Interview with Halil Berktay
"Aztag" Daily Newspaper
P.O. Box 80860, Bourj Hammoud,
Beirut, Lebanon
Fax: +961 1 258529
Phone: +961 1 260115, +961 1 241274
Email: [email protected]
The Specter of the Armenian Genocide:
An Interview with Halil Berktay
By Khatchig Mouradian
November 12, 2005
Halil Berktay was one of the organizers of the first conference held in
Turkey in late September that challenged the Turkish state's policy of
denying the Armenian genocide. After having been postponed twice because of
pressure exerted by nationalist circles from within the Turkish government
and judiciary, the conference, titled `The Ottoman Armenians during the
decline of the Ottoman Empire,' was held at Bilgi University in Istanbul and
was heralded as a step towards the elimination of the taboo of the Armenian
genocide within the Turkish society.
In the past few years, Halil Berktay has consistently spoken in various
Turkish and international forums about the systematic deportation and mass
killings of Ottoman Armenians during the First World War, describing those
events as `the horrors of 1915', `the events of 1915', `ethnic cleansing',
`proto-genocide', and very recently as `genocide.'
Halil Berktay received his B.A. and M.A. in Economics from Yale University
in the USA and his PhD in History from Birmingham University in the United
Kingdom. His research covers Turkish nationalism and the social and economic
history of Europe. He is currently professor of history in Sabanci
University, a prestigious private institution of higher learning in
Istanbul.
In this interview, conducted by phone on 18 October, 2005, we discussed his
presentation at a conference organized by the NATO Parliamentary Assembly,
which was held in Yerevan in 6-8 of October. During this conversation, he
also shared his views on important topics like nationalism, `the specter of
the Armenian genocide', and the prospects of Turkey facing its past.
Khatchig Mouradian- You recently participated in a conference held in
Yerevan and organized by NATO. Can you tell us about this conference?
Halil Berktay- This was the 61st installment of the Rose-Roth seminars
organized by the NATO Parliamentary Assembly. It was devoted to the broad
theme of regional cooperation in the South Caucasus and organized in
conjunction with the National Parliament of the Republic of Armenia. Members
from parliamentary delegations from various countries, observers from
different countries coming under various headings, ambassadors based in
Yerevan, and a large Armenian contingent were attending.
I was invited to speak on security in the South Caucasus. I was the only
Turk in this seminar; the Turkish parliamentary delegation was supposed to
be there, they were invited, and I was informally given to understand that
it was not because of political reasons that they did not attend. Rather, I
was told, there were some utterly mundane or practical reasons behind their
absence.
K.M. - This was the official explanation given by Ankara as well, wasn't it?
H.B. - Now that I spoke there and I made an out of the ordinary kind of
presentation, and now that it has had reverberations, Turkish diplomats are
trying to explain why they didn't attend the seminar. They're saying that
Turkey and Armenia don't have diplomatic relations and they are speaking of
the difficulty in traveling to Yerevan. Come on, give me a break! There are
regular plane flights between Istanbul and Yerevan, and the planes are just
packed full. And although there are no diplomatic relations between the two
countries, there's a lively trade and a lively movement of human beings.
I don't know why they did not come. Today, in the daily newspaper Star,
there is an article denouncing the willful neglect of the Turkish
parliamentarians in not going to Yerevan, and for that matter, when they
learned that I would be going, not forcing a cancellation of the seminar. It
seems that the Turkish nationalists are not only trying to obstruct and
prohibit conferences in Turkey, but also outside. Whether this is one step
forward or one step back, I'm not quite sure.
K.M. - In covering the conference, the Armenian media highlighted the fact
that in your speech, you said that the events of 1915 amounted to genocide.
Did the fact that you made such a statement in a non-academic conference
taking place in Armenia itself, create a fiercer reaction in Turkey?
H.B. - It might not have been intended that way, but I did not say what I
said accidentally and in a haphazard kind of way.
When I got the invitation and I saw the program I thought, `My God, I will
be like a fish out of water, because this is not an academic conference',
but then I thought, `If I were invited by the EU and EC I would go and talk,
wouldn't I? And this is a NATO seminar, what difference does it make? There
are going to be people from all over Europe there, and it is yet another
forum for me to make some points concerning the various aspects or
dimensions of 1915.'
I went in that spirit and I'm glad that I did.
My remarks were certainly not limited to saying that 1915 was genocide. My
remarks went far beyond that. The Armenian press played up this dimension of
`here is a Turkish historian in Yerevan saying that it was genocide'. I knew
that there was a possibility that such a thing would happen. I did realize
from the outset that the Armenian press was likely to overplay what I said
about 1915 and that when this eventually was picked up in Turkey, the
Turkish state and the media would once more be focusing on the same word.
