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Epitome of Denial

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  • #61
    Denial Without Boundaries

    I-Newswire.com (press release)
    Jan 6 2006



    (I-Newswire) - The Azerbaijani propagandists are in the hunt for new
    methods of denying the recent destruction of the ancient Armenian
    cemetery of Old Julfa. The latest shameless denial states, `Claims on
    existence of Armenian graveyard in Julfa are historically and
    ethnically baseless.'

    Azer-Press Informsiya Agentliyi ( http://en.apa.az ), an Azerbaijani
    source, quotes Dr. Vali Bakhshaliyev, a member of Azerbaijan's
    National Academy of Sciences, as saying, `The claims of Armenian[s]
    are historically and ethnically groundless. There was not any
    Armenian graveyard in Julfa.' Dr. Bakhshaliyev referred to the
    publication of photographs and videos from mid-December ( 2005 ),
    which showed about 100 Azerbaijani soldiers destroying the last
    historic headstones ( khachkars ) of the Armenian cemetery of Old
    Julfa ( Hin Jugha ).

    The historic cemetery of Old Julfa is so famous that to deny it ever
    existed - means to deny that the planet Earth exists. Even
    Azerbaijani websites enclose information about the cemetery (
    www.Azerb.com, for instance, writes, `Today you can still imagine
    Julfa's former grandeur, visiting what's left of... the vast cemetery
    with thousands of artistically sculpted tomb stones known as
    `Khachkars.'' ). The ridiculous lies about Julfa's nonexistence are
    hopeless tactics of denial. Before Dr. Bakhshaliyev's announcements,
    the Azerbaijani media had fabricated information about `destruction
    of Azerbaijani holy place in Armenia' with the denialist ideology of
    `we did - but you did it too.' Apparently, the propaganda of the
    `destruction of Azerbaijani holy place in Armenia' had not been
    successful.

    The Christian cemetery of Julfa, as stated in a letter of the
    American congressmen Joe Knollenberg and Frank Pallone to the
    Azerbaijani Ambassador, Jr., `is known to specialists to have housed
    as many as 10,000 of these intricately carved khachkar headstones, up
    to 2,000 of which were still intact after an earlier outbreak of
    vandalism on the same site in 2002.' Back in 1648, according to
    Alexander Rodes' data, there were 10,000 well-preserved headstones in
    Julfa, many as old as the 8th century. After Soviet dictator Joseph
    Stalin annexed Nakhichevan from Armenia and signed it off to
    Azerbaijan in the 1920s, the Armenian population of Nakhichevan (
    where Julfa is situated ) was wiped out. Since then, many Armenian
    monuments ( ancient cathedrals and thousands of beautifully-carved
    headstones ) have been raised to the ground. Steven Sim from
    Scotland, who visited the ruins of the Armenian holy places in
    Nakichevan, affirmed in 2005: `a special state policy of destruction
    is being implemented in Azerbaijan.'

    Photographs from the mid-December ( 2005 ) destruction of Old Julfa
    are available at
    http://www.armenica.org/history/old-jougha/index.html and
    http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Photos/Pictures109.htm. The video,
    taped by the Armenian Prelacy of Iran at the Iranian-Azerbaijani
    border and made available by www.Blogian.cjb.net, can be downloaded
    from www.azerivandalism.cjb.net; the same video ( clearer view, but
    larger file ) is also available at www.julfa.cjb.net.

    The administration of www.Genocide.com is shocked with the sinister
    denial of the Azerbaijani party, and is adding its voice to the
    international community in protesting the destruction of Old Julfa's
    ancient cemetery.

    It is certainly hoped that UNESCO will find courage to address the
    destruction of the Armenian heritage in Azerbaijan.

    "All truth passes through three stages:
    First, it is ridiculed;
    Second, it is violently opposed; and
    Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

