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Islamized Armenians: Coming to Grips With a New Reality

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  • Islamized Armenians: Coming to Grips With a New Reality

    Islamized Armenians: Coming to Grips With a New Reality

    Hrant Gadarigian


    21:50, November 3, 2013

    3 Day Istanbul Conference seen as a first step in opening a much
    needed discussion

    Over the centuries, untold numbers of Christian Armenians have
    converted to Islam. The vast majority have done so under various
    degrees of pressure and given the exigencies of the time.

    While relatively subtle on occasion, the imperative to convert to a
    religion mostly regarded as the faith of the `enemy' was often
    clear-cut - convert or perish.

    Over the past decade or so, a new sub-grouping of Armenians, either
    called Islamized of Muslim Armenians, has come to the fore.

    While the existence of such Armenians is not new per say, the issue of
    who they exactly are in terms of overall Armenian identity has been
    gaining greater exposure, both in Armenian circles and in Turkey.

    One such attempt to grapple with this issue is the conference now
    taking place in Istanbulthat I've been attending.

    Entitled, `Islamized (Islamicized) Armenians' and organized by the
    Hrant Dink Foundation, the conference began yesterday and will end
    tomorrow.

    The scope of the conference is immense and has attracted a number of
    prominent scholars and heretofore unknown speakers commenting and
    analyzing the centuries-old conversion process of Armenians in the
    Ottoman Empire, with a special focus on the 1915 Genocide and its
    aftermath.

    Bogazici University's Albert Long Hall was packed the other day when
    the conference kicked off.

    I would estimate that there were at least 700 people in the hall to
    listen to what speakers like Taner Akcam, Ayse Gul Altinay, Hranush
    Kharatyan, Laurence Ritter and Anoush Suni, and Adnan Celik, amongst
    others, had to say on the subject.

    Rakel Dink, representing the Hrant Dink Foundation, welcomed speakers
    and audience alike, stressing that the conference was merely an
    initial step in discussing both the history, and more importantly, the
    present reality of Islamized Armenians.

    Religion, identity, memory, ethnicity, are just a few of the
    intertwined topics that the speakers touched in their presentations.

    Naturally, I cannot delve into all the subjects that the 30 speakers
    will raise over the course of three days, but I can give readers a
    concise overview.

    After an opening conversation amongst Fethiye Cetin, Nabahat Akkoc and
    Sibel Asna, the first day saw three separate panels exploring such
    topics as: Burden of History, politics of Naming; The Recent and
    Distant History of the Islamization; and Islamized in 1915.



    Avedis Hadjian, an independent journalist based in New York, spoke
    about Constantinople Patriarch Shnork Kaloustian's `Four categories of
    Anatolian Armenians and Today's Muslim Armenians.'

    It was interesting to hear that some 40 years ago, Kaloustian had come
    up with different classifications of Armenians who had converted based
    on when the conversion had taken place, whether it was a conscious
    decision or not, and whether they had converted back to Christianity
    when conditions allowed them to do so.

    Hadjian, who has been touring Western Armenia for the past two years,
    is in the process of writing a book entitled `A Secret Nation' that
    will present his findings regarding Islamized Armenians he has come
    into contact with.

    The author, a native of Aleppo who then moved to Argentine at an early
    age, says his work is a journalistic investigation into the lives of
    these people and will serve as an introduction for a wider audience.

    `My purpose is not to proselytize or to make judgmental declarations.
    We must first come to recognize one another without preconditions or
    preconceived notions. This conference is a step in the right
    direction,' Hadjian says, adding that the book should be out in a few
    months. The first edition will be in Turkish and then translated into
    English.

    Hadjian added that tragically, the Armenian diaspora lacks the
    facilities to engage this new group of Armenians given that the
    Church, as a religious organization, cannot by its nature initiate a
    dialogue with individuals who profess another religion.

    Another speaker whom I caught up with was Vahe Tachian, an historian
    and chief editor of the website Houshamadyan.

    Tachjian spoke at this morning's panel entitled `Islamized in 1915:
    History and Bearing Witness'.