I had been saying in Turkey and in other international forums that in some
sense what happened in 1915 was genocide or it was proto-genocide or, even
leaving aside the word `genocide':
a) It was clear that the Armenians of the Ottoman Empire were rounded up,
socially deracinated and deported, and, therefore, in the process,
comprehensively uprooted and dispossessed, for no other reason than that
they were Armenians.
b) It was very clear that simultaneously, extra-legal secret orders for
massacres to be organized were sent out to the Tekilt- Mahsusa, the
special organization of the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP).
For me to repeat these historical facts or the evidence thereof, and then to
ask the question `was it genocide?' was nothing new. I could argue that it
was always much more difficult to say it in Turkey than in Yerevan. So it is
not as if I'm undertaking this analysis for the first time and it's
completely unheard of. Maybe if I had not been speaking up in public in
Turkey and in Europe and in the US and everywhere about this, maybe if
Yerevan was going to be the first time, it might have been inappropriate.
K.M. - It is only recently that you have started using the word `Genocide'
without prefixes. Taking into account how politicized the use of the `G'
word has become, I assume the reaction on both sides was predictable.
H.B. - In my presentation opening the Istanbul conference, I spoke about
this at great length. I said it is very unfortunate that what happened in
1915-16 and the fate of the Ottoman Armenians during the demise of the
Empire boils down to `Was it genocide or not?' This is an extreme case of
reductionism. If you have a mixed audience or Turks and Armenians (this is
what happened when I was speaking at Mulheim in Germany in March 2001), if
you say yes it was genocide, the Armenians cheer you and the Turks boo you,
and everybody stops listening, because they heard what they came to hear.
And if you say no, it was not genocide, exactly the reverse happens: the
Armenians boo the Turks cheer and again, everybody stops to listen. The
question of readdressing the historicity of what happened in 1915-1916 is
how do we break away from the bind of these two mutually exclusive
antagonistic nationalist attitudes and how do we liberate the historical
discussion and try to attempt a fresh interpretation.
K.M. - In an interview published today in the Turkish daily newspaper
Radikal, you mention the speech of the vice-president of the Armenian
Assembly, which preceded your presentation and had an impact on your
presentation and on your interventions during the question and answer
session.
H.B. - Yes. In the program that I originally had, the speakers were just
going to be the Executive Director of LINKS (South Caucasus Parliamentary
Initiative) Dennis Sammut and myself. When I got the final program there
were three papers, the first of which was Vahan Hovhannisian's. I learned
that Mr. Hovhannisian had not been there originally, but apparently when it
became clear that a Turk was going to be on the program, the Armenian side
insisted on having a speaker.
And Mr. Hovhannisian gave a very rigid, dogmatic, Dashnak type Armenian
nationalist version of Turkish-Armenian relations. It was absolutely rigid,
full of deep seated hostility towards Turkey and Turks and everything
Turkish. It was in his tone of voice, in the style of his sentences,
everything! Turkey was being blamed for everything in the Armenian past,
present, and possibly future. At one point, there was one striking sentence
that I noted down. Mr. Hovhannisian was talking of Turkey accusing Armenia
of holding 20 percent of Azerbaijani territory under occupation, and he
asked: What moral right does a country holding 36 percent of Cyprus under
military occupation has, to talk this way? I came back to this later and I
said, `We have a saying in Turkish, `tenjere dibin kara'; `seninki benden
kara.' These two kettles are supposed to be talking to one another and one
says, `You got a black bottom,' and the other says, `Your bottom is blacker
than mine.' And I added, `But I am morally at ease, because in my own
personal life, I had all along recognized the Armenian genocide and I had
always been opposed to the Turkish invasion of Cyprus. So I would be morally
consistent if I were also opposed to Armenian occupation of 20 percent of
Azerbaijani territory, leaving aside whether it is numerically correct. But
can Mr. Hovhannisian speak of the same kind of consistency for himself?'
K.M - You said that your remarks in Yerevan went far beyond the statement
that what happened in 1915 amounted to genocide. Can you share with us the
main points that you raised during your presentation and various later
interventions?
H.B. - Speaking after Hovhannisian, Dennis Sammut extensively criticized him
for bringing in `too much historical baggage'. So my talk fell neatly in
place.
