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Astarjian: Hypocrisy or Ineptitude?

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  • Astarjian: Hypocrisy or Ineptitude?

    Astarjian: Hypocrisy or Ineptitude?

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/09/28/astarjian-hypocrisy-or-ineptitude/
    By Dr. Henry Astarjian // September 28, 2013


    Like a drunken sailor, the Armenian nation - with its motherland and
    Diaspora - continues to drag itself through mud into oblivion,
    pretending that things are all right. It's time for jubilation.

    The motherland, basking in corruption and crime, is plagued with
    depopulation and confusion about its political identity. It pretends
    to switch its orientation towards civilized Europe, while
    historically, traditionally, culturally, and de-facto, it lives under
    the Russian tent. Russian armed forces remain camped on Armenian soil,
    while Russia pursues its interests by cow-towing to Azerbaijan. The
    psychological orientation of the Armenian man-in-the-street continues
    to be loyal to Russia, despite a huge American diplomatic presence in
    the country. This orientation is fortified by the fact that Russia is
    the biggest employer of Armenian workers, be they scientists or
    peasants.

    At present, the Armenian Diaspora in Russia is twice the size of that
    in America, and has the same psychological attachment to the
    motherland - casual and nominal - as other communities in the Diaspora.
    However, the sum total of their involvement in the problems and
    aspirations of the Nation is close to nil.

    The same applies to Armenian cantons that span the globe. In each
    country, Armenians, considering themselves natives of their new home,
    build churches (sometimes two, a few yards apart), schools and halls,
    to establish modified Armenian community life. Their actions affirm
    diasporan permanency: sports events; banquets to honor one another and
    decorate the chests of people - such as those who have devoted
    themselves to this or that church, have run schools and other
    municipal institutions, or have passed through Ellis Island - with
    meaningless medals worth as much as Coca Cola caps. These are
    indications of permanency.

    Individual and communal security, comfort, and prosperity enjoyed by
    much of the Diaspora have created a gigantic gorge between us and the
    Motherland. Diasporans are not willing to trade their status quo with
    that of their Motherland's, which has nothing to offer its inhabitants
    and the nation but corruption, extortion, poverty, and, at best,
    benign neglect.

    Armenia is no longer the spiritual or nationalistic fortress of
    Armenians; a sad, but true fact.

    To fill the vacuum created by this situation, the post-genocide
    Armenians are laboring to find identity in their immediate ancestors'
    churches, tombstones, graves, and destroyed homes in Western Armenia.
    At best, this activity brings some solace to those who pursue it, but
    never addresses the fact that Western Armenia is now fully inhabited
    by Kurds, and our business will have to be with them. Instead, we have
    fallen prey to a multifaceted dilemma, which has forced us to pursue
    our rights in the international arena through the recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide by the international community and Turkey. This is
    well and good, but not enough to reach our goals. For over three
    decades, we have expended tremendous amount of psychological and
    financial capital through the Armenian National Committee (ANC) and
    other organizations in Washington to have the U.S. government
    officially call the Genocide by its just name. This has not happened.
    Several U.S. presidents have deceived us by reneging on their written
    promises. Some 30 countries have recognized the Genocide, so what?
    What will happen if the UN and/or the U.S. accept the Genocide?
    Nothing!

    We have lost our political compass: we concentrated our efforts on
    popularizing hatred towards the Turks, convicting them of Genocide,
    and insist on having them 1) admit their crime of genocide, then 2)
    pay reparations.

    This decades-old approach is still our modus operandi. Turkey has
    rejected both. For them, the status quo is quite suitable and has
    succeeded in expending our psychological, material, and political
    capital, while diverting our target from the demands of land and
    Western Armenia to the useless issue of human rights. We have naively
    bitten that bait!

    Historic and current political realities have proven to us that this
    road is closed, and leads us to nowhere. Whatever happens, whether
    turkey recognizes the Genocide or not, our just demand is retrieving
    our land, our Fatherland, Western Armenia, then realizing our nation's
    right to unite East and West in one sovereign Armenia.

