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Scholars who have received funding from the Turkish Government

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  • Scholars who have received funding from the Turkish Government

    Recipients of Turkish Government Money
    From Armeniapedia.org
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    ITS, stands for the Turkish Studies Institute, in Washington D.C., honorary chairman, the Turkish Ambassador to the U.S.. The Institute's purpose is to counter Armenian activity at the "academic level" and to act as a pro-Turkey lobbying group.

    ARIT, stands for the American Research Institute in Turkey.

    The number in ( ) stands for the number of monetary grants by either ITS, or ARIT to the "scholar", and the items between [ ] indicate the total number of grants to the rest of the College or University the "scholars" are affiliated with.

    Note the names on this list are the Scholars Who Signed No-Genocide Ad

    Abu El Haj, Rifaat Cal. St. Univ, Long Beach ITS(1)
    Atis, Sara Univ. of Wisc @ Madison ITS(1), [ITS(8)]
    Barbir, Karl K. Siena Coll. (NY) Arab-Ottoman Studies
    Basgoz,Ilhan Indiana Univ. ITS(3), ARIT(2), [ITS(8)]
    Bates, Daniel Hunter Coll., Univ of NY [ITS(1)]
    Bates, Ulku Hunter Coll., Univ of NY ARIT(1), [ITS(1)]
    Bayerle, Gustav Indiana Univ. ARIT(1), [ITS(8)]
    Bodrogligetti, Andras UCLA ITS(1), [ITS(4)]
    Burrill, Kathleen Columbia University ITS(8), ARIT(1), [ITS(9)]
    Childs, Timothy SAIS, John Hopkins Univ. 19th-20th century Ottoman history
    Daulet, Shafiga Univ. of Conn. [ITS(4)]
    Davison, Roderic Geo. Wash. Univ. ARIT(1)
    Denny, Walter Univ. of Mass. ARIT(1)
    Duben, Alan Anthropoliogist
    Ervin, Ellen N.Y. Univ. ITS(1), [ITS(6)]
    Farah, Caesar Univ. of Minn. ITS(1)
    Findley, Carter Ohio State. Univ. ITS(2), ARIT(1), [ITS(3)]
    Finefrock, Michael Coll. of Charleston 20th century Turkish history
    Fisher, Alan Mich. State Univ. ARIT(1), [ITS(1)]
    Fleischer, Cornell Wash. Univ, Misssouri 16th-17th century Ottoman history
    Golden, Peter Rutgers Univ.
    Goodrich, Tom Indiana Univ of Penn. 16th century Ottoman history
    Gould, Andres Historian
    Griswald, Willaim Colo. State Univ. ARIT(1)
    Halasi-Kun, Tibor Columbia Univ. ITS(3), [ITS(10)]
    Hickman, William UCAL, Berkeley ARIT(1), [ITS(3)]
    Hurewitz, J.C. Columbia Univ (ret) ITS(10)
    Hymes, John Glenville State Col., W. Va. 19th-20th Century Ottoman history
    Inalcik, Halil Univ. of Chicago ITS(1), [ARIT(9)]
    Jaeckel, Ralph UCLA [ITS(4)]
    Jennings, Ronald Univ. of Illinois ARIT(1), [ITS(3)]
    Kelly, James Univ. of Utah ITS(2), ARIT(1), [ITS(5)]
    Key, Kerim Southeastern Univ. 19th-20th Century Ottoman history
    Kunt, Metin Ottoman history
    Latimer, Frederick Univ. of Utah (ret.) Ottoman history
    Levy, Avigdor Brandies Univ. ARIT(1), [ITS(7)]
    Lewis, Bernard Princeton Univ. [ITS(3)]
    Lowry, Heath Inst. of Turkish Studies ARIT(2)
    McCarthy, Justin Univ of Louisville ITS(1), ARIT(1)
    Mandaville, Jon Portland State Univ. ARIT(1), [ITS(2)]
    Meeker, Michael UCAL San Diego Turkish studies
    Murphy, Rhodes Columbia Univ. ITS(1), ARIT(1), [[ITS(10)]
    Naff, Thomas Univ. of Penn. [ITS(9)]
    Oberling, Pierre Hunter Coll., Univ of NY ITS(1), [ITS(1)]
    Ochsenwald, William Va. Polytech Inst. ARIT(1)
    Olson, Robert Univ. of Kentucky 18th-20th century Turkish history
    Peachy, William Ohio State University ARIT(2)
    Quataert, Donald Univ of Huston ITS(2), ARIT(1), [ITS(2)]
    Reed, Howard Univ. of Conn. ITS(1), [ITS(5)]
    Rustow, Dankart City Univ of NY ITS(1)
    Shaw, Ezel Kural Cal. State Univ, Nothridge 19th century Ottoman history
    Shaw, Stanford UCLA ITS(1), ARIT(2), [ITS(4)]
    Smith, Elaine Foreign Service (ret.) Modern Turkey
    Smith, Grace UCAL, Berkeley ITS(1), ARIT(1), [ITS(3)]
    Smith, John Masson UCAL, Berkeley ARIT(1), [ITS(3)]
    Soucek, Svat ARIT(1)
    Staab, Robert Univ. of Utah [ITS(5)]
    Starr, June SUNY Stoneybrook Anthropologist
    Stewart-Robinson, James Univ. of Mich. [ITS(3)]
    Stoddard, Phllip Middle East Institute, (Dir.) ITS(3)
    Tachau, Frank Univ. of Illinois ITS(1), ARIT(2), [ITS(3)]
    Tamkoc, Metin Texas Tech [ITS(1)]
    Thomas, David RI College ARIT(2)
    Yenzke, M.L. xxxxinson College ARIT(1)
    Walker, Warren Texas Tech [ITS(1)]
    Webster, Walter Rutgers Univ. 1930's Turkish History
    Woods, John Univ. of Chicago [ITS(9)]
    Zilfi, Madeline Univ of Maryland ARIT(2)