    Comment


    • #62
      Prof. Gocek Threatens to Sue Turks Who Sent Her Hate Mail

      California Courier Online, January 12, 2006


      By Harut Sassounian
      Publisher, The California Courier

      Turkish American Prof. Fatma Muge Gocek received abusive and possibly
      libelous e-mails from Turks last week after criticizing the denialist
      policies of the Turkish government on the Armenian Genocide in an interview
      conducted by Aris Babikian which was published in Horizon Weekly, a
      Canadian-Armenian newspaper, and posted on several internet sites.
      A Turk, calling himself "Ilyas Botas" (who also uses various aliases on
      different occasions) sent an e-mail full of insults to Dr. Gocek with
      copies to scores of others, including the Turkish Embassy. Referring to
      Prof. Gocek as "a useful idiot," the so-called "Botas" wrote: "This bimbo
      not only has an immense ego problem, but she is odiously (sic) arrogant....
      The chutzpah of this airhead of a woman is as big as her considerable
      heft."
      In a blatant attempt to libel Dr. Gocek, "Botas" wrote: "How obviously and
      how crudely her words are geared to please her Dashnak benefactors. If this
      woman is not a pathetic, sycophantic, toady of the Dashnak hate lobby, then
      my name is not Keenan Pars," thus shamelessly disclosing another one of his
      aliases.
      "Botas" then went on to attack Elif Shafak, a prominent Turkish scholar who
      had no role in the interview, but who had previously made sympathetic
      comments about Armenians. "Botas" described Shafak as "the other bimbo."
      Another Turk by the name of Ferruh Demirmen, who supposedly is a petroleum
      consultant in Houston, Texas, also sent a libelous hate e-mail to these two
      Turkish scholars, stating that "they are self delusional, they thrive in
      vanity, surpass in inanity, and their mark is stupidity. Arrogance is in
      their blood, deceit is their trade, and the Pavlovian instinct is in their
      psyche. As long as there are those like Gocek and her ilk, that are ready
      to serve their Dashnak masters, Turks don't need enemies."
      In a separate e-mail posted on the Turkish Forum, "Botas" referred to Gocek
      and Shafak as "opportunistic parasites...who sell their souls for personal
      gain." "Botas" is listed as a Board Member of the Turkish Forum.
      Prof. Gocek sent an e-mail to both Demirmen and "Botas," advising them
      that attorneys for the University of Michigan, where she is a tenured
      professor, are "looking into the legal implications of internet hate mail
      on the senders, their e-mail service providers, as well as the websites and
      the service providers of the websites at which these hate mails then get
      posted."
      In an e-mail Dr. Gocek posted on the Armenian Workshop site, she said: "I
      am not the only one to receive such hate mail. I know Taner Akcam, Halil
      Berktay and Elif Shafak had received such mail in large volumes and it
      became clear at the Istanbul Conference in September 2005 that many of the
      participants there and specially the journalists who happened to write on
      the Armenian issue have received it in droves as well."
      Dr. Gocek described her predicament as follows: "You have scholars on the
      one side and some vicious individuals - who of course are not scholars -
      backed by certain institutions sent out to attack them with all their
      might, on the other. That is not fair. For the peaceful resolution of the
      Armenian issue, such tacit institutional/organizational support behind such
      maliciously behaving individuals needs to stop. And even though such tacit
      support may work in Turkey, where the legal system, unfortunately, does not
      work as well as it ought to, it should not work in the United States."
      In response to Dr. Gocek's e-mail to the senders of the these hate mails,
      "Ilyas Botas" responded with even more insulting and obnoxious words, by
      writing: "The fat lady threatens legal action. And I am shaking in my
      boots, or more correctly, in my wing-tip shoes. Are the chickens coming
      home to roost, Ms. Gocek? How do you like them apples? Weren't you and a
      bunch of other Dashnak lackeys the ones who were decrying the lack of
      freedom of expression in Turkey before you held your 'Armenian Conference'
      in Istanbul? How now, Gocek Efendi? The moccasin is on the other foot and
      you don't seem to like it. That's too bad. ...How am I doing so far, fat
      lady? Am I providing you with even more grounds for 'legal action'? Good.
      Send in your lawyers. Take your best shot. ...I'll provide you with even more
      grounds. Or by 'legal action' do you mean to send the hoodlum punks from
      the Armenian Youth Federation or some such thing? ...Fat lady Gocek, I am
      ready for all eventualities, including having the perimeter of my house
      decorated with surveillance cameras. You say you are a professor 'with
      tenure.' Where did you get your degree? Like Dennis Papazian, at the Guguk
      Gagikyan Lahmajun Bakery? ...I will distribute the same piece to every
      institution, public or non (sic), as well as to individuals, that I can. I
      think every Tom, xxxx and Harry in the world should know what you're up to.
      Hey, what the hell more can you ask for? I'm making you famous. I expect
      you will send me my 10 percent commission via Fedex. Oh, if you want a good
      attorney, I recommend the Armenian lawyer, Mark Geragos the Gorgeous. Oh, I
      know he lost his last two big cases for the shoplifter actress Winona Rider
      [he means Ryder] and for the murderer Scott Peterson, but I think he still
      has the knack. I bet he'll even do pro bono work for people who are
      inclined to be toadies for the slick Dashnak lobby. Wishing for your
      eventual cessation of prostituting for the Dashnak hate peddlers, Ilyas."
      These vicious words remind one of the Armenian saying: "hayhoyanke pasdi
      sove e." Cusswords or name-calling indicates an absence of proof.
      If Dr. Gocek does carry out her intent to sue these unsavory characters,
      she would not only safeguard her own reputation, but she would blow the
      cover of such impostors who carry out a vicious campaign of insults and
      threats, hiding behind fake names and phony e-mail addresses!
      "All truth passes through three stages:
      First, it is ridiculed;
      Second, it is violently opposed; and
      Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

      Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

      Comment


      • #63
        Azeri ambassador to US "shares" congressmen concern over preserving historical herita

        Azeri ambassador to US "shares" congressmen concern over preserving historical heritage
        Azeri Ambassador to US Hafiz Pashayev gave a written response to a letter of Co-Chairs of the US Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) on destruction of Armenian khachkars (headstones) in Nakhichevan. H. Pashayev “expresses regret” over “unreliable” information sources, to which Congressmen referred. The Ambassador reminded that the Azeri Defense Ministry has rejected such accusations. The diplomat reminded that Azerbaijan is a society based on “rich historical legacy.” “Some 30 thousand Armenians live in Azerbaijan today. Our country highlights preservation of thousands of historical, cultural and architectural monuments,” he said. Addressing Congressmen the Azeri diplomat remarked he “shares their concern over preservation of historical and cultural heritage,” reported Trend agency. It should be reminded that Co-Chairs of the US Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) have sent a joint letter to Ambassador Pashayev of Azerbaijan expressing their concern over the reported destruction of Armenian khachkars (headstones), monuments and headstones in the medieval cemetery of Julfa, Nakhichevan of the Azerbaijan Republic on December 15, 2005, reported the Armenian Assembly of America. Knollenberg and Pallone stated their opposition to the vandalism of Armenian khachkars that have for centuries existed in the Julfa Cemetery, pointing out that the same site was vandalized in 2002, leaving up to 2,000 of the 10,000 khachkars intact. The organized nature of the ongoing demolition accounted by eyewitnesses has been qualified as cleansing. The letter also calls attention to Azerbaijan's national responsibilities within the United Nations, the OSCE, the Council of Europe and other international frameworks. “As a member of the international community, Azerbaijan has a duty to preserve the cultural and historical heritage in its custody. By ignoring this obligation, the government of Azerbaijan undermines U.S. and international efforts to achieve greater stability in the South Caucasus region,” says the letter of Knollenberg and Pallone. The Co-Chairs concluded their missive by urging Azerbaijan to cease the vandalism in Julfa's Old Cemetery and to prepare a report documenting the damage leading to measures in remedy of the situation. The government of Azerbaijan is also urged to cooperate with international and expert community in developing a program of action to prevent and preserve treasures of cultural heritage and halt future occurrences of violence.


        © PanArmenian
        "All truth passes through three stages:
        First, it is ridiculed;
        Second, it is violently opposed; and
        Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

        Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

        Comment


        • #64
          `Protestcide' - The Killing of Protest of a Denial of Genocide

          March 27, 2006

          by Israel W. Charny


          To what extent does a publication have the right to alter a Letter to
          the Editor that criticizes the publication, and then to publish their
          altered version of the letter without the full permission of the
          letter writer, especially in light of his explicit refusal to approve
          their revision?

          In December 2005, Commentary published a lengthy article denying the
          Armenian Genocide by one, Guenter Lewy, a retired professor who has
          previously published denials of other genocides as well, including a
          denial that the Gypsies were victims of genocide in WW II (Simon
          Wiesenthal defended the role of the Gypsies as fellow victims of the
          Holocaust, and on several occasions wrote and told passionately of
          seeing the Gypsies in Auschwitz in the barracks right next to his);
          and including a denial that the Native Americans (Indians) were
          victims of genocide in America. It is clear that Lewy has established
          himself as an arch specialist in denial who has now relegated no less
          than three victim peoples to some kind of status of sufferers other
          than victims of genocidal mass murder. I think that readers of this
          current Commentary piece denying there was a genocide of the Armenians
          had a right to know of the author's previous publications of denials
          (one of which was also in Commentary), but not a word was mentioned.