    Of late, demands have been begged from heaven, to have some 2,000
    confiscated churches returned by Turkey to their legal owners, the
    Armenian religious authorities. Already, it has happened in one place,
    Diyarbakir, where the dominant Kurdish municipality has returned the
    Sourp Giragos church. Yes, we are grateful to Mayor Osman Baydemir for
    his generosity, but as the assistant editor of The Armenian Weekly
    said while visiting the church, `What good is a church without its
    faithful?'

    While magnanimous, this gesture realizes neither Armenian, nor Kurdish demands.

    Return of churches is desirable but insufficient in solving the
    Armenian claims. Similarly, some individual's demand of $3 billion for
    their confiscated property does not address the demands of the nation.

    As a nation, we are plaintiffs with concrete demands, it is imperative
    that we regain ownership of our lands with our own efforts, not by
    begging charity from others. We are not beggars!

    We know that nobody will offer what is rightfully ours just for the
    sake of doing what is right. Freedom is taken, not given. Countries
    have their interests, and no country can sacrifice its interests for
    the sake of restoring our rights in our Fatherland, Western Armenia.

    The history of Armenians does not begin and end with the Genocide. For
    millennia, we have lived on our land, sometimes peacefully, sometimes
    miserably, and some other times in sovereignty. During all that, we
    have been able to maintain and renew our physical and cultural
    existence. Such has been our reality.

    Today, the unstable but obvious situation in the region has placed us
    at a decision-making crossroads, which requires us to correct our
    present political direction, clearly define our demands, sharpen our
    target, and move forward. It is imperative that we make the Genocide
    our launching point, not the psychological and political destination.

    Today, more than ever, Western Armenia is in danger. Kurds, having
    occupied our land, are striving to create their own united and free
    Kurdistan. That includes our Van, our Mush, our Bitlis, our Erzerum,
    our Trabizond, and our Araratian plane.

    For us, the alarm bell has rung, but for the Kurds, it is their bugle
    which is blowing the tunes of freedom. To implement their plans, they
    have pursued and succeeded in altering the individual Kurd's mind from
    tribal to revolutionary mode.

    They have also succeeded in influencing European public opinion in
    their favor through their parliament in exile, which is incorporated
    in The Hague, located in Brussels, and present in electronic and print
    media. They have presented their cause as the legitimate human rights
    struggle of 30 million landlocked people who have no independence, and
    who are persecuted by Turkey. The Kurds owe the development of this
    situation to the unwise and irritating political, social, and economic
    policies of Turkey.

    Aside from Ottoman persecutions of Kurds, the newly formed and
    supposedly modern regime of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk persecuted the
    Kurdish aghas to put an end to their authority and aspirations of
    independence.

    This policy energized Kurdish determination for independence.
    Furthermore, Ataturk denied the existence of a Kurdish race, and
    considered them to be `mountain Turks.' Speaking Kurdish was also
    forbidden.

    In 1937, tens of thousands of Kurds were annihilated in Dersim. The
    persecution continues.

    However, the situation has fortified the Kurdish revolution.

    Chauvinist and fascist Turkish governments did to the Kurds what the
    Kurds had done to the Armenians; this time, recruiting Kurdish
    mercenaries called korucus (village guards), who killed, raised havoc
    and destroyed hundreds of villages.

    In 1984, the Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) resorted to armed struggle
    against the Turkish government, which continues to date.

    ***

    We recognize the Kurdish cause as a de jure right: it is not just for
    the 30 million people - who have lived on their land for millennia - to
    remain the victims of Turkish hegemony and persecution.

    We share their national aspirations, but not at the expense of our
    rights and demands.

    Throughout time, we have known the Kurds to be ignorant and uneducated
    tribes, robbers, extortionists and murderers who have kidnapped and
    raped our women and participated in executing the Ottoman waged
    genocide against us. As such, we have formed negative opinions about
    them. Now, almost a century later, it is time to revisit that
    conviction.

    Today, the Kurdish leadership is highly educated, has modern-thinking
    intellectuals, free and healthy print and electronic media, theater
    and music, political and democratic maturity, and a representative
    parliament in exile in Brussels - consisting of men, women, and
    minorities - where free speech is supreme. It is a parliament whose
    first manifesto has been the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, the
    admission of their role in executing it, and asking for forgiveness
    from the Armenian nation.

