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Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide: Ipe

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  • Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide: Ipe

    Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide: Ipek Çalislar

    By MassisPost
    Updated: March 6, 2015

    By Hambersom Aghbashian


    Ipek Çalislar (born in 1947 in Istanbul), is a Turkish prominent
    journalist and writer. After finishing her high school (Ã`sküdar
    American High School), she received her education at Ankara
    University, Faculty of Political Sciences. She lived in
    Hamburg-Germany, 1990-1992, where she researched about `Homosexuality'
    and `women and Islam ` issues. In 2003 she visited Iran with her
    husband where they met Iranian intellectuals and wrote their book
    `Iran: A Man Dictatorship' in 2004. Ipek Çalislar has worked at the
    Turkish Cumhuriyet daily for 12 years and served at the Association
    for Education and Supporting Women Candidates (KA-DER), which defends
    equal representation of women and men in all fields of life, also at
    PEN Turkey. Her first literary book `Latife Hanim' has been translated
    into 11 languages, including Bulgarian, Arabic, German and Albanian.
    She wrote also `Halide Edip: Biography of Sigma Women (2008).' (1)(2).

    Ipek Çalislar was tried for her bestselling biography of Atatürk's
    first wife, Latife Hanim, under Article 5816 of the Penal Code for a
    passage that described the founder of the Turkish Republic escaping a
    life threatening situation in the guise of a woman and she was
    acquitted.(3)

    A group of Turkish intellectuals signed a petition against a Denialist
    Exhibit in Denmark, an exhibition which was planned by the Turkish
    embassy to support their point of view concerning the Armenian
    Genocide. `Don't Stand Against Turkey's Democratization and
    Confrontation with its History! ' was the message to the Royal Library
    of Denmark who has given the Turkish government the opportunity to
    present an `alternative exhibit' in response to the Armenian Genocide
    exhibition. Ipek Çalislar was one of the Turkish intellectuals who
    signed the petition.(4)

    In December 2008, two hundred prominent Turkish intellectuals released
    an apology for the `great catastrophe of 1915³. This was a clear
    reference to the Armenian Genocide, a term still too sensitive to use
    so openly. The signatories also announced a website related to this
    apology, and called on others to visit the site and sign the apology
    as well. The complete, brief text of the apology says ' My conscience
    does not accept the insensitivity showed to and the denial of the
    Great Catastrophe that the Ottoman Armenians were subjected to in
    1915. I reject this injustice and for my share, I empathize with the
    feelings and pain of my Armenian brothers and sisters. I apologize to
    them.' Ipek Çalisla was one of the intellectual who signed the
    petition which in few days was signed by over 13,000 signatories.(5)

    According to http://setasarmenian.blogspot.com, under the title `24
    April, the anniversary of the 1915s events, will be remembered this
    year in Turkey, too.', Taraf Newspaper of 20th April 2010 wrote ' A
    group of intellectuals, among them Ali BayramoÄ?lu, Ferhat Kentel, NeÅ?e
    Düzel, Perihan MaÄ?den and Sırrı Süreyya Ã-nder, for the first time in
    Turkey, will commemorate this year on 24 April as the anniversary of
    the events of 1915, under the leader-ship of `Say Stop!' group. The
    commemoration will start in front of the tram station in Taksim
    Square. The group will be dressing in black and carry photos of
    massacred Armenian intellectuals who were deported from that station.'
    the following abstracts are from the text of the commemoration
    activity, `This pain is OUR pain. This mourning is for ALL of US. In
    1915, when our population was just 13 million, 1,5 to 2 million
    Armenians were living in these lands¦. In April 24, 1915 it was
    started `to send them'. We lost them. They are no longer available.
    They have not even graves. But the `Great Pain' of the `Great
    Disaster', with its utmost gravity EXISTS in our pain'. The text was
    signed also by Ipek Çalislar.(6)

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

    1- http://www.todayszaman.com/national_ipek-calislars-biography-of-ataturks-wife-published-in-london_331881.html
    2- http://tr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ipek Çalislar
    3- http://www.englishpen.org/campaigns/turkey-insult-trials-continue-ipek-calislar-acquitted/
    4- http://www.genocide-museum.am/eng/19.12.12.php
    5- http://www.armeniapedia.org/wiki/200_prominent_Turks_apologize_for_great_catastroph e_of_1915
    6- http://setasarmenian.blogspot.com/2010/04/good-thoughtful-and-ugly-from-turks-on.html

    http://massispost.com/2015/03/turkish-intellectuals-who-have-recognized-the-armenian-genocide-ipek-calislar/

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