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ANKARA: Is 1915 Genocide Or What?

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  • ANKARA: Is 1915 Genocide Or What?

    IS 1915 GENOCIDE OR WHAT?

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 1 2013

    MARKAR ESAYAN
    [email protected]

    I intend to put an end to the 1915 matter for now with one last article.

    Whenever I attempt to write an article about this issue, I try to
    elaborate on the human aspects of the matter and explain the wrong
    done by the greater policies. As a matter of fact, while the 1915
    tragedy is being discussed as a historical incident, it is actually a
    matter that affects our time. Therefore, the failure to solve it stems
    from a mentality that has survived up to our time. Having seen the
    fact that this mentality is currently in decline, I nurture higher
    hopes about the future.

    I believe the debate over whether the 1915 incidents amount to
    genocide poses an obstacle for those who seek to understand the matter
    from the perspective of Turkey. I have written about this idea of mine
    countless times. The Genocide Convention, adopted by the United
    Nations in 1948, also ratified by Turkey, sets forth the following
    criteria for defining genocide:

    "(a) Killing members of the group; (b) Causing serious bodily or
    mental harm to members of the group; (c) Deliberately inflicting on
    the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical
    destruction in whole or in part; (d) Imposing measures intended to
    prevent births within the group; (e) Forcibly transferring children of
    the group to another group."

    For any action to be defined as genocide, these conditions need not be
    met. Any person who can take a look at the 1915 incidents can see if
    these incidents fall under these articles. I think it would be more
    rational for those who do not want the 1915 incidents to be labeled as
    genocide to try to modify the Genocide Convention than to argue that
    these incidents do not fall within the ambit of these articles.

    I feel uneasy as I write down the last paragraph. The
    is-1915-genocide-or-not debate leaves the remaining joint efforts out
    in the cold. We cannot settle this problem departing from this debate.

    Moreover, this would be an act of irreverence against the dead. As a
    person who is the grandson of a family half of whose members died in
    1915, I see this debate as unfairness done to this sorrow. While it is
    a profound piece of 98-year experience and a piece of knowledge
    ingrained on the identity, 1915 is still perceived by the people of
    Turkey in compliance with the narrative injected by the official
    ideology.

    In other words, Turkey still does not know what really happened in
    1915. For an Armenian, it would be more ethical to try to ensure that
    sorrows are acknowledged and respected instead of trying to take
    revenge, and to open up venues for dialogue by refraining from
    declaring a nation genocidal.

    True, the Armenian nation suffered from a great destruction in 1915.

    But that was not all. Inheriting the poisonous heritage of the
    Community of Union and Progress (CUP), the newly established Turkish
    Republic adopted a hostile attitude toward the surviving non-Muslim
    minorities and their cultural heritage. Can we offer another
    explanation to the fact that only 50,000 Armenians now live in the
    country?

    Unfortunately, this ideological perversion adopted the same stance in
    the face of Kurds, Alevis and Muslims, though to a lesser extent.

    Great sorrows were suffered. Today, Turkey is trying to get rid of
    this poisonous ideology. But you cannot rehabilitate the 90-year state
    mentality in a few days. Still, Turkey is changing at a dazzling pace.

    Today's Turkey and what it was 10 years ago are as different from each
    other as white is from black, in a positive sense. This change is
    being driven by the demands for reforms voiced by Muslims.

    Onlookers may fail to understand it. Or they may say: "We have been
    living with this problem for 98 years, and we have serious advantages
    over Turkey. We can corner Turkey and impose our version of the
    solution." But will this really be a solution? Will Armenians really
    attain serenity if they don't mourn for their losses together with the
    grandchildren of their Turkish and Kurdish neighbors? I think not.

    It is time Armenians and the people of Turkey make a new start.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/columnist-314221-is-1915-genocide-or-what.html

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