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Turkey Covers Up Armenian Genocide

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  • Turkey Covers Up Armenian Genocide

    TURKEY COVERS UP ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Assyrian International News Agency AINA
    Oct 16 2013

    In 1915, under the cover of World War I, Ottoman Turks wiped out
    about a third of its Armenian population. To this day, Turkey denies
    any blame for the atrocity, and behind it, U.S. stands firm among a
    dwindling band of nations that fail to acknowledge the killings were
    Genocide, writes Syuzanna Petrosyan, Executive Producer at Annenberg
    Digital News (neontommy.com).

    "In the recent years, as recognition from governments around the
    world has increased, Turkey has also multiplied its efforts to combat
    remembrance and commemoration inside and outside of Turkey. From the
    vivid photographs of Armin T. Wegner, a German soldiers and medic
    stationed in the Ottoman Empire during the genocide, to the reports
    of U.S. Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire Henry Morganthau, and the
    front page headlines in the New York Times, it is remarkable how
    forcefully Turkey has been able to curtail the memory of this tragedy
    from its own people and those around the world. It becomes perhaps
    less surprising when taking into account the billions of dollars
    the Turkish government spends on world-wide denial efforts. And one
    doesn't have to look too far. For the past five years, The Pacifica
    Institute, a Turkish-American organization based in Orange County,
    Calif. has hosted the Anatolian Cultures & Foods Festival. Anatolia
    refers to the region of Turkey were majority of Armenians lived during
    the Ottoman Empire. The festival portrays the rich multiculturalism
    of the region, including displays of old Armenian churches, artifacts
    and music, with no mention of the annihilation of an entire people
    but also the complete destruction of its culture in their homeland
    of thousands of years," Petrosyan says.

    "By presenting the Ottoman era of the Turkey in a positive light,
    they appeal to the mass media and the public, which helps them spread
    their message in solidifying denial and shaping the discourse of the
    Armenian Genocide. They focus on perceptions and images to appeal
    rather than historical and scholarly accuracy. Nonetheless, it is by
    no means an easy task to re-write history. In 1998, UCLA's history
    department voted to reject a $1m offer to endow a program in Turkish
    and Ottoman studies because it was conditional on their denying the
    Armenian Genocide."

    Petrosyan goes on to say: "In August of 2011, the Turkish government
    tried to suppress a Microsoft online encyclopedia entry. The Chronicle
    of Higher Education reports that the Turkish government threatened
    Microsoft with serious reprisals unless all mention of the Armenian
    genocide was removed. Authors Ronald Grigor Suny and Helen Fein
    refused to give in.

    "Professor Colin Tatz, director for the Centre for Comparative Genocide
    Studies at Macquarie University, in Sydney, Australia, claims that
    Turkey has used "a mix of academic sophistication and diplomatic
    thuggery . . . to put both memory and history into reverse gear".

    Despite the massive efforts by the Turkish government, however,
    in the recent years, intellectuals in Turkey have began rising the
    discussion of the genocide, risking persecution and arrest. In 2005,
    Nobel prize-winning novelist Orhan Pampuk was put on trial in Turkey
    after he made a statement regarding the Armenian Genocide. The
    controversy ensued with burning of Pamuk's books at rallies and
    assassination attempts."

    She reminds that in 2007, Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was
    assassinated in Istanbul in front of his newspaper office. "Dink had
    long endured threats by Turkish nationalists for his statements on the
    Armenian Genocide. He had also been under prosecution for violating
    Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code which makes it illegal to
    "insult Turkishness." In a 2012 decision, the European Court of
    Human Rights ruled that Turkey had failed to protect Dink's freedom
    of speech. His murder sparked international outrage."

    "In more recent years, academics in Turkey have risked fierce backlash
    by issuing a public apology campaign for genocide. The apology
    comes in an open letter inviting Turks to sign an online petition
    supporting its sentiments. In an interview with Cengiz Aktar, one of
    the founders of the apology campaign and a professor of EU studies at
    Istanbul's University of Bahcesehir, he said that the purpose of the
    petition is to bring back the memory of the genocide which has been
    forcefully erased by the government. By the end of 2000, the European
    Parliament, France, Sweden, the Vatican and Italy finally acknowledged
    the Armenian Genocide. Of the major powers, only the U.S., Canada and
    Britain still hold back. There are too many conflicting interests at
    stake. Turkey, for instance, threatened to deny the U.S. use of its
    air bases if President Clinton agreed formally to accept the massacres
    as a genocide," she says.

    "For the Turks, the problem is enormous. An acknowledgement of the
    Armenian genocide might result in land claims and reparations. They
    have only to look at recent German and Swiss history to take fright.

    It is no surprise, then, that they try to control every aspect of
    discourse on this topic."

    Petrosyan concludes the article with the words of Thomas Burgenthal, an
    Auschwitz survivor, lawyer and member of the UN Human Rights Committee,
    who said, "I don't know why the Turks can't admit it, express sorrow
    and go on. That is the worst. You do all these things to the victim
    and then you say it never happened. That is killing them twice."

    http://www.aina.org/news/20131015212548.htm

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