    His focus was on how many Armenian women during the Genocide entered
    into mixed marriages and prostitution as a means of survival. Tachjian
    talked about attempts to reintegrate these women into post-Ottoman
    Armenian communities and how many were ostracized and shunned by the
    dominant Armenian society and organizations.

    `Many of these women could never return to the larger Armenian fold,
    especially if they had children with Muslim men,' Tachjian noted,
    adding that the fact that so many `converted' Armenians were present
    at the conference underscored the need for a platform on this issue
    that has now taken on a greater sense of urgency.

    `These individuals, naturally, are interested to hear what the wider
    world, especially Armenians, have to say on the subject. We must
    approach this issue on a human level and shy away from making snap
    judgments as to whether these people are Armenian or not,' Tachjian
    stressed.

    During our conversation, Rakel Dink walked by and hearing the word
    `judgment', noted that identity is a concept that is not merely based
    on religion and that all of us have a duty to build bridges between
    these newly discovered Armenians and the traditional communities.

    I also had the chance to briefly speak with Hilmar Kaiser, a German
    historian, whose presentation dealt with the assimilation of Armenian
    deportees between 1915 and 1917.

    In his presentation, Kaiser noted that the CUP (Committee of Union and
    Progress), was split on the issue of converting Armenians to Islam.
    One grouping tolerated such conversions, which physically `saved' many
    Armenians from certain death, while others in the CUP saw it as
    presenting a future danger to the state.

    During my conversation with Kaiser, the historian noted that this
    conference an earlier one in Diyarbekir has returned the Armenian
    debate back to Turkey where it naturally belongs.

    `We are witnessing the reemergence of the Armenian community of
    Constantinople as the intellectual powerhouse that it once was.
    Armenian intellectualism is returning to the very place that it was
    cut down in 1915. And the Turkish colleagues are back. Thus the logic
    of the killers is denied,' Kaiser argued.

    He also pulled no punches in criticizing the academic work carried out
    in Armenia for the past twenty years, labeling it as not only
    academically inferior but also damaging giving its nationalist, even
    racist overtones. Luckily, Kaiser noted, there is a new generation of
    academics coming of age in Armenia who are raising the bar when it
    comes to academic scholarship, pointing to the presence of two young
    scholars from Armenia as panelists.

    Kaiser then turned his criticism to Armenian academics in the States
    who, he argues, haven't produced anything new in the past forty years.

    `Tell me one publication on the extermination, as I call it since I
    don't like the term genocide anymore, which has been published in the
    last ten years in the U.S. What comes to mind? You really have to
    scratch your head. And this is after millions of dollars and
    university chairs. It's basically a declaration of intellectual
    bankruptcy. They are stuck in their own mental prison,' Kaiser said.

    I last spoke with Raymond Kevorkian, the prominent Genocide scholar
    based in Paris, who moderated yesterday's `Islamized in 1915' panel.

    An old friend, I had no problem convincing Raymond to share his
    thoughts on the issue.

    `This is an issue that will only grow in significance in the future.
    And it is an issue that blows away the Turkish state's decades old
    argument of a homogenous populace. As such, the issue of Islamized
    Armenians should be seen as an integral part of the overall internal
    Turkish process now going on in various ethnic communities regarding a
    search for identity, and that there are actually several Turkish
    identities,' Kevorkian said.

    He stressed that the entire issue demands greater research on a social
    level and that the anecdotal studies carried out to date aren't
    sufficient.

    `The diaspora must come to grips with the fact that the bulk of these
    converted Armenians will remain as they are. So how do we relate to
    them and, in particular, how shall we relate to those who display a
    willingness to come into contact with traditional Armenian communities
    and structures,' Kevorkian added.

    Summing up the challenge that these converted Armenians now pose to
    the greater Armenian community, Kevorkian said, `We face a new reality
    today. A significant segment of us had disappeared and are now
    resurfacing, but in a new form.'

    When I asked my friend, if we are able, and willingly, to come to
    grips with this new reality, he responded, `We have to come up with an
    answer, better yet, a set of answers. This conference is a preliminary
    step in the search for answers, and I have no doubt that the search
    will continue.

    http://hetq.am/eng/news/30441/islamized-armenians-coming-to-grips-with-a-new-reality.html




    From: A. Papazian
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