My presentation was titled `The History, Historiography, and the Current
Politics of the Armenian Genocide'. I started by referring to the opening
sentences of the communist manifesto, obliquely. I said, `I hope it does not
sound strange in a post communist society, to refer to a famous political
tract of the mid 19th century which speaks of a certain specter haunting
Europe at that time. Paraphrasing this, I might say that a certain specter
is haunting the South Caucasus today; the specter of the Armenian genocide.
The big difference is, whereas Marx and Engels spoke of the Pope, the Tsar,
Metternich, and Guizot entering into a holy alliance to exorcise what they
saw as the specter of communism, various types and varieties of Turkish and
Armenian nationalisms seem to be bent on not exorcising the specter of
1915-16, but actually invigorating it, rejuvenating it, fanning its flames,
and persisting in holding us captive to the unionist murderers and the
Dashnaktsutiun komitadjis of 1915. My question, as a historian, is: How can
we liberate the present from being captive, in bondage, to the ghosts of
1915? I can approach this problem only through the tools of my profession,
historical sensitivity and understanding and working through culture. By
temperament, by nature and by training; that's virtually the only thing that
I am capable of. My inclination is to regard politicians and
parliamentarians, including NATO parliamentarians, as an evil, a necessary
evil, perhaps an absolutely necessary evil, in the sense that the best that
they can possibly do is impose temporary safeguards against the Hobbesian
dimensions of human nature, but in the case of profound national cleavages
like the one that we are faced with, we cannot really expect long term
solutions from them, because although they can work out ceasefires, non
aggression agreements, peacekeeping missions et cetera, fundamentally, if
peace is going to be long term and genuine, we've got to do this through the
hearts and minds of people. This is where people working for historical
understanding, like myself, come in.
I continued by saying that we have recently had the first conference outside
the official discourse in Turkey about the Ottoman Armenians during the
demise of the empire. It has been a very liberating and empowering
experience, and I would like to begin by summarizing a few key points of
than conference.
1) What actually happened in 1915-16?
I gave my considered assessment and said that the papers submitted at this
conference clearly demonstrated that this was no accident, this was not a
marginal or small thing, it was not a geographically or demographically
limited thing, virtually the entirety of Ottoman Armenians has been ordered
to be rounded up, socially deracinated, uprooted, dispossesses, and deported
for no reason other than that they were Armenians and, secondly, that there
was very strong evidence that the accompanied violence and massacres had not
started spontaneously or despite the best intentions of the state to protect
the convoys of the deportees. Rather, there was strong evidence to the
effect that there were orders issued, disseminated, and executed through the
Tekilt- Mahsusa and that this in turn triggered secondary and tertiary
rounds of violence and massacres once it became clear that the Armenians
were fair game and that the shooting season was open on them.
Such situations bring out the best and worse in people, as in the case of
Germany. Some people were helping, trying to protect the Armenians, and some
people were just jumping on the bandwagon of violence, and there is no easy
way to know whether it was the Lockian or Hobbesian side which dominated. We
don't have an easy guide into how people behave in such circumstances; the
ball seems to bounce that way and this way.
"Aztag" Daily Newspaper
P.O. Box 80860, Bourj Hammoud,
Beirut, Lebanon
Fax: +961 1 258529
Phone: +961 1 260115, +961 1 241274
Email: [email protected]
The Specter of the Armenian Genocide:
An Interview with Halil Berktay
By Khatchig Mouradian
November 12, 2005
Halil Berktay was one of the organizers of the first conference held in
Turkey in late September that challenged the Turkish state's policy of
denying the Armenian genocide. After having been postponed twice because of
pressure exerted by nationalist circles from within the Turkish government
and judiciary, the conference, titled `The Ottoman Armenians during the
decline of the Ottoman Empire,' was held at Bilgi University in Istanbul and
was heralded as a step towards the elimination of the taboo of the Armenian
genocide within the Turkish society.
In the past few years, Halil Berktay has consistently spoken in various
Turkish and international forums about the systematic deportation and mass
killings of Ottoman Armenians during the First World War, describing those
events as `the horrors of 1915', `the events of 1915', `ethnic cleansing',
`proto-genocide', and very recently as `genocide.'
Halil Berktay received his B.A. and M.A. in Economics from Yale University
in the USA and his PhD in History from Birmingham University in the United
Kingdom. His research covers Turkish nationalism and the social and economic
history of Europe. He is currently professor of history in Sabanci
University, a prestigious private institution of higher learning in
Istanbul.
In this interview, conducted by phone on 18 October, 2005, we discussed his
presentation at a conference organized by the NATO Parliamentary Assembly,
which was held in Yerevan in 6-8 of October. During this conversation, he
also shared his views on important topics like nationalism, `the specter of
the Armenian genocide', and the prospects of Turkey facing its past.
