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- post images that are too large (max is 500*500px)
- post any copyrighted material unless the copyright is owned by you or cited properly.
- post in UPPER CASE, which is considered yelling
- post messages which insult the Armenians, Armenian culture, traditions, etc
- post racist or other intentionally insensitive material that insults or attacks another culture (including Turks)
The Ankap thread is excluded from the strict rules because that place is more relaxed and you can vent and engage in light insults and humor. Notice it's not a blank ticket, but just a place to vent. If you go into the Ankap thread, you enter at your own risk of being clowned on.
What you PROBABLY SHOULD NOT post...
Do not post information that you will regret putting out in public. This site comes up on Google, is cached, and all of that, so be aware of that as you post. Do not ask the staff to go through and delete things that you regret making available on the web for all to see because we will not do it. Think before you post!
2] Use descriptive subject lines & research your post. This means use the SEARCH.
This reduces the chances of double-posting and it also makes it easier for people to see what they do/don't want to read. Using the search function will identify existing threads on the topic so we do not have multiple threads on the same topic.
3] Keep the focus.
Each forum has a focus on a certain topic. Questions outside the scope of a certain forum will either be moved to the appropriate forum, closed, or simply be deleted. Please post your topic in the most appropriate forum. Users that keep doing this will be warned, then banned.
4] Behave as you would in a public location.
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7] We retain the right to remove any posts and/or Members for any reason, without prior notice.
- PLEASE READ -
Members are welcome to read posts and though we encourage your active participation in the forum, it is not required. If you do participate by posting, however, we expect that on the whole you contribute something to the forum. This means that the bulk of your posts should not be in "fun" threads (e.g. Ankap, Keep & Kill, This or That, etc.). Further, while occasionally it is appropriate to simply voice your agreement or approval, not all of your posts should be of this variety: "LOL Member213!" "I agree."
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Armenian-Turkish Relations
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Re: Armenian-Turkish Relations
Originally posted by Jos View PostHow could Ataturk have supported this in 1915 when he was only a middle ranking officer engaged in the Gallipoli defense under General Limon Van Sanders?
Wrong to the point of almost comical. Is this amateur hour Alexandros? Do you even read any of these articles before posting them. Or is the only requirement being they must be anti-turkish?
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Re: Armenian-Turkish Relations
U.S. Praises Armenian High Court Ruling On Turkish Protocols
The praise follows a conversation between Turkey Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu (in file photo) and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
January 25, 2010
YEREVAN -- The United States says it welcomes a controversial ruling by Armenia's Constitutional Court that Turkey has criticized as running counter to Turkish-Armenian protocols aimed at rapprochement, RFE/RL's Armenian Service reports.
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Philip Gordon said in a statement sent to RFE/RL that Washington views "the court decision as a positive step forward in the ratification process of the normalization protocols between Turkey and Armenia."
He added in the January 22 statement that the court decision "permits the protocols, as they were negotiated and signed, to move forward towards parliamentary ratification, and does not appear to limit or qualify them in any way."
Gordon said "We are confident that both Turkey and Armenia take their commitment to the protocols seriously, and we urge timely ratification of the protocols by both countries."
The comments follow a reported phone conversation between U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. The Anatolia news agency quoted an unnamed Turkish Foreign Ministry official as saying that Davutoglu reiterated to Clinton Ankara's claims that the Armenian court's interpretation of the protocols' implications contradicts their "essence and substance."
Davutoglu said earlier on January 22 that he will urge his U.S. and Swiss counterparts to put pressure on the Armenian leadership.
Washington's reaction to the Turkish claims will boost Yerevan's position in the row which has raised more questions about the success of the U.S.-backed normalization process. U.S. officials have repeatedly urged Armenia and Turkey to implement the landmark agreements without preconditions and within a "reasonable" period of time.
Gordon said that Washington's position is unchanged. "We support the normalization process, which we believe contributes to peace and stability in the Caucasus. What is critical is to keep the parties focused on the vital importance of moving ahead."
http://www.rferl.org/content/US_Prai...s/1939073.html
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I see this going nowhere fast.
