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The Armenian Genocide: Turkey's Hundred Shades of Denial

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  • The Armenian Genocide: Turkey's Hundred Shades of Denial

    Assyrian International News Agency AINA
    March 7 2015


    The Armenian Genocide: Turkey's Hundred Shades of Denial


    By Grigor Boyakhchyan
    http://www.foreignpolicyjournal.com
    Posted 2015-03-07 19:08 GMT

    Picture showing Armenians killed during the Armenian Genocide. Image
    taken from Ambassador Morgenthau's Story, written by Henry Morgenthau,
    Sr. and published in 1918. Original description: "THOSE WHO FELL BY
    THE WAYSIDE. Scenes like this were common all over the Armenian
    provinces, in the spring and summer months of 1915. Death in its
    several forms--massacre, starvation, exhaustion--destroyed the larger
    part of the refugees. The Turkish policy was that of extermination
    under the guise of deportation" (Public Domain/Wikimedia
    Commons).Repentant or emboldened through a hundred long years of
    denial, the Turkish statehood stands at a critical juncture of its
    historical past, present, and future. The Armenian Genocide and the
    Great National Dispossession of the Armenian people from their
    homeland will ultimately determine its decent place in the family of
    civilized nations. Recognition and repentance, along with elimination
    of dire consequences, is the right way forward for the Turkish
    government.

    Only a month ahead of the April 24 Centennial of the Armenian
    Genocide, the Republic of Armenia, together with Diaspora Armenians
    from many far-flung corners of the world, brings together the vestiges
    of enduring historical memory and remembrance on human suffering,
    extermination and resurgence to denounce past inhumanities and prevent
    future ones. Unbroken in spirit against this unprecedented crime, the
    message they bring to the fore of international agenda stretches far
    beyond the tragedy of a single nation to embrace the whole humanity.

    Against the backdrop of Turkish official denialism, distortion, and
    propaganda stunt -- as the commemoration of Gallipoli landings staged
    by the Turkish government on April 24 demonstrate -- looms the larger
    decay of a state rooted in organized forgetting and long-enforced
    oblivion. Not only does the strenuous denial of the Armenian Genocide
    by the Turkish government constitute a form of renewed aggression that
    should be condemned and outlawed in its own right, but it also
    forecloses the mere opportunity for many decent men and women in
    Turkey to come to grips with their own history.

    Despite the vast amount of evidence that points to centrally planned
    and systematically orchestrated genocide against the Armenian people
    -- the testimony of survivors, documentary evidence, official
    archives, and the reports of diplomats -- the denial of Armenian
    genocide by successive regimes in Turkey has proceeded from 1915 to
    the present. Among the scores of articles available in the archives of
    the New York Times, one featured on February 23, 1916 presents the
    reflections of Lord Bryce, the head of British delegation to the
    Anglo-French Parliamentary conference, on Turkish atrocities committed
    against Armenians. It reads in part: "The cause of Armenians is
    especially dear to me. There is no people in the world which has
    suffered more. It has been a victim not of religious fanaticism, but
    of cold-blooded, premeditated hatred on the part of the brigands who
    term themselves the Turkish Government and who do not intend to permit
    the existence of any national vitality except in their own element."

    In an attempt to assassinate the entire civilization and culture, the
    Ottoman Turkish government unleashed the deportation of Armenian
    people to the arid deserts of Syria that would come to be known as
    death marches of men, women and children, with many dying along the
    way of exhaustion and starvation. The American ambassador Henry
    Morgenthau would later write in his memoirs: "When the Turkish
    authorities gave the orders for these deportations, they were merely
    giving the death warrant to a whole race; they understood this well,
    and in their conversations with me, they made no particular attempt to
    conceal the fact."

    Various perspectives on denial can be brought to bear on the form and
    content of Turkish attempts to transplant a benign political image
    around the world; what unites them together, however, is the
    state-sponsored struggle to diminish, disguise and consign to oblivion
    the memory of race extermination behind their actions in whatever way
    possible -- a struggle of forgetting against memory.

    Regardless of the state of play on the ground in the Middle East or
    elsewhere and the ensuing geopolitical significance allegedly
    attributed to Turkey in world affairs, it is crystal clear that the
    only enduring strength, authority and leadership that a country seeks
    to obtain in international arena proceeds along the principles of
    morality and justice. Unwillingness to embrace this route is an
    attribute of politicians who think in short timelines.

    There are no "smart denials" on the face of justice, irrespective of
    the strategies and techniques the Turkish authorities choose to
    concoct behind the sealed borders and closed doors. Denials are either
    short-or long-lived; but they never mature into reality. Nor does the
    known fade into the unknown -- no matter how intensely the hundred
    shades of distortion and denial envelop the truth -- and those who
    have attempted it have themselves ended up in the dustbin of history.
    To bind the country to the same path of government-backed denial is an
    expression of no strategy, no goals, and no vision for its future. It
    is a sign of moral decay.


    http://www.aina.org/news/20150307140800.htm

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