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Turkey: Genocide A La Carte

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  • Turkey: Genocide A La Carte

    TURKEY: GENOCIDE A LA CARTE

    by Burak Bekdil
    April 16, 2015 at 4:00 am

    http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/5570/turkey-genocide

    Turkey's Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu accused the Holy See of
    ignoring the pain suffered by Muslims and Turks. Cavusoglu did not
    say why Muslims and Turks tend to ignore the pain suffered by other
    faiths and other nations.

    Such political controversies as the Pope's speech always offer golden
    opportunities to Turkish officials who would not miss exploiting
    them in order to look pretty to an Islamist government and hope for
    a brighter career.

    It seems as if Turkey's ruling politicians are in a race to look less
    and less convincing to an already suspicious international audience.

    How they defended their ancestors' sins a century ago earned them
    new points in the race, and made them look even more odd than before.

    The tragic events of 1915-1920 that killed 1.5 million Ottoman
    Armenians have been recognized as genocide by a total of 22 countries
    in the world, 44 states in the United States, two states in Australia,
    three in Brazil, four regions and three cities in Spain, two in Syria,
    five provinces in Bulgaria, one in Colombia, one regional parliament
    in the Netherlands, one regional parliament in Italy and one in Iran.

    The Catholic city-state, the Vatican, is among the countries that
    have recognized the genocide. But a papal speech on April 12 at a
    commemorative Mass, calling the mass killing of Armenians the "first
    genocide of the 20th century," deeply annoyed some very important
    men in Ankara. Their defense line was beyond the traditional official
    Turkish language based on outright denial: it featured generous doses
    of banality and hypocrisy.

    Pope Francis speaks at a Mass commemorating the centenary of the
    Armenian genocide, on April 12, 2015. (Image source: Vatican video
    screenshot)

    Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu accused the Holy See of ignoring
    the pain suffered by Muslims and Turks. But Cavusoglu did not say why
    Muslims and Turks tend to ignore the pain suffered by other faiths
    and nations. In 2009, then Prime Minister (now President) Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan accused China of committing genocide against the ethnic Turkic
    Uighurs in China, after fewer than 100 of them lost their lives during
    clashes with Chinese security forces. The same year, Erdogan said
    that he went to Darfur in Sudan and did not see genocide there. Only a
    few months earlier, Erdogan's Islamist friend, Sudan's President Omar
    al-Bashir, had become the first sitting president to be indicted by the
    International Criminal Court for genocide and crimes against humanity
    that caused the death of 400,000 people in Darfur in 2005. "A Muslim
    would never commit genocide," Erdogan said, explaining why the man
    with an arrest warrant for his crimes, al-Bashir, was innocent.

    A more creative, jaw-dropping explanation for why Pope Francis may
    have uttered the word that deeply irritates many Turks came from
    Volkan Bozkir, a former ambassador and Turkish minister for the
    European Union. Bozkir said he must remind that the Pope is "in fact
    a citizen of Argentina." Most journalists listening to his speech
    silently wondered: So what.

    Bozkir further explained: "As you know, Argentina is a country that
    embraced the Nazi leaders and torturers ... The Pope must have had
    a sensitivity for his own Argentinian citizenship."

    According to this theory, Pope Francis, like every other citizen of
    Argentina, is responsible for the acts of Nazi fugitives who fled
    to his country. And the Nazi collaborator in the Pope (like every
    other Argentinian!) forced him to label the mass killings of Armenians
    "genocide." That is not even meant to be funny. It reveals the mindset
    of the people who rule Turkey.

    According to Professor Mehmet Gormez, Turkey's top Muslim cleric, Pope
    Francis's statement was totally "unfounded." That could be Gormez's
    own opinion, and everyone has the liberty to take him seriously or
    not. But Professor Gormez also claimed that there have never been
    missionary ambitions or colonialism in the history of Turkey [the
    successor state to the Ottoman Empire]. That is only laughable to
    anyone with an elementary knowledge of history. For one, Gormez should
    explain why millions of Turks every day celebrate the "conquest of
    [Christian] Istanbul" by Muslim Ottomans.

    Such political controversies as the Pope's speech always offer golden
    opportunities to Turkish officials who would not miss exploiting
    them in order to look pretty to an Islamist government and hope
    for a brighter career. They usually would make a weird statement,
    make sure it gets published, and lots of public attention, so that
    the very important men in Ankara could privately or publicly hail
    them. Turkey is never short of (centrally-appointed, not elected)
    governors with eccentric opinions. The Pope's speech lavishly enabled
    someone serving in one of Turkey's most remote and poorest corners
    to prove his loyalty to the Islamists in Ankara.

    In a public speech, the governor of Turkey's easternmost province,
    Kars, invited Pope Francis to -- convert! The governor kindly invited
    the leader of the Catholic world to a Muslim mass in his city and said:
    "May God grant him the right path [to Islam]."

    This author has no idea if the Pope would take that opportunity and
    convert to Islam. But it is certain that Turkey's Islamists have
    brought a playful new dimension to their country's culture of denial.

    Burak Bekdil, based in Ankara, is a Turkish columnist for the Hurriyet
    Daily and a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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