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The New York Times Declines To Run Turkish Ad On 1915

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  • The New York Times Declines To Run Turkish Ad On 1915

    THE NEW YORK TIMES DECLINES TO RUN TURKISH AD ON 1915

    By MassisPost
    Updated: April 23, 2015

    New York Times has refused to run a pro-peace and reconciliation
    advertisement over the 1915 Armenian atrocities because it did not
    recognize the Armenian Genocide, an e-mail correspondence between the
    newspaper's advertising department and the Turkish-American Steering
    Committee revealed yesterday, according to Daily Sabah.

    The ad, which was published by the Washington Post today instead,
    is written as an open letter addressing President Barack Obama and
    members of Congress, informing them that the Turkish-American community
    would march through downtown D.C. on April 24, beginning at the White
    House and ending in front of the Turkish Embassy to commemorate the
    100th anniversary of the 1915 atrocities. "Our most sincere hope is
    that Armenian Americans will join us on this walk. We will walk to
    pay our respects to the lives lost from all ethnicities and creeds,
    and to kindle a spark for what we believe should be our shared future"
    the letter reads.

    However the e-mails obtained by Daily Sabah revealed that The New
    York Times asked the Steering Committee that represents over 145
    Turkish-American associations to remove three out of five paragraphs of
    the letter, which depicts the 1915 incidents as a civilian tragedy that
    cost the lives of millions of Ottoman citizens including Armenians,
    Turks, Kurds and Arabs. The targeted paragraphs underline the fact
    that there is no academic consensus on the incidents by referencing
    substantial number of international scholars who declined to label
    the atrocities as genocide.

    The targeted paragraphs underline the fact that there is no academic
    consensus on the incidents by referencing substantial number of
    international scholars who declined to label the atrocities as
    genocide. "My legal team crossed out the first three paragraphs that do
    not pass acceptability," wrote Michael Hayden, the officer responsible
    for Advocacy Advertising at The New York Times. Hayden also said in the
    email that the legal team had wanted to exclude the slogan "Unite Us,
    Not Divide us," and this sentence in the fifth paragraph: "One hundred
    years ago, a brutal war started neither by Turks nor Armenians cost the
    Ottoman Armenians, the Ottoman Turks and many other groups so dearly."

    The newspaper made it clear that the letter must be changed before it
    could be published. Subsequently, emails from the Steering Committee
    asking for an explanation, Mr. Hayden had explained that as a matter
    of policy, they do not accept ads that deny great historical events
    that are generally accepted as facts, including the Armenian Genocide,
    the Holocaust, and the World Trade Center bombing.

    http://massispost.com/2015/04/the-new-york-times-declines-to-run-turkish-ad-on-1915/

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