor Resit
    Pasa, Basra Governor Ferit, Yozgat Governor Mehmet Cemal Bey, Kutahya
    Governor Faik Ali Ozansoy, Muntefek Governor Bedii Nuri, Lice District
    Governor Huseyin Nesimi Bey and Batman District Governor Sabit Bey will
    all guide us on the path towards spiritual purification and serenity.

    If we could bear the anguish and look at our history honestly, the
    religious people of this country will promote the honorable tradition
    of Muslims who strongly opposed the murder of Armenians in Bogazlayan,
    stressing that there is no killing of innocent people in the Quran. If
    we could look at 1915 honestly and talk openly about everything, we
    will start to meet the real heroes. Of course, this will come after
    huge pain and mourning. They will be our real heroes.

    After so many years, we have made some progress towards confronting
    the past but there is still a long way to go. I think that these
    heroes will guide us on this journey. I bow to them with great respect.

    ORHAN KEMAL CENGIZ (Cihan/Today's Zaman) CIHAN


    From: Baghdasarian
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