    It is a parliament that hosted an Armenian and allowed him to present
    his nation's land demands freely, according to the Treaty of Sevres.

    It is a parliament that stood in attention while the Armenian national
    anthem played.

    It is a parliament whose foremost revolutionary battle-songs were
    composed by an Armenian, Aram Tigran Manoogian.

    Yes, our interests dictate that we value all these.

    Nonetheless, it is prudent to ask these questions:

    Where are we in this? Where are we in this complex situation?

    Why are our people unaware of these developments, especially that
    there is the danger of losing Western Armenia forever?

    Saving Western Armenia and saving our compatriots who have forcefully
    converted to Islam is our duty. We are accountable to the future
    generations, if we do not protect their heritage.

    In all these, one thing is clear: willingly or otherwise, our future
    is with the Kurds, and it is the Kurds who are our partners. Dialogue
    with them is inevitable and necessary.

    This venue is not alien to us. Historically, we have cooperated with
    them in their struggle for freedom:

    In 1843, prince Bedirkhan of Bohtan formed a 40,000-strong
    Armenian-Kurdish army and waged war against Ottoman Turkey.

    In 1927, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) signed the
    Khoyboon Treaty with the Kurds, and participated in the battles of
    Ararat.

    Malkhas and Garo Sassouni attempted to establish cooperative relations
    with the Kurdish tribes in order to fight the common enemy, Ottoman
    Turkey.

    Now, time and atmospherics having changed, developing and advancing
    our relationship is the mandate of both sides.

    Kurds - with their parliament's first manifesto, the return of Sourp
    Giragos church of Diyarbakir (which they restored partly at their own
    financial expense), and with the organization of an Armenian song and
    dance festival in Dersim (Tunceli) - have demonstrated good will towards
    us. We, in turn, have participated in their all-important Spring
    Rights Newruz.

    All these are friendly gestures, but never the solution to the return
    of our Western Armenia.

    Our demands are ours for as long as we make them ours. Therefore, it
    is imperative that we create and establish a national political
    entity, in addition and parallel to ANC, to study and pursue
    Armeno-Kurdish relations and formulate ideas and suggestions.

    Second, it is imperative to assemble an entity consisting of world
    famous, Armenian and non-Armenian lawyers and experts in international
    law, to revive the Sevres Treaty and realize the map of President
    Woodrow Wilson, which delineates the borders between Turkey and
    Western Armenia.

    But what is this Treaty?

    In 1920, during the League of Nations meeting in Sevres, France was
    considering dividing the defeated Ottoman Empire, and returning to the
    different nationalities the lands the Ottomans had taken by force.

    Articles 88-93 of this treaty dealt with the Armenian issue,
    delineating borders with Turkey according to the Wilsonian map.

    Today, the Sevres Treaty and the Wilsonian map are the foundations of
    our demands. They form the basis of our international jurisprudence,
    and our political conviction.

    Today, we believe that this treaty is alive, but lethargic. Its impact
    is interpreted differently by various countries.

    For Turkey, it is an eternal threat because, in its entirety, it
    convicts Turkey with misdeeds and crimes in every field.

    For us, it is a solid, internationally viable, and politically firm
    document, protecting our rights.

    And for the Kurds, it is like a sweet and sour soup.

    Our national cause and claim are crystal clear, but complex. However,
    Sevres satisfies them fully.

    We have no right to ignore precious Sevres.

    We have no right to overlook or postpone the claim of a `united
    sovereign Armenia.'

    We have no right to excite our people with the slogan of a `united
    sovereign Armenia,' and then do nothing about it.

    We have no right to get excited with the return of some `church
    buildings empty of its faithful' (The Armenian Weekly's assistant
    editor on her visit to Diyarbakir). No one has the right to convert
    our places of worship to museums.

    No one has the right to push us around. The question arises: are we
    hypocrites for not acting yet sloganeering `free and united Armenia,'
    or are we inept?

    ***

    As a nation, we are neither cry-babies nor beggars.

    Let our enemies know that when the knife hits the bone, ten million
    Armenians, with their Pakos, Serges, Raffis and the rest, will stand
    shoulder-to-shoulder, like a shield to defend their Fatherland.

    This nation is determined, heroic, and brave; to wit Artsakh (Nagorno Karabagh).

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