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    sources for the above chart: Middle East Studies Association Bulletins, Directory of American Scholars, and the Ottoman Studies Directory.
    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

  • #2
    Scholars Who Signed No-Genocide Ad
    From Armeniapedia.org
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    Published by the Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide
    Special Double Issue 25/26, April 1990,
    75th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.


    A Follow-up of the Sixty-nine Scholars who Signed an Advertisement Questioning the Armenian Genocide

    By Israel W. Charney and Daphna Fromer

    How are we to understand the mind of a rational person who denies the historical authenticity of a major historical tragedy such as the Holocaust or the Armenian genocide? On December 2, 1985, 69 scholars signed an advertisement which appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, and Washington Times which questioned insidiously the evidence of the Armenian genocide. Instead of denying the occurrence of the genocide outright, the scholars proceeded self-righteously in the name of values of historical and scientific truth to call on the Turkish and other governments to open all the archives so that the facts -- presumably unknown even in their essence as to whether or not there was a state-authorized and executed genocide of the Armenians -- will be ascertained.

    Since its publication, the advertisement has been repeatedly used as proof that "many scholars do not believe there was a genocide of the Armenian people by the Turks," and it appears as a key document in repeated Turkish lobby statements to members of the U.S. Congress.

    In an effort to understand more fully the attitudes of the scholars who signed the advertisement, the Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide in Jerusalem undertook a follow-up study of the signators. In an accompanying statement of "Acknowledgment of Bias,", the Institute conveyed to the scholars that our studies of the subject have previously convinced us of the authenticity of the Armenian genocide, moreover that we have had our own direct experience with the Turkish government efforts to suppress the record in connection with the landmark International Conference on the Holocaust and Genocide in Tel Aviv in 1982.

    The questionnaire inquired into the respondents' knowledge of and opinion about the events that took place at the time of the Armenian genocide, their knowledge of and opinions towards any attempts to suppress and revise the historical record by either the Turks or the Armenians, their knowledge of the uses to which the advertisement has been put and about signators' current attitudes about the advertisement and their participation in it.

    A total of 62 mailings are presumed to have reached their destination -- we failed to find an address for one signators and six other packages were returned as undeliverable. Of these 62, 4 returned empty questionnaires as statements of their refusal to participate, 10 wrote letters -- an number of them detailed and expository -- explaining their refusal to answer the questionnaire and also their attitudes about the subject of the Armenian genocide, while 7 returned completed questionnaires. Altogether, the total of 21 active responses represents a surprisingly high figure of 34% responses (compared to an average expectation of 10% responses to mail questionnaires in the social sciences). As the emotional intensity of the responses show, indications are that not only the questionnaire itself aroused tension but the subject of the advertisement is, as it should be, a focus of no little tension for many signators.

    Some of the information revealed by those who did respond sheds light on the creation of this very clever propaganda technique, an in our judgment provides sufficient evidence on which to discredit the advertisement: Like in an earlier report by the Armenian Assembly of America of its follow-up correspondence with the 69 signators, several respondents indicated that

    a.) they had no doubt about the essential truth of the Armenian genocide;

    b.) they are fully aware of the Turkish government's intention to falsify the record through censorship, suppression and revision of the facts;

    c.) and as to the advertisement itself, that they had not been aware that the Turks would use their call to open the archives to "prove" that there was no Armenian genocide, nor did they know that there would be repeated use of their statement beyond a single advertisement.

