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A Small Country But A Big Nation: How Genocide Shaped The Armenia Of

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  • A Small Country But A Big Nation: How Genocide Shaped The Armenia Of

    A SMALL COUNTRY BUT A BIG NATION: HOW GENOCIDE SHAPED THE ARMENIA OF TODAY

    As Armenians mark the beginning of violence that left 1.5 million
    dead, Turkey's lack of contrition leaves descendants struggling to
    reconcile loss and renewal

    Mount Ararat, in neighbouring Turkey, reminds the population of the
    Armenian capital, Yerevan, of the proximity of lands abandoned during
    the genocide. Photograph: Maxim Shipenkov/EPA

    Ian Black in Yerevan

    @ian_black

    Wednesday 22 April 2015 11.13 BST Last modified on Wednesday 22 April
    2015 11.53 BST

    In the beginning you hardly notice them: little lapel buttons in
    purple, yellow and black to mourn the dead and a lost homeland. But
    then there are the posters, T-shirts, umbrellas, bumper stickers,
    even cakes, all bearing the same forget-me-not flower designed to
    commemorate the tragedy of a nation.

    It is the symbol of the centenary of the Armenian genocide of 1915,
    being marked this week in solemn ceremonies in Yerevan and wherever in
    the world this ancient people fled in the wake of the mass atrocities
    suffered in the dying days of the Ottoman empire.

    This newly invented tradition, a poppy-like throwback to the
    killing fields of eastern Anatolia, has triggered complaints about
    commercialisation. But it has caught on. Across Armenia, in schools
    and homes, and as far away as the diaspora community of Glendale,
    California, children have picked up crayons and scissors to make their
    own paper flowers or have planted the real thing in remembrance of
    the horrors that beset their forebears.

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Artwork by pupils from the Rose & Alex
    Pilibos Armenian school in Los Angeles commemorating the 100th
    anniversary of the Armenian genocide.

    Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images

    Rosa and Tamara, Yerevan sisters of 10 and six, wrote a name on the
    back of their homemade forget-me-nots: Raphael Lemkin, the Polish
    -Jewish scholar who coined the word genocide in 1944 - and cited the
    Armenians as a seminal example.

    Analysis The Armenian genocide - the Guardian briefing

    Turkey has never accepted the term genocide, even though historians
    have demolished its denial of responsibility for up to 1.5 million
    deaths

    The centenary on 24 April provides a rare opportunity to focus global
    attention on killings that were once notorious, then faded from view,
    were fought over in a vicious propaganda war, and are now widely seen
    as a crime on a monumental scale - and a grim precursor to the Nazi
    Holocaust. In their different ways, the pope and the reality TV star
    Kim Kardashian both highlighted the issue last week, much to the fury
    of Turks who continue to dispute the Armenian version of events.

    Final preparations for Friday's commemoration are under way
    at Armenia's genocide memorial on the Tsitsernakaberd plateau,
    overlooking Yerevan. It features a bunker-like museum and a tapering
    grey stele pointing skywards like an accusing finger. To the south,
    on the Turkish side of the long-closed border, Mount Ararat beckons
    through spring clouds, snow-covered and majestic.

    The big names on the day will include Vladimir Putin and Francois
    Hollande, leaders of the largest of the 20 countries to have formally
    recognised the genocide. But western governments that have not,
    including Britain, are sending low-profile officials to Yerevan, and
    far more senior representatives to Turkey to mark the centenary of
    the Gallipoli landings, the date deliberately and cynically chosen
    by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan - so furious Armenians believe -
    in order to sabotage their own ceremony.

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest The Armenian genocide memorial complex at
    Tsitsenakaberd hill.

    Photograph: Sasha Mordovets/Getty

    "I am proud to be here and I understand why I am here," said Milena
    Avetisyan, 16, looking formal in black suit, white blouse and sensible
    pumps, standing with an honour guard of her classmates outside the
    memorial's cone of basalt slabs, an eternal flame burning at its
    centre. "It is a call to the world to recognise the Armenian genocide.

    It is to show that we remember and demand."

    The slogan lies at the heart of the campaign for the Turkish state
    to recognise that its Ottoman predecessor annihilated up to 1.5
    million Armenian citizens, starting on 24 April 1915 with the arrest
    of intellectuals in Constantinople and continuing with a centralised
    programme of deportations, murder, pillage and rape until 1922. The
    shadowy Teskilat e-Mahsusa ("special organisation") drew up plans
    and sent coded, euphemistic telegrams to provincial officials and
    dispatched its victims on railway journeys to oblivion in the deserts
    of Iraq and Syria. Henry Morgenthau, the US ambassador, described
    the Turks as giving "a death warrant to a whole race".

