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  • Ankara: Intellectual Bullying

    INTELLECTUAL BULLYING

    Hurriyet , Turkey
    June 19 2013

    by BURAK BEKDÄ°L
    Wednesday,June 19 2013, Your time is 4:45:49 PM

    Send to friend Â" Share on linkedinI recalled Rafi, the
    Canadian-Armenian whose introductory remarks to me were: "I hate you -
    because you are Turkish!" Rafi who would later become a good companion
    in Yerevan... I also recalled the Turkish blogger who, many years after
    Yerevan, would write of me: "No doubt about it. After having his [my]
    photo enlarged and examined it, I have come to the conclusion that
    he is a crypto Armenian!" (because this column had angered the man).

    I was forcefully reminded of both expressions of hatred recently
    in Tbilisi, at the conference "The Caucasus at Imperial Twilight:
    Nationalism, Ethnicity and Nation-Building (1870s-1920s)," not by
    its academic content but because of the intellectual intimidation
    against Armenian scholars who participated.

    According to Asbarez Armenian News, the presence of Armenian scholars
    [at the conference] both from Armenia and the United States was
    "surprising." A few lines later, Asbarez says their participation was
    not surprising "as they [were] sold out a long time ago." Finally,
    Asbarez concludes that "these scholars should be accountable to the
    public through press reports."

    Echoing the same view, the Armenian Weekly quoted Professor Richard
    Hovannisian as saying that, "...such a conference confers on those
    behind it an unmerited status as partners in a scholarly dialogue
    when, I believe, the real purpose is to create doubt and undermine
    honest scholarly investigation."

    According to the Armenian Weekly, the fact that one of the sponsors of
    the conference was the Turkish Coalition of America was enough evidence
    of conspiracy. "A key element of TCA's mission is to normalize the
    presentation of denial of the Armenian genocide within academia... In
    order to succeed, they need legitimate scholars to function as 'the
    other side.'" Perhaps the organizers should think about another subject
    at their next conference: "The Abundance of Conspiracy Theories in
    the Caucasus: The role of the Media."

    In fact, the conference brought together nearly 100 scholars who did
    not travel all the way to the Georgian capital only to debate Armenian
    genocide. And those who did included those who think it was a genocide,
    those who think it was not and those who think the tragedy was beyond
    the power of any single word to name it. But the scholars were there
    to listen to each other, to learn from each other; not to settle the
    almost century-long dispute, nor to draw up future borders.

    The Armenian scholars powerfully defended why the events of 1915-1920
    constituted genocide. One scholar even demanded territory from what
    is today Turkey or, to him, what is western Armenia. Another argued
    that changing the current border would be easier if genocide had
    been recognized.

    But they were engaged in honest debate with Turkish scholars who
    agreed or disagreed, even with Turkish diplomats. Those on both sides
    of the huge, invisible divide line seemed to be vigorously carving
    out a common mental map of mutual understanding. And the reward came
    without much delay: The Armenian scholars were accused of high treason!

    As any academic debate would require, the G-word was not disturbing
    for any scholar, Turkish or otherwise. In fact, there was frequent
    reference to it although it was not always associated with the word
    Armenian. A Russian professor listed about 15 genocides in the Caucasus
    only. An American professor added a few more in Latin America, the
    natives in North America and even Chernobyl! There were differences,
    but that was precisely why those people were there.

    Professor Hakan Yavuz from the University of Utah said: "We are not
    politicians or lawyers, but scholars. Our purpose is to understand
    what happened, and why it happened."

    Intimidation against scholarly debate would only radicalize even the
    most moderate Turks and Armenians. Academic debate should go on -
    with no winners or losers.

    But perhaps the professor who was a former member of the International
    Association of Genocide Scholars was right when he said: "People who
    have been subjected to a tragedy want their tragedy to be 'pure.'" In
    fact, a tragedy is a tragedy and always pure.

    What's next? Armenians enlarging the photos of Armenian scholars who
    attend conferences to debate "what happened and why" only to examine
    them and conclude that they are in fact crypto Turks?

    June/19/2013

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/intellectual-bullying.aspx?pageID=238&nID=49040&NewsCatID=398


    From: Baghdasarian
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