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ANKARA: What Should The Armenian Not Do?

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  • ANKARA: What Should The Armenian Not Do?

    WHAT SHOULD THE ARMENIANS NOT DO?

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 2 2013


    ETYEN MAHCUPYAN
    e.mahcupyan@todayszaman

    In massacres and upheavals, the asymmetry between the perpetrator and
    the victim naturally speaks to our sense of justice and we expect
    that the perpetrator would express his regret and finally redress
    the damage caused. However, these "solution" processes politicize
    both parties and, most of the time, make them actors. In other words,
    followers on both sides emerge and confront each other.

    In this case, we have to speak of the differing politics of the two
    sides, which are operating in symmetry to each other. The reality that
    the new balance implies is simple: In this new setting, regardless
    of the level of victimization, there is no point of reconciliation
    and peace independent of the attitude of the victim.

    The meaning of this generalization within the context of the Armenian
    issue is the fact that if Turkey decides to confront its past, this
    would not be independent of the politics of the Armenians. From this
    perspective, the Armenian diaspora holds special importance because
    the pain, rage and persecution associated with their alienation and
    expulsion from their homeland can trigger an extreme level of enmity
    in diaspora members towards Turkey.

    On the other hand, the genocide discourse has generated a sphere of
    power and authority because it plays a significant role and function
    for the diaspora to secure its internal integration and identity;
    and the community leadership carries on this discourse. In this way,
    the Armenian diaspora, which is actually a fairly pluralistic entity,
    is integrated with a distinctively strong discourse and represented
    by this discourse. It is not surprising to see that this is sustained
    within the diaspora because of the ability to create an elite class.

    However, the Turkish state is actually pleased with this state
    of affairs because, thanks to the opposition this strong discourse
    generates, it is not hard to ensure Turkish society is unaware of the
    facts and use it as part of an ideological defense. In this way, 1915
    has been transformed from an issue of the past and of the violation
    of rights into a struggle by which one party has been trying to make
    the other submit to its terms and conditions. In this process of
    escalating tension, the Armenian side has been focused on the defeat
    of the perpetrator even though this means that it has been unable to
    experience a decent grieving process.

    Humiliating the perpetrator morally and defeating it politically
    becomes one of the ways to express and convey the pain and grievance.

    This becomes so obvious that it is assumed that those who hold the
    strongest and bitterest discourse feel the pain most extensively; and
    an environment where only those who struggle against the perpetrator
    acquire what is viewed as the proper political identity.

    This development harms Armenians by manipulating their emotions and
    plays on the idea of victimhood and subjects them to the psychology of
    victimization for the sake of the consolidation of social solidarity;
    the expression of political pressure has taken the present and
    the future of the Armenians hostage. The Armenians live the present
    individually; however, as a community, they have to leave their common
    culture hostage to the past.

    To this end, the greatest mistake is the transformation of the 1915
    tragedy from a process of remembrance and grievance into a performance
    or presentation. However, two additional mistakes have been committed.

    First, the Turkish state was tied to the 1915 tragedy and a policy
    that resisted the influence of other states was pursued as a rule.

    This attitude makes the past of the Armenians a foreign policy tool
    for today's states and politicians.

    More importantly, this focuses on the cold face of the perpetrator by
    ignoring what has been lost as a community and society as if Turkey's
    recognition of genocide will bring what has been lost back. However,
    the case is just the opposite. If it happens, the nakedness and
    severity of what was lost will appear before the Armenians, along
    with the alienation generated by politicization.

    Secondly, a stereotype of a "Turk" has been created; this has led to
    the ignoring of change and plurality in Turkey out of a fear of losing
    a fixed enemy. This approach has been the root cause of the fact that
    the Armenian community in the diaspora has remained distant to its
    homeland and common culture. The fear of the humanization of the "Turk"
    minimized the likelihood for Armenians to have and see a human being in
    front of them. In this way, all connections and links that would enable
    Armenians to experience and overcome the grief have been destroyed.

    In the end, the history and pain of the Armenians were left to a state
    which holds no moral considerations. To some point, all this should
    be understood. Of course, it would not be fair to see the victim and
    the perpetrator as equals. However, it is not possible to argue that
    a victim held captive by the perpetrator is acting soundly.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/columnistDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=314316

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