Khatchig Mouradian- You recently participated in a conference held in
Yerevan and organized by NATO. Can you tell us about this conference?
Halil Berktay- This was the 61st installment of the Rose-Roth seminars
organized by the NATO Parliamentary Assembly. It was devoted to the broad
theme of regional cooperation in the South Caucasus and organized in
conjunction with the National Parliament of the Republic of Armenia. Members
from parliamentary delegations from various countries, observers from
different countries coming under various headings, ambassadors based in
Yerevan, and a large Armenian contingent were attending.
I was invited to speak on security in the South Caucasus. I was the only
Turk in this seminar; the Turkish parliamentary delegation was supposed to
be there, they were invited, and I was informally given to understand that
it was not because of political reasons that they did not attend. Rather, I
was told, there were some utterly mundane or practical reasons behind their
absence.
K.M. - This was the official explanation given by Ankara as well, wasn't it?
H.B. - Now that I spoke there and I made an out of the ordinary kind of
presentation, and now that it has had reverberations, Turkish diplomats are
trying to explain why they didn't attend the seminar. They're saying that
Turkey and Armenia don't have diplomatic relations and they are speaking of
the difficulty in traveling to Yerevan. Come on, give me a break! There are
regular plane flights between Istanbul and Yerevan, and the planes are just
packed full. And although there are no diplomatic relations between the two
countries, there's a lively trade and a lively movement of human beings.
I don't know why they did not come. Today, in the daily newspaper Star,
there is an article denouncing the willful neglect of the Turkish
parliamentarians in not going to Yerevan, and for that matter, when they
learned that I would be going, not forcing a cancellation of the seminar. It
seems that the Turkish nationalists are not only trying to obstruct and
prohibit conferences in Turkey, but also outside. Whether this is one step
forward or one step back, I'm not quite sure.
K.M. - In covering the conference, the Armenian media highlighted the fact
that in your speech, you said that the events of 1915 amounted to genocide.
Did the fact that you made such a statement in a non-academic conference
taking place in Armenia itself, create a fiercer reaction in Turkey?
H.B. - It might not have been intended that way, but I did not say what I
said accidentally and in a haphazard kind of way.
When I got the invitation and I saw the program I thought, `My God, I will
be like a fish out of water, because this is not an academic conference',
but then I thought, `If I were invited by the EU and EC I would go and talk,
wouldn't I? And this is a NATO seminar, what difference does it make? There
are going to be people from all over Europe there, and it is yet another
forum for me to make some points concerning the various aspects or
dimensions of 1915.'
I went in that spirit and I'm glad that I did.
My remarks were certainly not limited to saying that 1915 was genocide. My
remarks went far beyond that. The Armenian press played up this dimension of
`here is a Turkish historian in Yerevan saying that it was genocide'. I knew
that there was a possibility that such a thing would happen. I did realize
from the outset that the Armenian press was likely to overplay what I said
about 1915 and that when this eventually was picked up in Turkey, the
Turkish state and the media would once more be focusing on the same word.
I had been saying in Turkey and in other international forums that in some
sense what happened in 1915 was genocide or it was proto-genocide or, even
leaving aside the word `genocide':
a) It was clear that the Armenians of the Ottoman Empire were rounded up,
socially deracinated and deported, and, therefore, in the process,
comprehensively uprooted and dispossessed, for no other reason than that
they were Armenians.
b) It was very clear that simultaneously, extra-legal secret orders for
massacres to be organized were sent out to the Tekilt- Mahsusa, the
special organization of the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP).
For me to repeat these historical facts or the evidence thereof, and then to
ask the question `was it genocide?' was nothing new. I could argue that it
was always much more difficult to say it in Turkey than in Yerevan. So it is
not as if I'm undertaking this analysis for the first time and it's
completely unheard of. Maybe if I had not been speaking up in public in
Turkey and in Europe and in the US and everywhere about this, maybe if
Yerevan was going to be the first time, it might have been inappropriate.
K.M. - It is only recently that you have started using the word `Genocide'
without prefixes. Taking into account how politicized the use of the `G'
word has become, I assume the reaction on both sides was predictable.
H.B. - In my presentation opening the Istanbul conference, I spoke about
this at great length. I said it is very unfortunate that what happened in
1915-16 and the fate of the Ottoman Armenians during the demise of the
Empire boils down to `Was it genocide or not?' This is an extreme case of
reductionism. If you have a mixed audience or Turks and Armenians (this is
what happened when I was speaking at Mulheim in Germany in March 2001), if
you say yes it was genocide, the Armenians cheer you and the Turks boo you,
and everybody stops listening, because they heard what they came to hear.