          Lewy's article in Commentary is entitled, `The first genocide of the
          20th century?' Lewy himself mentions in his article that the
          International Association of Genocide Scholars, of which I am the
          current president, had passed a unanimous resolution some years ago
          confirming the validity of the Armenian Genocide. When Commentary was
          approached by a colleague as to whether they would publish a rejoinder
          to Lewy's article by me, the editor agreed immediately to receive a
          600-word statement from me. So far to their credit. But then in the
          grotesque sequence of censorship and revisions of my rejoinder that
          follows, Commentary at first refused to identify my connection to the
          same Association that passed the resolution, and finally did in fact
          identify me as somehow affiliated with the Association but eliminated
          identifying my leadership role. A personal slight? Then it's
          irrelevant. Or is it a diminution of the significance of my protest?
          In the meantime, Commentary published a lengthy rejoinder by Lewy in
          the same issue with the following statement that, by a wave of the
          Lewy-Commentary wand removes any significance to our association's
          informed judgment: `I am less than impressed by the unanimous vote of
          the International Association of Genocide Scholars that the Armenian
          case `was one of the major genocides of the modern era' writes Denier
          Lewy conclusively and then presumptuously slams the members of the
          association that virtually no one (but him) has done real research.

          No matter. Commentary commits more serious infringements to the point
          of not allowing me to voice my definite judgment about their question,
          `The first genocide of the 20th century?'

          In my letter I write about how the Turks also killed other Christian
          (therefore non-Turkish) groups such as the Assyrians and Greeks as
          well as the Armenians (the first Christian people of Europe) and that
          this was `outright genocidal murder.' Commentary removed this vital
          statement from my letter. Remember, the article by Lewy they have
          published is asking explicitly if this was genocide, and the section
          of Letters to the Editor in February is re-entitled, `Genocide?' but
          my clear-cut rejoinder that it was `outright genocidal murder' was not
          permitted.

          Moreover, what does Lewy do? I say in my letter that I wonder if
          readers of the Jewish-sponsored Commentary (this remark by me is also
          censored out) know that the Turks were also responsible for two forced
          expulsions of Jews from Jaffa-Tel Aviv in 1914 and 1917, both of which
          resulted in losses of life of the elderly, infirm and ill. As if
          referring to this information, Lewy says to me in his rejoinder,
          `Mr. Charny stops short of calling these occurrences `genocide,'' but
          he and the hard-working editor who we have seen manages to censor my
          writing so fastidiously, thus manage to get across a message that
          seems to refer to the whole bigger original issue of the Armenian
          Genocide. Now, not only have I not been allowed to say what I did say
          that there was clear-cut genocide, but it is as if claimed explicitly
          that I too don't call the Ottoman murders genocide.

          Higher-class deniers, like Lewy and Commentary, are a fascinating
          study in the propagandistic logic-defying language mechanisms they
          employ -- Commentary also removed from my letter a reference to an
          article that Daphna Fromer and myself published in the British
          journal, Patterns of Prejudice in which we analyzed the language-logic
          of earlier deniers of the Armenian Genocide.

          Ultimately, my most serious criticism is that Commentary is fully
          responsible alongside of its author for publishing a bald exposition
          of denial of an established major genocide. Thus, I conclude my
          letter, `Regrettably, Mr. Lewy and Commentary too have now earned
          places in the pantheon of genocide Deniers,' but -- by now you guessed
          it -- you will never see that sentence, or an earlier statement
          similarly critical of Commentary in the letter they published.

          I ask, do responsible publications in a free world have the right to
          censor and arbitrarily revise Letters to the Editor beyond
          considerations of space, bad language such as epithets, and ad hominem
          attacks (but not legitimate major criticisms of an author or the
          publication!)? Obviously a publication holds the ultimate power and
          can simply decline to publish a letter (who will ever know?). But to
          cut and revise and remove and distort the thrust of the original
          message, and fail to advise and fail to get approval of changes? I
          don't know if there are legal controls against such tampering with the
          lowly institution of a Letter to an Editor and/or op-ed writing, but I
          do know such tampering violates the `natural law' of journalistic
          integrity, and I think Commentary should be told so by an informed
          public.



