Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

One year to the centenary of the Armenian Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • One year to the centenary of the Armenian Genocide

    Ekklesia, UK
    April 25 2014

    One year to the centenary of the Armenian Genocide

    By Harry Hagopian
    24 Apr 2014


    Just utter the words 'Armenian genocide' or mention the date '24 April
    1915' to any Armenian in any corner of the world, and he or she would
    instantly launch into stories about the near-extermination of their
    Armenian forebears by Ottoman Turkey under the cover of the First
    World War.

    Mention those same words or dates to most Turkish men or women and
    they would in all likelihood profess ignorance of the event, or deny
    that it ever happened, or go into fits of indignation about such
    Armenian mendacities. Welcome to the world of Armenian-Turkish
    relations 99 years after this horrible chapter in their shared
    history.

    While most Diasporan Armenians define much of their identity through
    those events, Turkey seemingly feels no such moral compunction or
    guilt despite the holocaust (as Robert Fisk calls it) that its Ottoman
    predecessors committed against Armenians. Instead, and unlike Germany
    that has bent backwards in its admission of responsibility for
    ha-Shoah (the Jewish Holocaust) let alone made reparations, Turkey
    still challenges any statement that dares question its actions during
    the First World War.

    So here are my latest thoughts about the issue of the Armenian
    genocide at a time when Armenians in all five continents commemorate
    this event despite what have been frenetic, persistent denials by
    Turkish officials -- with some more hopeful comments recently
    forthcoming from Prime Minister Erdogan.

    * I have probably repeated this statement ad nauseum, but I would like
    to re-affirm that there is no doubt in my mind about the historical
    veracity of this genocide - a macabre event that one priest recently
    described as 'the granddaddy of all genocides'. And I utter this
    statement not as an ethnic Armenian with presumed genetic biases, but
    as someone quite familiar with the solid literature coming out from
    international historians, organisations, scholars and lawyers - not
    least the International Association of Genocide Scholars - confirming
    time and again that forced deportations and massacres took place
    against Armenians of Turkish nationality [alongside Greeks, Assyrians
    and Nestorians] living in their homelands in Eastern Turkey / Western
    Armenia during those ominous years of WWI.

    * Mind you, any search engine would come up with a wealth of serious
    and incontrovertible documentation about this genocide. As Professor
    Colin Tatz, a former director of the Centre for Comparative Genocide
    Studies, stated, "The Turkish denial [of the Armenian genocide] is
    probably the foremost example of historical perversion. With a mix of
    academic sophistication and diplomatic thuggery - of which we at
    Macquarie University [in Sydney, Australia] have been targets - the
    Turks have put both memory and history into reverse gear". In fact,
    was it not Tala'at Pasha, in a conversation with Dr Mordtmann of the
    German embassy in June 1915, who said that Turkey was taking advantage
    of the war in order to thoroughly liquidate {gründlich aufräumen} its
    internal foes?

    * Yet, many Turks remain largely unaware of this Ottoman chapter in
    their history. How could they, really? A blend of Turkish stubborn
    nationalism, coupled with a near blackout of any literary or academic
    sources (until quite recently), has meant that a gap has existed in
    the education of Turks. One rule of thumb has always been that
    ignorance often fosters strident tones of chauvinism - which is what
    also happens at times in modern-day Turkey. Nonetheless, there is a
    creeping awareness by Turks of this genocide: after all, some
    universities, academics, authors and researchers are openly - at times
    bravely - defying this manner of self-imposed and deliberate denial.

    * In this sense, one very powerful Turkish manifestation of this
    evolving and encouraging trend has been the public Call for
    Commemoration: The 24th of April statements issued yearly by the Human
    Rights Association, Istanbul Branch Committee against Racism and
    Discrimination. In letters they sent to the two catholicoi (highest
    authorities of the Armenian Church at Etchmiadzin and Antelias) a
    couple of years ago, for instance, they decried "the deracination of
    the Armenian population throughout Anatolia where they had lived for
    thousands of years, and their annihilation as a result of starvation,
    destitution and massacres". In fact, the significance of this decision
    by the Human Rights Association far outreaches its small numbers. It
    is a bold decision that is driven by respect for human rights per se
    and as such is a crucial transit point for the future since what
    matters most is not the recognition of this genocide by third parties
    - even important ones such as the USA, the UK or Israel - but rather
    by Turkey itself. Simply put, the buck started with Turkey, and the
    buck can really only stop with Turkey.