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Re: Armenian-Turkish Relations
Originally posted by ashot24 View PostI respect your view, but Mustafa Kemal was one of the main figures of pan-turanism. He expelled the Pashas for being against his views, Atatürk expelled anyone who didn't share his views, but that doesn't mean he was not a pan-turanist.
Much of the principle of pan-turanism, which is re-inventing history, is based on the work of Atatürk. He himself stated Writing history is as important as making history, which is of course what he did. In the First History Congress in Ankara in 1932, the main mission of the many Turkish 'historians' and 'historical institutions', such as the Turkish Historical Society, invited personally by Atatürk, was to produce historical narratives and linguistic validation for pan-Turanist ideologies, for example the Sun Language Theory, which states that: all human languages are descendants of one Central Asian primal language. and the only language remaining more or less the same as this primal language is Turkish, hence Turkic people are the heirs of nearly all civilizations.
Out of this congress, the Turkish state institutionalized in the education system the reforms made on every single History book published in the Republic of Turkey. Atatürk was one of the main figures of pan-turanism, as he grouped all the previous works made by other pan-turanists, edited them, enlarged them, developed them, modified them, bettered them, and institutionalized them.
Many Armenians were invited by Atatürk to make his reforms, but these Armenians were particularly close to the Turkish state and some of them held important positions during the Ottoman Empire, such as Berch Kerestejyan, who besides saving Atatürk's life, was the director of the Ottoman Bank, and he provided large quantities of money and funds to fight the "enemy" from 1919 to 1922 during the wars Turkey fought before the founding of the republic. And who were the enemy? Of course, one of them were the Armenians. That kind of 'Armenians' were the ones Atatürk invited.
As you say, Mustafa Kemal is not the same as Atatürk, those were too different people. Mustafa Kemal modernized the Turkish state and got the Turkish civilization at the gates of the 20th century, he did many great things for Turkey, but then he was turned into Atatürk, the man who left the bases for Turkish state system in every area as we see today.
Kemalism never merged with Turanism, it was born out of it. Atatürk's legacy was never disgraced, it was enlarged and engreatened. Mustafa Kemal is not remembered in Turkey, Atatürk is.
Mustafa Kemal viewed the CUP policies as a romantic ideal inherently infused with political Islam. He vehemently opposed a successor State that pointed eastward into Central Asia. His vision was a state that emulated "The West"'s modernity and mentality.
Islamism was Mustafa Kemal's main obstacle.In order to suppress political Islam, Mustafa Kemal knew Turks must not primarily identify themselves as Muslims. Turks needed a non-confessional ethnic identity. He saw hypotheses such as the "Sun Theory" as a means of giving Turks a secular heritage.
Mustafa Kemal was not a historian or even a scholar. I doubt there was a single legitimate historian at the turn of the century; this was an era that was extraordinary biased by nationalism. He was above all else a pragmatist and a national builder. He carefully reconstructed Turkish heritage so all that all citizens, regardless of religion and ethnicity, can feel united as one nation.
Unlike the CUP pan-Turanists, Mustafa Kemal incorporated non-Turkic elements into Turkish national heritage. Hittites, Lycians, and Trojans were perfect predecessors for Mustafa Kemal's new nation. These ancient Anatolian civilizations came long before the primitive Arab influences of Islam, and most importantly they were of a separate heritage from the rebellious Greeks and Armenians.
Pan-Turanists saw Turks as an exclusive ethnic identity. Under their regime, Turkey's motto would have been "Happy who is a Turk". Kemalism in its true form was an extremely inclusive national identity. So inclusive, that it was compulsory. Kemalism has only one true motto : "Happy who CALLS himself a Turk.
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Re: Armenian-Turkish Relations
Originally posted by bell-the-cat View PostYou are the comic ... but a failed, stupid comic whose jokes are not funny.
Most of your points are irrelevant to the discussion at hand, but it's ironic how you chose to mention Bitlis - being one of the strongholds of the Armenian revolutionary movement in mid 1915 and the scene of some of the heaviest fighting between Armenian guerilla and Ottoman troops ....and what was Ataturk doing in Bitlis around August 1916? Re-taking Bitlis from General Nazarbekov, the Russian commander not rounding up Armenian surviviors as your post would suggest.