          --
          Prof. Israel W. Charny, Ph.D. is President of the International
          Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS) Editor-in-Chief, Encyclopedia
          of Genocide [www.abc-clio.com/product/109124] Executive Director,
          Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide, Jerusalem Prof. of Psychology
          & Family Therapy, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Tel & Fax:
          972-2-672-0424 e-mail: [email protected] Author of forthcoming book,
          Fascism and Democracy in the Human Mind, by the University of Nebraska
          Press, May 2006
          "All truth passes through three stages:
          First, it is ridiculed;
          Second, it is violently opposed; and
          Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

          Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

          Comment


          • #65
            France Is Solving The Armenian Question

            Cengiz Aktar

            TDN
            Friday, May 5, 2006

            France, which is going through a period of "end of rule," seems like
            a floundering ship. No one knows who is at the helm, and it is very
            hard to predict where it will bump next.

            The Socialist Party, which may take the reins next year in France,
            suddenly decided to reopen the Armenian case file. On May 18, it
            will submit to Parliament a bill that criminalizes negation of the
            "Armenian genocide." If the bill becomes law with the approval of
            Parliament, the Senate and the president, negation of genocide will
            carry substantial fines and prison terms.

            (Gav.Well socialists in the world seem to be the only ones that are sane at this point of history!)



            The French socialists have always had an "Armenian genocide"
            policy. One of the former defense ministers, Charles Hernu, was a
            fervent supporter of the matter. The Socialist Party, still considering
            the Armenian Dashnak Party as a fellow socialist movement, always
            entertained good relations with it. Today this relationship together
            with the naive approach of Francois Hollande, first secretary of the
            Socialist Party, kept the matter on the agenda of the socialists.

            If the bill becomes law, France will have solved its Armenian
            issue. But this move may even be beneficial to the overall debate.



            (Gav.I agree.)



            The self-confident Armenian diaspora exploited and is exploiting
            pretty successfully the humanitarian compassion of the Western
            countries they reside in, the feeling of guilt that resulted from
            the Holocaust and the anti-Turkish sentiments. Their distance from
            the time and place where this tragedy happened has become a part
            of their identity and is directly affecting their attitudes. It is
            indeed difficult to expect a constructive approach from them or to
            discuss the current state of the issue in connection with the real
            protagonists living in this region. If this matter is solved one day,
            it will be solved between Turkish Armenians, Armenia and Turkey. Not
            in France, Switzerland or the United States.




            (Gav.And the Diaspora who are direct descendants of the Genocide!)



            Thus, with France now banning any further discussion on the Armenian
            issue, we will be forever freed from this never-ending and unproductive
            debate that is taking place in France.

            But France cannot solve the Algerian question:


            (Gav.If this matter is solved one day,it will be solved between Algeria and France not Turkey)


            For some time, France has been trying to mend its relations with
            oil-rich Algiers. It is trying to balance its present policy of
            supporting Morocco against Algeria. It wants to base its relations
            on a solid foundation, namely a "Friendship Treaty." Their foreign
            minister even approached Algiers with a sort of special relation, this
            time an "exceptional partnership," but as empty as the "privileged
            relationship" which we were presented with.

            However, a new era is only possible with the questioning of the
            old one. France's social memory carries a lot of mixed feelings and
            memories about Algeria: The very harsh colonial period that started
            with the occupation in 1830; French Minister Adolphe Crémieux's
            decision to grant Algerian Jews French citizenship, which ruined
            the social cohesion of the land once and for all; the civil war that
            started in 1954 which was full of pain and bloodshed and only ended in
            1961 with independence, with around a million people mainly composed
            of "pieds-noir" colonials but also "harki" Arabs who had fought for
            France, departing for France.

            France, just like Turkey, is refusing to question this hurtful era.

            Whenever an Algerian official or a French intellectual utters a word
            contrary to the official position, condemnation follows. Algerian
            President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, only recently, said: "You carried out
            an identity genocide on us between 1830 and 1962. We can't tell whether
            we are Arabs, Berbers, Europeans or French," creating uproar in France.

            Let's ignore the sound comparison of social memory. France, on Feb.

            23, 2005, passed a bill that noted the positive aspects of
            colonialism. Even though there was considerable criticism, Parliament
            refused to amend the controversial article.

            French philosopher Voltaire, who said, "I don't agree with you,
            but I will defend to the death your right to express it," must be
            turning in his grave.

