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Ahmet Altan article

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  • Ahmet Altan article

    Genocide...
    By Ahmet Altan
    May 9, 2005

    Translated by the Zoryan Institute

    I would like to ask a very simple, ordinary question.

    Would you wish to be an Armenian in 1915?

    No, you wouldn't.

    Because now you know you would have been killed.

    Please stop arguing about the number of murdered or the denials or the attempts to replace pain with statistics.

    No one is denying that Armenians were murdered, right?

    It may be 300,000, or 500,000, or 1.5 million.

    I don't know which number is the truth, or whether anyone knows the true number accurately.

    What I do know is the existence of the death and pain beyond these numbers.

    I am also aware how we forget that we are talking about human beings when we are passionately debating the numbers.

    Those numbers cannot describe the murdered babies, women, the elderly, the teenage boys and girls.

    If we leave the numbers aside, and if we allow ourselves to hear the story of only one of these murders, I am sure that even those of us who get enraged when they hear the words "Armenian Genocide" will feel the pain, will have tears in their eyes.

    Because they will realize that we are talking about human beings.

    When we hear about a baby pulled from a mother's hands to be dashed on the rocks, or a youth shot to death beside a hill, or an old woman throttled by her slender neck, even the hard-hearted among us will be ashamed to say, "Yes, but these people killed the Turks."

    Most of these people did not kill anyone.

    These people became the innocent victims of a crazed government powered by murder, pitiless but also totally incompetent in governing.

    This bloody insanity was a barbarism, not something for us to take pride in or be part of.

    This was a slaughter that we should be ashamed of, and, if possible, something that we can sympathize with and share the pain.

    I understand that the word "genocide" has a damningly critical meaning, based on the relentless insistence of the Armenians' "Accept the Genocide" argument, or the Turks' "No, it was not a genocide" counterargument, even though the Turks accept the death of hundreds of thousands of Armenians.

    And yet, this word is not that important for me, even though it has significance in politics and diplomacy.

    What is more important for me is the fact that many innocent people were killed so barbarically.

    When I see the shadow of this bloody event on the present world, I see a greater injustice done to the Armenians.

    Our crime today is not to allow the present Armenians even to grieve for their cruelly killed relatives and parents.

    Which Armenian living in Turkey today can openly grieve and commemorate a murdered grandmother, grandfather or uncle?

    I have nothing in common with the terrible sin of the past Ittihadists, but the sin of not allowing grief for the dead belongs to all of us today.

    Do you really want to commit this sin?

    Is there anyone among us who would not shed tears for a family attacked at home in the middle of the night, or for a little girl left all alone in the desert during the nightmare called "deportation," or for a white-bearded grandfather shot?

    Whether you call it genocide or not, hundreds of thousands of human beings were murdered.

    Hundreds of thousands of lives snuffed out.

    The fact that some Armenian gangs murdered some Turks cannot be an excuse to mask the truth that hundreds of thousands of Armenians were murdered.

    A human being of conscience is capable of grieving for the Armenians, as well as the Turks, as well as the Kurds.

    We all should.

    Babies died; women and old people died.

    They died in pain, tormented, terrified.

    Is it really so important what religion or race these murdered people had?

    Even in these terrifying times there were Turks who risked their lives trying to rescue Armenian children.

    We are the children of these rescuers, as well as the children of the murderers.

    Instead of justifying and arguing on behalf of the murderers, why don't we praise and defend the rescuers' compassion, honesty, and courage?
    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

  • #2
    Originally posted by Joseph View Post
    Genocide...
    By Ahmet Altan
    May 9, 2005

    Translated by the Zoryan Institute

    I would like to ask a very simple, ordinary question.

    Would you wish to be an Armenian in 1915?

    No, you wouldn't.

    Because now you know you would have been killed.

    Please stop arguing about the number of murdered or the denials or the attempts to replace pain with statistics.

    No one is denying that Armenians were murdered, right?

    It may be 300,000, or 500,000, or 1.5 million.

    I don't know which number is the truth, or whether anyone knows the true number accurately.

    What I do know is the existence of the death and pain beyond these numbers.

    I am also aware how we forget that we are talking about human beings when we are passionately debating the numbers.

    Those numbers cannot describe the murdered babies, women, the elderly, the teenage boys and girls.

    If we leave the numbers aside, and if we allow ourselves to hear the story of only one of these murders, I am sure that even those of us who get enraged when they hear the words "Armenian Genocide" will feel the pain, will have tears in their eyes.

    Because they will realize that we are talking about human beings.

    When we hear about a baby pulled from a mother's hands to be dashed on the rocks, or a youth shot to death beside a hill, or an old woman throttled by her slender neck, even the hard-hearted among us will be ashamed to say, "Yes, but these people killed the Turks."

    Most of these people did not kill anyone.

    These people became the innocent victims of a crazed government powered by murder, pitiless but also totally incompetent in governing.

    This bloody insanity was a barbarism, not something for us to take pride in or be part of.

    This was a slaughter that we should be ashamed of, and, if possible, something that we can sympathize with and share the pain.

    I understand that the word "genocide" has a damningly critical meaning, based on the relentless insistence of the Armenians' "Accept the Genocide" argument, or the Turks' "No, it was not a genocide" counterargument, even though the Turks accept the death of hundreds of thousands of Armenians.

    And yet, this word is not that important for me, even though it has significance in politics and diplomacy.

    What is more important for me is the fact that many innocent people were killed so barbarically.

    When I see the shadow of this bloody event on the present world, I see a greater injustice done to the Armenians.

    Our crime today is not to allow the present Armenians even to grieve for their cruelly killed relatives and parents.

    Which Armenian living in Turkey today can openly grieve and commemorate a murdered grandmother, grandfather or uncle?

    I have nothing in common with the terrible sin of the past Ittihadists, but the sin of not allowing grief for the dead belongs to all of us today.

    Do you really want to commit this sin?

    Is there anyone among us who would not shed tears for a family attacked at home in the middle of the night, or for a little girl left all alone in the desert during the nightmare called "deportation," or for a white-bearded grandfather shot?

    Whether you call it genocide or not, hundreds of thousands of human beings were murdered.

    Hundreds of thousands of lives snuffed out.

    The fact that some Armenian gangs murdered some Turks cannot be an excuse to mask the truth that hundreds of thousands of Armenians were murdered.

    A human being of conscience is capable of grieving for the Armenians, as well as the Turks, as well as the Kurds.

    We all should.

    Babies died; women and old people died.

    They died in pain, tormented, terrified.

    Is it really so important what religion or race these murdered people had?

    Even in these terrifying times there were Turks who risked their lives trying to rescue Armenian children.

    We are the children of these rescuers, as well as the children of the murderers.

    Instead of justifying and arguing on behalf of the murderers, why don't we praise and defend the rescuers' compassion, honesty, and courage?
    still resonates
    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

    Comment


    • #3
      Fully agree as a Turk

      Comment


      • #4
        Glad to hear it, since that makes us the same race; "Human race"
        "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

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