    On 23 April, at Etchmiadzin, seat of the Armenian Apostolic church, the
    martyrs will be canonised collectively - renewing a tradition dating
    back 1,700 years. "We have to liberate our own people from hostility
    and hatred," explained Bishop Bagrat Galstanyan. "And we have to
    liberate the Turks, to cleanse themselves from the pain of genocide."

    It was at Etchmiadzin in 1965 - the 50th anniversary of the slaughter,
    a key moment of Armenian national awakening, and when many witnesses
    were still alive - that the bleached bones of the dead were brought
    from Deir ez-Zor in Syria for reburial.

    Numerous centenary events, such as conferences, exhibitions and
    concerts, underline how closely this country's identity and future
    are bound up with the bloody past. Raw emotion, competing narratives
    and an ongoing diplomatic crisis make for a difficult combination.

    "International recognition is fine but, if Turkey doesn't do it, then
    we won't have the security we need," said Tevan Poghosyan, an MP for
    the nationalist Heritage party. "It is a security issue because the
    genocide happened to us. It is our nation that lost its homeland and
    was scattered around the world. It is not just a historical issue."

    History does cast a long shadow. Modern Armenia won its independence
    in 1918, but was taken over by the Soviet Union two years later and
    only regained its freedom in 1991. Landlocked and poor, its 3 million
    people include many descendants of the survivors of the genocide,
    though far more of them live in the diaspora of 7 million to 10
    million, concentrated in Russia, the US and France - a split that has
    had a powerful effect on the politics of commemoration and the closely
    linked question of the troubled relations between Yerevan and Ankara.

    Scholars say denial is the last stage of the crime of genocide

    Vigen Sargsyan, Armenian presidential adviser

    Turkey's behaviour is seen as consistent with its traditional animosity
    towards the Armenians. The border has remained shut since 1993, part
    of the continuing stand-off over Nagorno-Karabakh, the ethnic Armenian
    region of neighbouring Azerbaijan, in which Ankara supports Baku. That
    "frozen conflict" has heated up into a shooting war in the past year so
    the issue is live and dangerous. People and goods do get through from
    Turkey by air and by land via Georgia but the blockade is damaging to
    an already fragile economy and ties it uncomfortably closely to Russia.

    "Turkey has engaged in a proactive policy of denial, and scholars
    say denial is the last stage of the crime of genocide," said Vigen
    Sargsyan, the presidential adviser in charge of centennial events.

    "Genocide is based on xenophobia and it has a tendency to affect the
    current policy of the state that denies it. Turkey has an anti-Armenian
    policy. The burden of proof is with them to show that it does not."

    Independent Armenian voices readily acknowledge the changes that have
    taken place in Turkey, where liberal intellectuals, civil society and
    Kurdish groups accept that genocide occurred. Thousands signed the
    "We Apologise" petition in the spirit of the Armenian-Turkish writer
    Hrant Dink, who was murdered in 2007. Memorial ceremonies will be
    held in Istanbul and elsewhere, and Turkish delegations will be in
    Yerevan on 24 April. Last year Erdogan referred to the victims as
    "Ottoman citizens" and sent "condolences" to their descendants.

    But his Gallipoli manoeuvre has been a crude reminder of the refusal
    of the Turkish state to go any further than what many in Yerevan
    dismiss as "repackaged denial".

    The cultivation of memory is presented as a national duty. There is
    a striking parallel with Israel, where the Nazi holocaust is seen
    as part of the state's raison d'etre. Like Jerusalem's Yad Vashem,
    Yerevan's genocide memorial is invariably the first stop for visiting
    foreign VIPs - many of their names inscribed on plaques under the
    trees in its "alley of memory".

    New interactive exhibits are being installed so that an Armenian child
    of today can connect to one of his or her own age in those times of
    savagery and terror. "We try to avoid the most horrible photographs of
    human remains," said Suren Manukyan, the museum's deputy director, "or
    at least to use them on touch screens rather than on public display."

    It is not only the atrocities that are remembered

    Individual memories do not need to be curated by the state. It is
    common to hear stories of a grandmother fleeing to the screams of
    men burning alive; of orphans blinded and girls abducted.

    But it is not only the atrocities that are remembered. In Nerkin
    Sasnashen, a village of simple stone houses, unpaved roads and a
    ruined 7th-century monastery, locals talk animatedly about their
    roots in Sasun, a mountainous region of what is now Turkey's Batman
    province and a stronghold of Armenian resistance to Turks and Kurds -
    who carried out a notorious massacre in 1894. The second word of the
    village's name means "built by people from Sasun".

