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Ankara: Turks, Armenians And Ottomans

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  • Ankara: Turks, Armenians And Ottomans

    TURKS, ARMENIANS AND OTTOMANS
    by MUSTAFA AKYOL

    Hurriyet Daily News
    nov 3 2012
    Turkey

    CALIFORNIA - I really was not expecting to eat the best lahmacun of my
    life on the western coast of the United States. (Lahmacun, a sort of
    thin pizza with minced meat, is prominent in Turkish cuisine.) However
    Jack's Bakery, a small family restaurant in the greater Los Angeles
    area, went beyond all my expectations. Not only its lahmacun, but
    everything I tasted here were both very delicious and very "Turkish."

    When I learned more about the story of 51-year-old Jack, whose
    big moustache does not overshadow his big smile, I got it all. His
    original name is Agop, and his family is from Kilis, an ancient town
    in southeastern Turkey. They were one of the hundreds of thousands
    of Armenian families who used to live in Anatolia until they were
    tragically deported to Syria in 1915 - a painful episode in history
    that I call, and condemn, as the ethnic cleansing of Ottoman Armenians.

    However, while you can take the Armenians out of Anatolia, you
    apparently can not take Anatolia out of them. Jack was a living proof.

    He was speaking to me in perfect Turkish with a barely noticeable
    accent and a beautifully native body language. "We always spoke
    Turkish at home," he told me, remembering his days in Kuwait, where
    his family migrated to after some decades in Syria. "I perfected my
    Armenian only in school."

    The curious story of Jack reminded me of how Turks and Armenians lived
    side by side peacefully as neighbors for almost a thousand years,
    before the dark side of modernity befell upon them. In these times,
    Turks were considered superior, but thanks to Islamic law they also
    recognized Armenians as "people of the book." The Ottoman Empire
    turned traditional Islamic pluralism into the "millet system," in
    which all "millets," or nations, such as Muslims, Jews or Armenians,
    had a certain degree of autonomy.

    In fact the Armenians were so well integrated into the empire that the
    Ottoman elite called them "the loyal nation." Armenian architects were
    the creators of some of the most beautiful mosques in Istanbul. Thanks
    to the introduction of full equal citizenship in 1856, many Armenians
    also joined Ottoman bureaucracy and even the Parliament.

    However, this Ottoman pluralism would soon be challenged, and
    ultimately destroyed, by a very un-Ottoman idea: nationalism. The
    modern (and largely secular) belief that every nation should have
    a sovereign state of its own led to rebellions, wars and ethnic
    cleansings throughout the empire. Armenians got their terrible share
    in 1915.

    Since then, unfortunately, Turks and Armenians have been bitterly
    opposed to each other. Turks have wrongly chosen to dismiss the
    Armenians' tragedy, whereas the latter decided to blame all Turks
    for the acts of the Young Turk government of 1915.

    "How can I hate you for what happened decades before you were born?"

    Jack asked me, shattering many myths that we Turks have about
    "the Armenian diaspora," (we are told that all of them hate us). He
    gave me hope that perhaps the gaps between our peoples are not that
    unbridgeable.

    Not at all, because things are changing, at least on the Turkish side.

    No matter how belatedly and slowly, more Turks are realizing
    that 1915 is not something to be proud of. And even more of them
    are understanding that there is something gravely wrong with the
    nationalist paradigm that has ruled Turkey for a century. In their
    "neo-Ottomanism," I believe, lies the key for Turko-Armenian
    reconciliation.

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turks-armenians--and-ottomans.aspx?pageID=238&nID=33843&NewsCatID=411

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