    * Moreover, and as Marc Nichanian writes somewhat controversially in
    his Historiographic Perversion (CUP, 2009) when discussing history and
    law, the Armenian genocide deals with amputation as well as
    imputation. Indeed, the certainty alone that the genocide occurred -
    no matter how deliberately cruel - is in itself an inadequate
    response. The same could be argued for the self-sufficiency of
    worldwide campaigns for recognition embracing our political, religious
    or community leaders. Even though their words are fiery and rousing,
    their follow-up actions remain politic and therefore casuistic. Nor,
    for that matter, is recognition achieved merely through an
    overinflated reliance on draft laws submitted to parliaments as
    political footballs or the prevarications of US Administrations and
    Israeli governments who spin their decisions politically and label the
    genocide as meds yeghern (great catastrophe) or else market the
    recognition of the genocide episodically for the sake of rankling if
    not pressuring Turkey. What troubles me is that this Armenian
    dependency on recognition by world leaders or parliaments is not the
    real solution. What is required is a much deeper reflection on
    longer-term strategies rather than shorter-term tactics alone.

    * In my opinion, as a Christian believer but equally as an
    international lawyer who has worked with such cases, those expressions
    of frustration and indignation - understandable though they might be
    on an emotional level - must also be measured and well thought out. We
    must certainly lift up our indefatigable values, sacrifices and
    traditions as Armenians but we should also ensure that we do not go
    down the slippery road of revenge. Recognition is not tantamount to
    vindictiveness or a settling of scores. So I do wonder about the
    wisdom of constant Turkey-bashing with words (and at times with eggs
    hurled at Turkish demonstrators!), or when our recognition campaigns
    turn exceedingly jingoistic and attempt to legislate our freedoms of
    thought and expression - those very freedoms our forefathers were
    deprived of during the genocide?

    * This year, in 2014, the Diasporan communities are preparing - some
    less slowly than others - for the centenary of the Armenian genocide.
    So what should be the task of those committees that are meant to
    represent Armenians worldwide? Should it be one of looking inward
    (perish the thought, even navel-gazing), with each committee behaving
    parochially or else slavering to the expectations of vested interests
    - Armenian or otherwise - as they consider the programmes that could
    feature in our commemorative events for 2015? Or should they come
    together as avant-garde thinkers who surprise us by stepping outside
    the box, even pushing the proverbial envelope, and confidently seeking
    to define a robust and united roadmap that is grounded in an inclusive
    vision? As appointed leaders, are they ready to lead by challenging
    some of our long-held taboos? Where do we Armenians wish to go in
    terms of a genocide that cleansed two-thirds of the Armenian
    populations in Ottoman Turkey during 1915-1923? Should we not look at
    the arsenal of tools that constitute the potential wealth of the whole
    Armenian nation today?

    * Such tools could be political, legal, literary, religious,
    dialogical and media-friendly - to name just five. Are we not aware of
    the number of journalists or activists who are detained in Turkish
    gaols today or are we not familiar of the vagaries of the Turkish
    Penal Code and its proscriptive articles that muzzle Turks and
    handcuff their words let alone deeds? Should we not challenge the
    vociferous denial of modern-day Turkey in legal fora, academic and
    media outlets as well as on political levels that require less
    grandstanding perhaps than the White House or Elysée Palace but are
    more effective in mobilising grassroots support for an Armenian case
    that helped Lemkin craft the UN Genocide Convention of 1948? Here in
    the UK, a small number of committed activists in Wales have over the
    years achieved much more than in many other parts of the UK. The same
    could be said of Edinburgh where another handful of Armenians managed
    to pass two Resolutions by the Edinburgh City Council that recognise
    the Armenian genocide despite massive Turkish opposition and a
    reluctance by Scottish Conservatives to support the Motion.

    * Finally, and whilst keeping recognition by Turkey as the bull's eye
    of all collective efforts, the Armenian genocide must also tap into
    its available resources in association with survivors of other
    genocides - from the Holocaust and Cambodia to Rwanda and Darfur.
    Should we not talk perhaps to Rwandans or Kurds about their
    experiences at Kigali, at Halabja and elsewhere too? After all, and as
    George Shirinian of the Canada-based Zoryan Institute stated a while
    back, education is a mnemonic, the one indispensable skeleton key
    toward the achievement of the Armenian objective. Education is harder
    than loose words, but it could also re-incarnate the memories of all
    those Armenians killed, wounded, raped, deported, converted or
    forgotten during this cheerless period in the history of humankind.

    Like most Diasporan Armenians today, I too trace my roots to the
    horrors committed against my family by the triumvirate rulers of
    Turkey ninety-nine years ago. I have lost members of my family and
    have heard the stories recounted to me by my maternal grandfather some
    decades ago. But I do not seek revenge, nor do I want to spill more
    blood in order to cleanse the stain that blots Ottoman Turkish
    history. Rather, I seek painfully a way forward that honours the
    memories of all those who perished during the genocide so that I too
    can move forward - alongside other Armenians and Turks.

    And let me say it plainly but also confidently, while all Turks are
    certainly not righteous Hrant Dinks, some of them certainly are, as
    they went out of their way to help protect Armenians - and therefore
    they too become part of my own future.

    * More on the Armenian Genocide from Ekklesia:
    http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/armeniangenocide

    ---------

    (c) Harry Hagopian is an international lawyer, ecumenist and EU
    political consultant.

    http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/20454



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X