    Handfuls of earth from Sasun are thrown into graves and at one recent
    baptism the proud parents gave the priest consecrated oil brought
    from there. "We even name our children after the towns and villages
    of western Armenia," said Andranik Shamoyan - his own first name
    recalling the most celebrated of his people's national heroes.

    Arayan Hendrik, a leathery-faced 72-year-old sitting back after a
    festive lunch of kebab, lavash bread and vodka toasts, sang movingly
    of the beauty of Sasun in the dialect spoken there in 1915. "Our
    children dance the same dances as their great-grandparents did,"
    he said. "They are part of our history that we want to hand down to
    the next generations. They are a connection between us and the lands
    we left."

    Many have travelled to Turkey to seek their roots but say they find
    it an unsettling, emotionally wrenching experience. Others refuse to
    visit their homeland as tourists. If the border were open, it would be
    just a 90-minute drive from Yerevan to Ararat. As it is, the journey
    there, via Georgia, takes 14 hours. Unlike Palestinians, few Armenians
    articulate a "right of return" to their lost patrimony. "It is not
    that people don't dream about their land," suggested Poghosyan. "But
    they do have a state now and they need to build it."

    We live in a small territory but we are a big nation

    Hranush Hakobyan, Armenia's minister for the diaspora

    Armenian government policy does not include demands for territory
    or reparations, as organisations in the more militantly nationalist
    diaspora would like. Yerevan seeks normalisation of relations with
    Ankara, starting with the crucial reopening of the border, to promote
    reconciliation that it hopes will eventually bring genocide recognition
    - even if that takes decades.

    Optimism peaked in 2009, when protocols brokered by the Swiss and
    endorsed by the US and EU were signed in Zurich, crucially with no
    mention of the horrors of 1915. But they were never ratified - because
    the Turks insisted on linking them to progress on Nagorno-Karabakh. It
    has been downhill ever since, relations now frozen in an atmosphere
    of deep mistrust. The vacuum is being filled by strident, anti-Turkish
    voices from the diaspora, and attitudes are hardening at home as well.

    Talk of greater unity is rife. "We live in a small territory but we
    are a big nation," said Hranush Hakobyan, minister for the diaspora.

    "Anyone who deals with us is dealing with 12 million Armenians." The
    country's entry to this year's Eurovision song contest will be sung
    by a six-strong band - one singer each from the five continents of
    the diaspora and one from the republic. The title of the song is
    Don't Deny.

    "Nationalist tendencies are gaining the upper hand," warned Vahram
    Ter-Matevosyan, a highly regarded historian of Turkey. "People feel
    that we tried to help the Turks to come to terms but they failed,
    so why should we trust them again?"

    No one expects much to change after 24 April, even if Erdogan comes up
    with another expression of qualified contrition that avoids the totemic
    G-word. There are signs, however, of a debate about the style of the
    genocide commemoration, dominated by the ubiquitous forget-me-not.

    The forget-me-not flower designed to commemorate the centenary of
    the Armenian genocide. Photograph: PR

    "I was a bit critical of this campaign at first but it is the
    first time Armenians have associated themselves with a symbol," said
    Ter-Matevosyan. "This is about modernising genocide discourse, a sort
    of rebranding. Now it is the fifth generation since the genocide so
    you do need to reach out to young people with a different message."

    But Tigran Matosyan, a sociologist, warned of "a ritual without
    reflection" that was not relevant to the country's needs. "Armenia
    has lots of problems and I wish the centennial could be used as
    an opportunity to reflect on them," he said. "Armenia wants to be a
    democracy, but it's not. There's huge social injustice as well. That's
    not becoming for a people who suffered genocide."

    Isabella Sargsyan, who promotes Armenian-Turkish reconciliation,
    remembers her first meeting as a teenager with a Turk from Kars,
    her family's ancestral home, and bursting into tears, lost for words.

    "It's not that I am not sorry for the genocide," she said. "I am. But
    I don't like the way it is dealt with publicly. And it is also not the
    only thing that shapes my identity. The old diaspora is focused on the
    genocide. It's an identity issue for them. We are citizens. The fact
    that we have this tiny piece of land is a miracle. The primary goal
    for the Republic of Armenia is to be a decent place for the people
    who live here."

    Still, time alone, it seems, cannot heal the open wounds of a century
    ago. Remembering is the easy part. Fulfilling the demand that goes
    with it is far harder. "Other genocides have been recognised, but
    ours has not been," said Andranik Shamoyan. "It will be part of our
    lives always. You cannot just turn this page."

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/apr/22/turkish-silence-fans-century-of-armenian-grief-over-genocide




    From: A. Papazian
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