But that's not really the point of discussion. We're discussing sloppy writing by someone masquerading as a professional journalist claiming that: "Kemal Ataturk... himself supported the destruction of Christianity via the Armenian, Assyrian and Greek Christian genocide of 1915".
Grammatically it suggests that he did something in the present tense i.e. specifically in 1915. The reality is as someone of only limited rank up to 1918 what could have Ataturk done or should have done at the time (to borrow one of your earlier phrases)?
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Re: Armenian-Turkish Relations
Originally posted by egeli View PostMustafa Kemal was extremly opposed to pan-Turanism. Do you know why Enver, Talat, and Cemal Pasha all died outside of Turkey? They were expelled by Mustafa Kemal for being ideologically opposed to his principles.
There is no ethnic nationalism in Kemalism. Every Muslim is a Turk. Considering how Mustafa Kemal invited Istanbul-Armenians to form the Turkish Language, the foundation for Turkish identity, he most likely envisioned loyal indigenous Christians as Turks.
His views have always been too radical for Turkey. Do not be fooled, Ataturk is not Mustafa Kemal. The state has disgraced his legacy from the moment he died.
Contemporary Kemalism has merged with Turanism.
Much of the principle of pan-turanism, which is re-inventing history, is based on the work of Atatürk. He himself stated “Writing history is as important as making history”, which is of course what he did. In the First History Congress in Ankara in 1932, the main mission of the many Turkish 'historians' and 'historical institutions', such as the Turkish Historical Society, invited personally by Atatürk, was to produce historical narratives and linguistic validation for pan-Turanist ideologies, for example the “Sun Language Theory”, which states that: all human languages are descendants of one Central Asian primal language. and the only language remaining more or less the same as this primal language is Turkish, hence Turkic people are the heirs of nearly all civilizations.
Out of this congress, the Turkish state institutionalized in the education system the reforms made on every single History book published in the Republic of Turkey. Atatürk was one of the main figures of pan-turanism, as he grouped all the previous works made by other pan-turanists, edited them, enlarged them, developed them, modified them, bettered them, and institutionalized them.
Many Armenians were invited by Atatürk to make his reforms, but these Armenians were particularly close to the Turkish state and some of them held important positions during the Ottoman Empire, such as Berch Kerestejyan, who besides saving Atatürk's life, was the director of the Ottoman Bank, and he provided large quantities of money and funds to fight the "enemy" from 1919 to 1922 during the wars Turkey fought before the founding of the republic. And who were the enemy? Of course, one of them were the Armenians. That kind of 'Armenians' were the ones Atatürk invited.
As you say, Mustafa Kemal is not the same as Atatürk, those were too different people. Mustafa Kemal modernized the Turkish state and got the Turkish civilization at the gates of the 20th century, he did many great things for Turkey, but then he was turned into Atatürk, the man who left the bases for Turkish state system in every area as we see today.
Kemalism never merged with Turanism, it was born out of it. Atatürk's legacy was never disgraced, it was enlarged and engreatened. Mustafa Kemal is not remembered in Turkey, Atatürk is.Last edited by ashot24; 01-23-2010, 06:25 PM.
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Re: Armenian-Turkish Relations
Originally posted by ashot24 View PostNot to mention he was and is one of the main figures, supporters and spreaders of Pan-Turkism, and if anyone is guilty for the racism and that both Turkey and Azebaijan have towards Armenians, as well as Greeks and Assyrians (Turkey's case) is him. Amongst all the people who are guilty for the injustices our people has gone through the last century up until today is him and his regime, which tried through every mean to destroy the existence of Armenia socially and politically. Because he couldn't fulfill that, he sent to destroy every trace of Armenian culture and history inside Western Armenia, but that wasn't accomplished either, so he personally created, arranged, and institutionalized a system starting from the cradle to the grave where Armenians (among others) are portrayed as the enemies of the Turkish state, and the thieves of the """millenarian""" Turkish culture, as the liars who come up with invented stories trying to tarnish with blood the good name of the Turkish people, as the 'scum of the earth'...there's no doubt where Hitler took inspiration.