            (Gav.I don't think Mr.Voltaire had to or felt the need to ever deal with disgusting phenomenon called Genocide denial!)-----------
            Copyright 2006, Turkish Daily News. This article is redistributed with
            permission for personal use of Groong readers. No part of this article
            may be reproduced, further distributed or archived without the prior
            permission of the publisher. Contact Turkish Daily News Online at
            http://www.TurkishDailyNews.com for details.
            "All truth passes through three stages:
            First, it is ridiculed;
            Second, it is violently opposed; and
            Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

            Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

            Comment


            • #66
              BBC Article

              I don't agree 100% with the author but it is an interesting article nevertheless


              Turkey's Armenian dilemma

              Turkey did not always deny the mass killing of Armenians. As the US House of Representatives prepares to vote on recognising the 1915 massacres as genocide, journalist and historian Bruce Clark looks at how and why Turkish attitudes have changed over the past 90 years.

              "The more foreign parliaments insist that our forebears committed crimes against humanity, the less likely anybody in Turkey is to face up to the hardest moments in history."

              That, roughly speaking, is the message being delivered by Turkey's hard-pressed intelligentsia as the legislators in one country after another vote for resolutions which insist that the killing of hundreds of thousands of Ottoman Armenians in 1915 amounted to genocide.

              "Will the adoption [of a resolution] help to inform the Turkish public... on the great tragedy which befell the Ottoman Armenians?

              "No, it can hardly be expected to... broaden the debate on the history of the Ottoman Empire's final period."

              So writes Sahin Alpay, a liberal-minded Turkish academic, in a recent column in Zaman newspaper.

              What such appeals reflect, of course, is an elementary fact of human psychology: the phenomenon of individual and collective defensiveness.

              When people feel completely secure, and among friends, they can be very frank about misdeeds which they, or people close to them, have committed.

              But hackles will go up again as soon as they become insecure, because they feel their accusers are acting in bad faith, or that accepting their accusations will have bad consequences.

              On the defensive

              In recent years, liberal Turkish scholars have expressed the hope that membership, or even prospective membership of the European Union, will give the country enough confidence to discuss the Armenian tragedy without threatening those who use the "g-word" with prosecution.


              Sceptics may retort that in recent years, things have been moving in the opposite direction: the revised Turkish penal code and its preamble, adopted in 2005, make even more explicit the principle that people may be prosecuted if they "insult Turkishness" - a crime which, as the preamble makes clear, includes the assertion that the Ottoman Armenians suffered genocide.

              It is certainly true that Turkish defensiveness - the sort of defensiveness which can treat open discussion as verging on treachery - has been running high since the 1960s when the Armenians round the world began lobbying for an explicit acceptance, by governments and parliaments, that their people suffered genocide in 1915.

              A campaign of violence launched by Armenian militants in the 1970s, who mainly attacked Turkish diplomatic targets and claimed over 50 lives, raised hackles even higher.

              All that raises a question: has there ever been a moment, since the events of 1915, when the Turkish authorities might, conceivably, have acknowledged or even freely discussed the view that almost every Armenians regards as self-evident: the view that in addition to relocating the entire ethnic Armenian population of eastern Anatolia, the "Committee of Union and Progress" (CUP) which wielded effective power in the Ottoman empire also gave secret orders to make sure that as few as possible of the deportees survived the experience?

              In fact, there was such a moment: the immediate aftermath of World War I.

              Tried and executed

              At that time the Ottoman government was intact but dependent for its survival on the good graces of the victorious British Empire.

              The sultan's regime was desperately trying to distance itself from the actions of the CUP, the "state within a state" which in 1915 had masterminded the deportation of hundreds of thousands of Armenians - and is alleged to have given secret "extermination" orders at the same time.

              During the early months of 1919, few people in Anatolia publicly doubted that Armenians had suffered atrocities that were egregious even by the standards of a terrible war.

              The sultan and his foreign minister were at pains to reassure the British of their determination to punish the perpetrators of these atrocities, and they held four big and revealing trials whose proceedings were published in the government gazette.

              In April 1919 a local governor, Mehmed Kemal, was found guilty and hanged for the mass killing of Armenians in the Ankara district.

              But the climate shifted rapidly after May 1919, when Greek troops were authorised by the victorious Entente powers to occupy the Aegean port of Izmir and, in another part of Anatolia, Mustafa Kemal - later known as Ataturk - began his campaign to make the Turks masters in their own land.