    It should be noted that at the same time, all the respondents who commented on the matter were adamant that they received no reward or promise of reward for their participation in the advertisement, and a good number of them were insulted and irate at what they felt were implication of such questions by us.

    What stands out in the responses of these 17 scholars is that many of them go to great pains to explain that their intentions are innocent and good, they are only interested in being responsible academicians, indeed that they want to bring an end to inter-ethnic tensions and help people forget and forgive old-time events that should not be allowed to get in the way of present-day peaceful relationships between peoples. We call this presentation style of "innocence and self-righteousness" and include it in the list of mechanisms of language and propaganda which are the ones we found were being used to disguise and justify the full meaning of the denials.

    The following are the patterns of "thinking defense-mechanisms" which we identified "allow" the scholars to engage in the denial of the genocide:

    1. Innocence and Self-Righteousness. The respondents claim that they only intend to ascertain the truth. Moreover, they do not believe that human beings could have been so evil as the descriptions of the genocide imply. Furthermore, even if many deaths took place a long time ago, it is important to put them aside now and forgive and forget.

    2. Scientificism in the Service of Denial. The position taken is seemingly an innocent one that we do not know enough to know what the facts of history were, and rather than condemning anyone we should await the ultimate decision of research. This is a manipulative misuse of the science-value principle that facts must be proven. The very purpose of science, which is to know, is invoked in order to justify a form of know-nothingness.

    3. Practicality, Pragmatism, and Realpolitik. Here the claim is made that dealing with ancient history is impractical, it will not bring peace to the world in which we live today. One must be realistic and live through realpolitik.

    4. Idea-Linkage Distortion and Time-Sequence Confusion. This is a dishonest linkage of different ideas often out of time sequence to excuse denials of the facts, e.g., current Armenian terrorism against Turks will be exonerated and encouraged if Turkey admits to past events of the Armenian genocide; Turkish national responsibility for the Armenian genocide would constitute "retribution" against innocent present and future grandchildren and great-grandchildren of past perpetrators; the damage that present acknowledgment of the genocide would cause to the real security needs of the U.S. and NATO today does not justify bringing out the past record of long-ago events which are all over.

    5. Indirection, Definitionalism, and Maddening. These are responses which avoid the issue by failing to reply or by going off on tangents about trivial details that avoid the essential issue of whether genocide took place. Definitionalism refers to a form of maddening resistance that is particularly common to academics who enter into definitional battles overwhether or not a given event really fits the pure form of definition of genocide, so that so much energy goes into the definitional struggle that the significance of the event and its enormous human tragedy are virtually written out of existence.

    Denials of genocide are rooted in several mind-phenomena which represent some of the weakest aspects of the development of the human mind and civilization as a whole. For the inability to differentiate between the factual and not-factual certainly stands in opposition to all that Western-world science and development strive for in the ways of truth and knowledge.


    About the authors:

    Israel Charney is Executive Director of the Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide, Jerusalem. He is author of How Can We Commit the Unthinkable? (1982); editor, with Shamai Davidson, of The Book of the International Conference on the Holocaust and Genocide (1983); editor of Toward the Understanding and Prevention of Genocide (1984); and editor of Genocide: A Critical Bibliographic Review.

    Daphna Fromer is a Fellow of the Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide.
    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

    Comment


    • #3
      It is an interesting list of the deniars. It would be more interesting and useful if we search what are their professional www pages. Thus it is possible to inform their professionel collegues and their neighbourhood that theu deniars.

      Nil

      Comment


      • #4
        It is an interesting list of the deniars. It would be more interesting and useful if we search what are their professional www pages. Thus it is possible to inform their professionel collegues, their students and their neighbourhood that they are deniars.

        Nil
        #113

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by CRDA-France View Post
          It is an interesting list of the deniars. It would be more interesting and useful if we search what are their professional www pages. Thus it is possible to inform their professionel collegues, their students and their neighbourhood that they are deniars.

          Nil
          #113
          That presupposes their professional collegues would care. I would hold that they would not. Many of those on that list publish in mainstream academic publications, and often place their propaganda within those mainsteam articles. You or I might want to wash our mouths out after mentioning such disreputable names as "Justin McCarthy", but their supposedly "professional" collegues will regularly cite them in their own articles without hesitation. And I bet all on that list will be quite open about all their publications - there is nothing academics like more than having a long list of publications for their CVs.
          Plenipotentiary meow!

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