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  • It Has Begun

    IT HAS BEGUN

    Editorial, 24 December 2014

    What will be Ankara's response to the commemorations of the Genocide
    of Armenians? Earlier this year several official Turkish spokesmen
    announced that the government had allocated a multi-million dollar
    budget in an orchestrated campaign to combat the Armenian assertions
    re the Ottoman Turkey/Republic of Turkey planned annihilation of
    Armenians from 1915 to 1923. The Turkish denialist campaign will
    be probably monolithic, unlike the Armenian effort which will be
    multi-pronged because of the Armenia and Armenian Diaspora duality,
    in addition to the Diaspora's far-flung status.

    The Turkish government campaign has begun with soft lobs.

    In the past month it has been announced in Turkey that...

    A street in the Buykere district of Istanbul will be named after
    Turkish-Armenian film actor Nubar Terziyan.

    Armenian chef Grigori K. Antinyan was invited to Turkey in a "food for
    diplomacy" project where he taught culinary students the mysteries of
    Armenian cuisine. Never mind that this sounds like carrying coal to
    Coventry since it's universally recognized that every Armenian dish,
    sauce, condiment and dessert is of echt Turkish origin.

    Mayor Mehmed Sayit Dagoglu of Balu would restore an 800-year-old
    Armenian church in that city. Apparently, the church has been finally
    pensioned off after years of serving as target for stone-throwing boys.

    Etyen Mahcupyan, former editor of "Agos" (2007-2010) and contributor
    to "Taraf" daily and pro-government "AK" has been appointed senior
    advisor to Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. He will work
    in the "areas of democracy, government and public relations, and
    minorities," according to government sources. It's the first time that
    a non-Muslim has been hired for such a position. Mahcupyan promptly
    and unsurprisingly denied that his sinecure had anything to do with
    the Armenians. Right.

    MP Mustafa Balbay announced that the 8-volume "Archival Documents on
    the Armenian activities in 1914-1918", which denies the Genocide,
    were recently removed from the Turkish General Staff website. But
    what's to stop their reinstallation on January 1, 2016?

    The Aghtamar Holy Cross Church in Lake Van has been identified as
    Armenian by a government-posted sign. For years Turkey has insisted
    that the island's name derives from "Akdamar" and a Turkish folk tale.

    "Tale" is right, as in fairy tale.

    Lo and behold: a tourist billboard in Ani now says King Kakig was
    Armenian. But who were the Armenians? A long-disappeared nomadic
    Turkic Anatolian tribe?

    Ankara returned some real estate to the Armenian Patriarchate in
    Istanbul. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had a photo-op with a senior
    patriarchate official.

    By no means is the above list comprehensive.

    Some would argue that these developments have nothing to do with
    the centennial of the Genocide and that they are positive signals
    and an aspect of Turkish liberalization. Even more optimistic souls
    would naively assume that Turkey is edging closer to admitting its
    horrendous crime against the Armenian nation. However, the timing and
    their volume, in such a short span of time, would indicate otherwise.

    A recent statement from Erdogan also underlines that these "happy
    news" blips are part of the incipient Turkish campaign. During his
    speech at the French Institution of International Relations, Erdogan
    chided that Turkey had manifested goodwill and extended its hand in
    peace to Armenians, but the Armenians had rejected it. "Despite all
    our constructive approach, Armenia and Armenians in Diaspora have
    not manifested a reasonable demeanor," Erdogan bleated.

    Despite his predictable and ennui-inducing harangue in France,
    it's inconceivable that Erdogan would think the above feints would
    persuade Armenians to give up their efforts this year, next year or
    the year after. However, the fact is Armenians are irrelevant to
    the Turkish government strategy. These PR volleys are largely for
    the benefit of the mostly ignorant third-party media which would be
    eager to consider them as genuine peace-making efforts on Ankara's
    part. The Ankara gestures are meant to portray Armenians are obdurate,
    vengeful, unrealistic, etc. etc. They are also intended to provide an
    "out" to governments which don't recognize the Genocide.

    Finally, the most telling proof that the above goodwill gestures are
    feints to mislead Armenians is the Turkish government's announcement
    (according to the "Pusalhaber" website) that Ankara has established
    5,000 overseas Turkish community organizations to strengthen its
    lobbying efforts and to combat the Armenian Diaspora. In addition to
    helping fund these civil society groups, Turkey has staffed some of
    them with foreign ministry officials.

    What should be the Diaspora Armenian reaction to Ankara's continued
    policy of mythinformation and denialism?

    Anger, contempt, and jeering are lazy and don't advance our cause.

    Here are some of the steps the Armenian Diaspora must take:

    Expose the foreign government's intrusion into the domestic affairs
    of the countries where Armenians are citizens.

    Intensify and expand efforts to spread the word.

    Concentrate on external communication and commemorations rather
    than keep them inside Armenian community "walls": Armenians know
    what happened; it's the non-Armenians who should be informed and
    convinced of the justness of Hye Tadd. A good example of reaching
    to the "outside" world is the Toronto Armenian community blood bank
    campaign next April. Blood donated from Armenians, in memory of the
    Genocide, will be distributed to the Canadian Red Cross.

    Time is running out. The Armenian Diaspora should devise ASAP as many
    as possible DRAMATIC, NOVEL, and GLOBAL events to draw the attention
    of the media and the public to the ONE-HUNDRED YEARS OF LIES.

    Unflinching steadfastness, especially when Ankara brings out its big
    propaganda guns to promote its Genocide-denying enterprise, is key.

    Ankara has the money. We have the truth. Let's deploy the facts in
    an effective manner to combat Ankara's expensively-bought untruths.

    http://www.keghart.com/Editorial-Has-Begun

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