              Nationalist feeling

              Turkish rage over the Greek landing lent fuel to the Kemalist cause, and discredited the Ottoman government.

              With every passing month, the British government's leverage over the Ottoman authorities waned, and so did British enthusiasm for the conduct of war crimes trials.

              In 1921, the British government made a pragmatic deal to release a group of Turkish prisoners it had been holding in Malta on suspicion (among other things) of crimes against the Armenians.

              They were freed in exchange for Britons being held by the Turks.

              In Turkish lore, this release is held up as proof that no serious evidence against the captives existed.

              What it certainly proves is that British zeal for investigating the past was waning, even as the Kemalist cause gained strength and the British-influenced Ottoman regime faded into oblivion.

              In any case, the officially cherished version of the Turkish state's beginnings now insists since the empire's British adversaries and occupiers were the main promoters of war crimes trials, those trials themselves must have been worthless or malicious.

              A new state

              But in the midst of all this nationalist discourse, something rather important is often obscured, and there are just a few Turkish historians who dare to point this out.

              The atrocities against the Armenians were committed by an Ottoman government, albeit a shadowy sub-section of that government.

              There is no logical reason why a new republican administration, established in October 1923 in an act of revolutionary defiance of Ottoman power, should consider itself responsible for things done under the previous regime.

              In fact, when the nationalist movement was founded in 1919, the climate of revulsion over the sufferings of the Armenians was so general that even the neo-nationalists were keen to distinguish themselves from the CUP.

              Some see significance in the fact that the nationalist movement chose to rally round an army officer, Mustafa Kemal, who had never been anywhere near the places where the Armenians met their fate.

              The very fact that the Turkish republic bears no formal responsibility for eliminating the Armenian presence in eastern Anatolia (for the simple reason that the republic did not exist when the atrocities occurred) has given some Turkish historians a flicker of hope: one day, the leaders of the republic will be able to face up to history's toughest questions about the Armenians, without feeling that to do so would undermine the very existence of their state.

              Fatma Muge Gocek, a Turkish-born sociologist who now works as professor in America, has said there are - or will be - three phases in her country's attitude to the fate of the Armenians: a spirit of "investigation" in the final Ottoman years, a spirit of defensiveness under the Turkish republic, and a new, post-nationalist attitude to history that will prevail if and when Turkey secures a places in Europe.

              That makes perfect psychological sense, even if the immediate prospects for a move from phase two to phase three do not look very bright.

              Bruce Clark is international news editor of the Economist newspaper.

              Story from BBC NEWS:
              BBC, News, BBC News, news online, world, uk, international, foreign, british, online, service


              Published: 2007/02/27 07:24:25 GMT

              © BBC MMVII
              General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

              Comment


              • #67
                Next time I murder someone make sure to remind me to change my name so I no longer will be the person who commited the crime.

                Comment


                • #68
                  Originally posted by 1.5 million View Post
                  Next time I murder someone make sure to remind me to change my name so I no longer will be the person who commited the crime.
                  Exactly.

                  If I ever murder anyone, I'll change my name from Joseph to Steve.
                  Steve never murdered anyone because there was no Steve when the "so-called" murder supposedly happened.
                  If Steve killed anyone, they had it coming because no one should ever provoke Joseph...I mean Steve.
                  General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

                  Comment


                  • #69
                    Originally posted by 1.5 million View Post
                    Next time I murder someone make sure to remind me to change my name so I no longer will be the person who commited the crime.

                    Check this post out:



                    The Turkish defense always seems to essentially be derived from this arguement:
                    1. It was the Ottoman Empire that did those things.
                    2. The Ottoman Empire ceased to exist in 1923
                    3. The Ottomans then called themselves Turks and history just evaporated and they can no longer be blamed for the what happened.

                    Like magic.

                    I'll give you a hypothetical situation. Suppose I murder someone but then I change my name from Joseph to Mehmet. I can now use the Turkish defense and say that it was Joseph who committed the murder and since I'm now Mehmet, I cannot be held responsible for what Joseph has done.

                    Furthermore, I can supplement my arguement by saying: Joseph no longer exists so perhaps the murder never happened or what happened is in the past, people should not anger Mehmet with such triviality because he may revert to his Joseph-like ways and murder again.
                    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

                    Comment

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