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Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide:

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  • Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide:

    Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide: Osman Kavala

    By MassisPost
    Updated: February 28, 2015

    By Hambersom Aghbashian

    Osman Kavala (born in Paris in 1957), is a prominent Turkish
    businessman. After graduating from Robert College in Istanbul he
    continued his higher education and graduated from Manchester
    University, Department of Economics. After his father's death in 1980,
    he began working as a manager for many business groups. Osman Kavala
    is the Chair of the Board of Anadolu Kulture which is a non-profit
    company based in Istanbul, and is a member of various business and
    social organizations Board of Directors. He is also the sponsor of
    many cultural organizations.(1)

    In its article `Armenian culture in Turkey, From the ashes', `The
    Economist' wrote on Aug 24, 2013, `Around 2 million Armenians are
    believed to have lived in Turkey before the genocide. Now there are
    about 70,000. Survivors are scattered across the Middle East, Europe,
    America and Australia. Many more converted to Islam to carry on, but
    their numbers remain unknown. Osman Koker, a Turkish historian,
    reckons that more than half of Diyarbakir's population used to be
    non-Muslim, mainly Armenian Orthodox, but also Catholic, Syrian
    Orthodox and Jewish. `Now', says Mr Koker, `there is practically
    none.'(2)

    In a text released with a you tube by EGAM ` European Grassroots
    Antiracist Movement, about Osman Kavala's Impression of the `Remember
    24 April1915³, 2014 initiative, EGAM quoted Kavala, Founder of Anadolu
    Kültür Foundation-Turkey saying `We are getting closer to the 100th
    year, and this is affecting the feelings, making them heavier, of
    everyone involved. Having the European Delegation is important, and
    shows a bond of solidarity with them and the local organizations in
    Turkey.' It added that European leaders, who are members of DurDe!,
    EGAM, and AGBU Europe, helped to facilitate large public
    commemorations of the Armenian Genocide, and helped in bringing
    together many people affected by it. Everyone involved was there to
    show their support and to help work towards stopping the continual
    denial of the genocide by the Turkish government.(3)

    Ozgun Caglar, wrote an article on October 2014 in Agos, entitled
    `Unresolved Trauma Reason for Violence, Suffering'. He mentioned that
    Diyarbakir's Ismail Besikci Foundation hosted a symposium on Oct. 25
    titled `1915 Diyarbekir and the Kurds'. Sociologist Osman Kavala, one
    of the participants said that `Turkish civil society has to campaign
    for the recognition of the Genocide because there is no big Armenian
    community in Turkey any more. There is no genocide anymore. But this
    issue is not local anymore. It's an international issue because the
    Genocide created the Armenian Diaspora and this Diaspora is working
    for the recognition of the Genocide by the parliaments in the
    countries where Armenians live. ' He added `We are trying to explain
    to people that this is an internal issue to be solved in Turkey. We
    are trying to explain that we are not working on this issue to
    compensate the injustice committed against the Armenian people but to
    make Turkey a more civilized and democratic state.'(4)

    `Turks, Armenians, foreign delegation commemorate 1915 events' was
    `Todays Zaman's April 24, 2013 article where it mentioned that
    `Turkish Armenians and Turkish civil society groups joined with a
    foreign delegation comprising 20 anti-racist and Armenian
    representatives from 15 countries to commemorate the 98th anniversary
    of the tragic events of 1915 in Istanbul's Sultanahmet Square on
    Wednesday.' It added that many of the protesters think that public
    opinion should be changed in such a way that when Turkey recognizes
    the 1915 events, there will not be strong opposition to the steps that
    will be taken by the government to solve the issue. Osman Kavala, who
    attended the commemoration, told Today's Zaman that public opinion
    could be changed through giving objective information to schools and
    via media. `Opinion may change in a short time period,' he added.(5)

    In his article entitled ' Turks Could Gain More Than Armenians By
    Acknowledging the Genocide', Harut Sassounian Publisher, The
    California Courier wrote in Armenian Pundits, `It is noteworthy that
    prominent and sensible businessman Osman Kavala wrote in his
    `armworkshop' posting: `It is not possible to dismiss the issue of
    compensation so readily. One can find it controversial, unrealistic
    [and] harmful to strategic priorities, etc., but it is clear that
    unlike `land return,' it [compensation] will remain an issue to be
    discussed in the course of the reconciliation process.'(6)

    On May 2, 2011, `Hye Media' wrote: `A current exhibition of Turkish
    photographer Erhan Arik in Istanbul telling about genocide survivors
    has moved not only local Armenians, but also many Turks visiting it.
    The photographer himself says with his exhibition called `Horovel' he
    has opened for his countrymen a new page of history ` a painful one.
    But Erhan says `keeping silence about is a bigger and more dangerous
    crime'. The Exhibition was organized in the DEPO hall of the Anadolu
    Kultur cultural center, which is an establishment that has advocated
    Turkish-Armenian relations and has implemented a number of joint
    projects to this effect.The hall's director Osman Kavala, despite
    risks, continues to provide space to Armenian artists and for various
    events on Armenian subjects. `We are interested in having such
    exhibitions, as we need to create space for dialogue, for discussion
    on different issues, such as human rights, social, political issues.
    Such an exhibition could not have been organized in Turkey only a few
    years ago, but now it is already normal. Unless there are certain
    steps by nationalists, everything goes quite well,' Kavala told
    ArmeniaNow.'(7)

    ''''''''''''''''

    1- http://www.ensonhaber.com/is-adami-osman-kavala-biber-gazi-yedi-2011-06-27.html
    2- http://www.economist.com/news/books-and-arts/21583981-turkish-armenians-are-beginning-celebrateand-commemoratetheir-past-ashes
    3- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-wsHqcxY8Wc
    4- http://www.keghart.com/Caglar-Suffering
    5- http://www.todayszaman.com/diplomacy_turks-armenians-foreign-delegation-commemorate-1915-events_313616.html
    6- https://armenianpundits.wordpress.com/2007/12/20/turks-could-gain-more-than-armenians
    7- http://hyemedia.com/2011/05/turkish-photographer%E2%80%99s-exhibition-in-istanbul-presents-accounts-of-armenian-genocide-survivors/

    http://massispost.com/2015/02/turkish-intellectuals-who-have-recognized-the-armenian-genocide-osman-kavala/

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