Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Why Does Turkey Continue To Deny Armenian Genocide?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Why Does Turkey Continue To Deny Armenian Genocide?

    WHY DOES TURKEY CONTINUE TO DENY ARMENIAN GENOCIDE?

    13:00, 09 Mar 2015
    Siranush Ghazanchyan

    The Boston Globe has published an articpel by Armenian novelist
    Chris Bohjalian:

    One night in November, 2009, I heard Gerda Weissmann Klein speak at
    the University of Texas. A Holocaust survivor, Gerda's 1957 memoir,
    "All But My Life," chronicles her harrowing ordeal in labor camps and
    death marches during World War II. During the question and answer
    period, someone asked, "What do you say to Holocaust deniers?" She
    shrugged and said, "I really don't have to say much. I simply tell
    them to ask Germany. Germany doesn't deny it."

    I recalled that exchange last month when President Recep Erdogan
    of Turkey was asked about the Armenian genocide. He responded,
    "Let's remove the 1915 events from the area of politics and refer
    to science and scientists." He then chastised the Armenian president
    Serzh Sargsyan for rejecting his invitation to visit Turkey on April
    24 for the centennial commemoration of the Battle of Gallipoli,
    saying the rebuff "violated protocols of courtesy."

    Why did the Armenian president pass on the chance to join Erdogan on
    the site of the battle? Because April 24 is also the centennial of
    the start of the Armenian genocide, and he will be at the Armenian
    Genocide Memorial that day. It was the night of April 24, 1915, when
    the Armenian intellectuals, professionals, editors, and religious
    leaders in Constantinople were rounded up by the Ottoman authorities,
    and almost all of them were executed. In the years that followed,
    three out of every four Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire were
    systematically annihilated by their own government: 1.5 million
    people. The majority of Armenians alive today are descendants of
    those few who survived.

    But Turkey denies the facts -- as does oil-rich Azerbaijan. (Moreover,
    some of Turkey's allies, including the United States, find euphemisms
    for the word "genocide.") And while there are many thousands of Turkish
    citizens who want their country to face its past and acknowledge
    the crimes of its World War I leaders, no one expects Ankara to
    follow Berlin's lead anytime soon and build -- to use the name of the
    poignant and powerful Holocaust monument near the Brandenburg Gate --
    a Memorial to the Murdered Armenians of the Ottoman Empire.

    The reality is that for nearly a century, Turkish leaders have worked
    fanatically to falsify the historical record. President Erdogan asking
    scientists or historians to weigh in on the genocide is rather like
    asking scientists to weigh on global climate change. They have. The
    International Association of Genocide Scholars unanimously considers
    the cataclysmic ethnic cleansing of the Anatolian Plains genocide.

    Just last month, a Kurdish member of the Turkish Parliament, Ahmet
    Turk, acknowledged his Kurdish ancestors' role in the nightmare and
    apologized to the Armenians for the "blood on our hands." Even the
    first postwar Turkish government convicted the three architects of
    the genocide of "crimes against humanity" in 1919 and sentenced them
    to death in absentia. It was not until the second postwar government
    took over in 1924 -- the government led by Gallipoli hero Mustafa
    Kemal Ataturk -- that Turkey began to rewrite history and sweep under
    the rug the death of 1.5 million people.

    And why do they get away with it? It's not merely that our memories
    are short and news cycles move on; it's the political reality that
    so many Western nations viewed Turkey as the last stop against Soviet
    expansion during the Cold War.

    Holding the Gallipoli commemoration on the very day that is
    acknowledged by Armenians around the world as Genocide Memorial Day
    is too offensive and obvious to be Machiavellian. It's appalling. It
    is emblematic of the Turkish government's aggressive and insulting
    approach to reconciliation with Armenia.

    But it does raise a question: Where will our American leaders be on
    April 24? Will they be in Armenia, standing in memory for those whose
    stories were silenced in Der-el-Zor and Ras-el-Ain and the Dudan
    Crevasse? Or will they be in Turkey, at a commemoration designed
    specifically to keep those Armenian voices forever stilled?

    Chris Bohjalian is the author of 17 novels, including one about the
    Armenian genocide, "The Sandcastle Girls."

    http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/03/09/why-does-turkey-continue-to-deny-armenian-genocide/

Working...
X