But life is funny....Sabiha Gökçen, one of Atatürk's adopted children and Turkey's first woman pilot, had Armenian roots and was originally named Hatun Sebiljyan. She lost her family in the Armenian Genocide and was sent to an orphanage where she was adopted by Atatürk, as proved by the survivors of her own lost family in one of the many cases of ethnic Armenian so-called-Turkish people studied by Hrant Dinq and published by Akos. But of course Turkish officials strongly deny this and label it as one of the many 'Armenian tales', and this was one of the many reasons why Dinq was killed, for daring to prove one of Turkey's most important women was Armenian. And Turkish history if full of important people who were ethnic Armenians...how funny, doesn't it?
Atatürk founded the Turkish state looking for 'freedom', 'rights', 'justice' for the Turkish people, but all of that was at the cost of our freedom, our rights, our justice...but that's always like that, for one people to enjoy others have to suffer, for one people to live others have to die. It's amazing how unfair live is.
There is no ethnic nationalism in Kemalism. Every Muslim is a Turk. Considering how Mustafa Kemal invited Istanbul-Armenians to form the Turkish Language, the foundation for Turkish identity, he most likely envisioned loyal indigenous Christians as Turks.
His views have always been too radical for Turkey. Do not be fooled, Ataturk is not Mustafa Kemal. The state has disgraced his legacy from the moment he died.
Contemporary Kemalism has merged with Turanism.
Leave a comment:
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Re: Armenian-Turkish Relations
Originally posted by bell-the-cat View PostAtaturk was in Bitlis in 1916, so he was well aware of the slaugher at first hand. When he was in a position of power what did he do - he finished off the genocide by having his nationalist forces massacre tens of thousands of genocide survivors, and forcing the remainder to flee again for their lives. Then he single-handed invented a regime that not only denied the genocide had happened, but even denied that Armenians had existed in great numbers, denied that there was historically a place called Armenia, and invented laughable official Turkish history that "proved" the existence of "Hittite Turks" and "Urartian Turks".
But life is funny....Sabiha Gökçen, one of Atatürk's adopted children and Turkey's first woman pilot, had Armenian roots and was originally named Hatun Sebiljyan. She lost her family in the Armenian Genocide and was sent to an orphanage where she was adopted by Atatürk, as proved by the survivors of her own lost family in one of the many cases of ethnic Armenian so-called-Turkish people studied by Hrant Dinq and published by Akos. But of course Turkish officials strongly deny this and label it as one of the many 'Armenian tales', and this was one of the many reasons why Dinq was killed, for daring to prove one of Turkey's most important women was Armenian. And Turkish history if full of important people who were ethnic Armenians...how funny, doesn't it?
Atatürk founded the Turkish state looking for 'freedom', 'rights', 'justice' for the Turkish people, but all of that was at the cost of our freedom, our rights, our justice...but that's always like that, for one people to enjoy others have to suffer, for one people to live others have to die. It's amazing how unfair live is.
Leave a comment:
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Re: Armenian-Turkish Relations
Originally posted by Jos View PostHow could Ataturk have supported this in 1915 when he was only a middle ranking officer engaged in the Gallipoli defense under General Limon Van Sanders?
Wrong to the point of almost comical. Is this amateur hour Alexandros? Do you even read any of these articles before posting them. Or is the only requirement being they must be anti-turkish?
Ataturk was in Bitlis in 1916, so he was well aware of the slaugher at first hand. When he was in a position of power what did he do - he finished off the genocide by having his nationalist forces massacre tens of thousands of genocide survivors, and forcing the remainder to flee again for their lives. Then he single-handed invented a regime that not only denied the genocide had happened, but even denied that Armenians had existed in great numbers, denied that there was historically a place called Armenia, and invented laughable official Turkish history that "proved" the existence of "Hittite Turks" and "Urartian Turks".
Leave a comment:
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