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ANKARA: Entering 1915

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  • ANKARA: Entering 1915

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Dec 31 2014

    Entering 1915

    CENGÄ°Z AKTAR
    December 31, 2014, Wednesday


    Who knows, all the evil haunting us, the endless mass killings and our
    inability to recover from afflictions may be due to a century-old
    curse and a century-old lie. What do you think? This is perhaps the
    malediction uttered by Armenians -- children, civilian women and men
    alike -- who died moaning and buried without a coffin. It may be the
    storms created in our souls by the still-agonizing specters of all our
    ill-fated citizens, including Greeks and Syriacs and later, Alevis and
    Kurds.

    Perhaps the massacres that have not been accounted for since 1915 and
    the `prices' that have remained unpaid are now being paid back in
    different venues by the grandchildren. The curses uttered in return
    for the lives taken, the lives stolen, the homes plundered, the
    churches destroyed, the schools confiscated and the property
    extorted... "May God make you pay for it for all your offspring to
    come." Are we paying back the price of all the injustices committed so
    far? Does repayment manifest itself in the form of the audacity of
    being unable to confront our past sins or in the form of indecency,
    which has become our habit due to our chronic indulgence in
    unfairness? It seems as if our society has been decaying for a
    century, festering all around.

    Despite this century-old malediction, 2015 will pass with the debate,
    "Was there really genocide?" remaining unanswered. We will watch how
    the current tenants of the state exert vast efforts to cover up this
    shame and postpone any move to confront it. If it were in their hands,
    they would just skip the year 2015. The denialist prose that consists
    of three wizened arguments, which amount to upheaval, collaboration
    with the enemy and victimization -- it is the Armenians who killed us
    -- will continue to be parroted in a series of conferences. And we
    will dance to our own tunes. On April 24-25, 2015 an official ceremony
    will be held on the occasion of Anzac Day in Gallipoli, not in
    connection with the genocide. And we will hear abundant tales about
    heroism in the Dardanelles. But we will find none to listen to our
    narrative.

    How many more maledictions need to happen to us before we will be inclined:
    - To reckon with our bloody nation-building process?
    - To know and remember how an innocuous, hardworking, productive,
    talented and peaceful people were destroyed by the warrior people of
    Anatolia and to empathize with their grandchildren in remembrance?
    - To feel the gist of the tyranny that made unfortunate Armenians cry,
    "Ur eir Astvadz" (Where were you God?) in the summer of 1915, which
    was as dark and cold as death?
    - To realize that the population of Armenians has dwindled from
    millions in 1915's Ottoman Empire to virtually none today. The
    remaining Armenians have either concealed their true identities or
    were converted to Islam, after sweeping aside the puzzle, "Was it
    genocide or not?" or the question "Who killed whom?" and purely
    listening to our conscience?
    - To understand, as Hrant Dink put it, a full-fledged cultural
    genocide and the loss of a tremendous amount of civilization?
    - To realize that the biggest loss to this country is that non-Muslim
    citizens of this land no longer live here?
    - To comprehend why the genocide -- which Armenians of those dark days
    would refer to as the Great Catastrophe (Meds Yeghern) -- is a
    disaster that befell not only Armenians, but the entire country?
    - To see that the loss of our non-Muslim citizens who were killed,
    banished or forced to flee amounts to the loss of brainpower,
    bourgeoisie, culture and civilization?
    - To calculate the curse of the goods, property and children confiscated?
    - To duly understand the wisdom of the author YaÅ?ar Kemal, who wrote:
    "Another bird cannot prosper in an abandoned nest; the one who
    destroys a nest cannot have a nest; oppression breeds oppression"?
    - To even realize that those who would reject all the aforementioned
    points would do so because of a loss wisdom deriving from the
    genocide.

    The Armenian genocide is the Great Catastrophe of Anatolia, and the
    mother of all taboos in this land. Its curse will continue to haunt us
    as long as we fail to talk about, recognize, understand and reckon
    with it. Its centennial anniversary actually offers us a historic
    opportunity to dispense with our habits, understand the Other and
    start with the collective therapy.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/columnist/cengiz-aktar/entering-1915_368487.html



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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