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ANKARA: From Gallipoli To Ararat

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  • ANKARA: From Gallipoli To Ararat

    FROM GALLIPOLI TO ARARAT

    Hurriyet Daily news, Turkey
    March 20 2015

    by YUSUF KANLI

    Turkey, Australia, New Zealand and Britain... What do they have in
    common? This week not only these countries, but the entire world
    remembered the heroes of the Gallipoli Campaign on the centenary of
    the historic battle. Was it important only because of its "nation
    building" effect on Australians and New Zealanders? Was it not the
    Gallipoli Campaign which produced to the forefront a great Turkish
    commander, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk who only a couple of years later,
    was to become the commander of the Turkish War of Liberation?

    The fallen heroes of Gallipoli lay side-by-side today on what was
    the battlefield of yesterday. Was it not Ataturk who in response
    to a call for the repatriation of the remains declared those enemy
    soldiers who lost their lives in brave battles against the Turks on
    the Turkish homeland were no longer enemies but distinguished sons
    of this nation, resting in peace and should not be disturbed?

    Indeed Gallipoli has been very important for Australians and New
    Zealanders or the Anzacs of yesterday. Through them, it has become very
    important for Turks as well. Yes, it is sad to admit but the Turkish
    state learned from them how to respect their fallen heroes beyond
    solemn funerals. If not for the great efforts of the Australians and
    New Zealanders who travel to Gallipoli by the tens of thousands every
    year to respect their fallen heroes, forcing the Gallipoli cemeteries
    to turn into some sort of "nationhood pilgrimage," Turks would not
    have begun to pressure their governments to take care of the Turkish
    cemeteries, convert the battle grounds of the Gallipoli Campaign into
    a national park and make the region easily accessible. Was it not sad
    to read up until a few years ago stories of human remains erupting
    from the fields of farms in the region?

    Was not the Canakkale Monument - erected in memory of soldiers who
    despite all odds staged a brave defense and did not allow enemies
    to pass through the Canakkale Strait - in a desperate situation up
    until few years ago? Now, not only the monument but also the museum
    reflects the gratitude of the nation to the heroes of the campaign
    that marked the first victory of this nation since the Balkan defeat
    and thus helped revive national self-confidence. Could the under-armed
    Turkey with almost no fighting power wage a War of Liberation without
    the Mustafa Kemal of Canakkale or the self-confidence that campaign
    produced?

    How many Turks have walked through Canakkale or at least visited
    the Canakkale Monument? Walking through the cemeteries or reading
    through the last letters of fallen soldiers to their families, it
    can sadly be seen those who fought on the Gallipoli front were not
    only ethnic Turks, but representatives of all ethnicities throughout
    the death-bed-ridden Ottoman Empire. Turks, Arabs, Kurds, Greeks,
    Armenians and Assyrians are all resting in the Gallipoli cemeteries
    side-by-side in peace...

    The spirit of empire is long gone. Despite all the propaganda to the
    contrary, republican Turkey, unfortunately, could not survive that
    imperial multi-cultural heritage of cohabitation. Indeed, on its death
    bed the empire did whatever possible to kill that culture anyhow. The
    Armenian problem, for example, is a headache inherited from the
    same period. How did it happen? Was it indeed a systematic genocide
    campaign as Armenians claim with some political agenda today? Or,
    was it a product of a web of reasons including but not restricted to
    conditions of a decaying empire, gang activities and collaboration
    with the enemy, making it compulsory to apply forced resettlement
    and a civil war? Was it indeed a civil war-like situation that both
    the Turks and Armenians lost heavily? Whatever the case, the minority
    always suffers more in such ordeals than the majority. One should as
    well try to understand the "nation building" role of the 1915 events
    on the Armenian people.

    Still, why can Turks and Armenians not do what the Turks and
    Australians and New Zealanders did and convert a huge disaster for
    all into a joint commemoration, a source of binding friendship? Why
    is it that while Gallipoli was converted into some sort of festival
    ground where enemy forefathers are remembered in equal pride, Turks
    and Armenians still wage verbal fights for ownership on the image of
    Mount Ararat?

    Obviously, there is a need to explore and bring to light what indeed
    happened to Armenians and Turks of the Ottoman Empire who lost
    their lives in 1915. Rather than withdrawing from parliament the
    protocols that included the creation of a joint history commission
    of international historians to explore the 1915 events, the Armenian
    president must have asked for parliamentary approval. Antagonism,
    Turkish enmity and getting parliaments to adopt genocide resolutions
    won't settle this problem, Yerevan must talk with Ankara.

    March/20/2015

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/from-gallipoli-to-ararat.aspx?PageID=238&NID=79907&NewsCatID=425

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