And if you say no, it was not genocide, exactly the reverse happens: the
Armenians boo the Turks cheer and again, everybody stops to listen. The
question of readdressing the historicity of what happened in 1915-1916 is
how do we break away from the bind of these two mutually exclusive
antagonistic nationalist attitudes and how do we liberate the historical
discussion and try to attempt a fresh interpretation.
K.M. - In an interview published today in the Turkish daily newspaper
Radikal, you mention the speech of the vice-president of the Armenian
Assembly, which preceded your presentation and had an impact on your
presentation and on your interventions during the question and answer
session.
H.B. - Yes. In the program that I originally had, the speakers were just
going to be the Executive Director of LINKS (South Caucasus Parliamentary
Initiative) Dennis Sammut and myself. When I got the final program there
were three papers, the first of which was Vahan Hovhannisian's. I learned
that Mr. Hovhannisian had not been there originally, but apparently when it
became clear that a Turk was going to be on the program, the Armenian side
insisted on having a speaker.
And Mr. Hovhannisian gave a very rigid, dogmatic, Dashnak type Armenian
nationalist version of Turkish-Armenian relations. It was absolutely rigid,
full of deep seated hostility towards Turkey and Turks and everything
Turkish. It was in his tone of voice, in the style of his sentences,
everything! Turkey was being blamed for everything in the Armenian past,
present, and possibly future. At one point, there was one striking sentence
that I noted down. Mr. Hovhannisian was talking of Turkey accusing Armenia
of holding 20 percent of Azerbaijani territory under occupation, and he
asked: What moral right does a country holding 36 percent of Cyprus under
military occupation has, to talk this way? I came back to this later and I
said, `We have a saying in Turkish, `tenjere dibin kara'; `seninki benden
kara.' These two kettles are supposed to be talking to one another and one
says, `You got a black bottom,' and the other says, `Your bottom is blacker
than mine.' And I added, `But I am morally at ease, because in my own
personal life, I had all along recognized the Armenian genocide and I had
always been opposed to the Turkish invasion of Cyprus. So I would be morally
consistent if I were also opposed to Armenian occupation of 20 percent of
Azerbaijani territory, leaving aside whether it is numerically correct. But
can Mr. Hovhannisian speak of the same kind of consistency for himself?'
K.M - You said that your remarks in Yerevan went far beyond the statement
that what happened in 1915 amounted to genocide. Can you share with us the
main points that you raised during your presentation and various later
interventions?
H.B. - Speaking after Hovhannisian, Dennis Sammut extensively criticized him
for bringing in `too much historical baggage'. So my talk fell neatly in
place.
My presentation was titled `The History, Historiography, and the Current
Politics of the Armenian Genocide'. I started by referring to the opening
sentences of the communist manifesto, obliquely. I said, `I hope it does not
sound strange in a post communist society, to refer to a famous political
tract of the mid 19th century which speaks of a certain specter haunting
Europe at that time. Paraphrasing this, I might say that a certain specter
is haunting the South Caucasus today; the specter of the Armenian genocide.
The big difference is, whereas Marx and Engels spoke of the Pope, the Tsar,
Metternich, and Guizot entering into a holy alliance to exorcise what they
saw as the specter of communism, various types and varieties of Turkish and
Armenian nationalisms seem to be bent on not exorcising the specter of
1915-16, but actually invigorating it, rejuvenating it, fanning its flames,
and persisting in holding us captive to the unionist murderers and the
Dashnaktsutiun komitadjis of 1915. My question, as a historian, is: How can
we liberate the present from being captive, in bondage, to the ghosts of
1915? I can approach this problem only through the tools of my profession,
historical sensitivity and understanding and working through culture. By
temperament, by nature and by training; that's virtually the only thing that
I am capable of. My inclination is to regard politicians and
parliamentarians, including NATO parliamentarians, as an evil, a necessary
evil, perhaps an absolutely necessary evil, in the sense that the best that
they can possibly do is impose temporary safeguards against the Hobbesian
dimensions of human nature, but in the case of profound national cleavages
like the one that we are faced with, we cannot really expect long term
solutions from them, because although they can work out ceasefires, non
aggression agreements, peacekeeping missions et cetera, fundamentally, if
peace is going to be long term and genuine, we've got to do this through the
hearts and minds of people. This is where people working for historical
understanding, like myself, come in.
I continued by saying that we have recently had the first conference outside
the official discourse in Turkey about the Ottoman Armenians during the
demise of the empire. It has been a very liberating and empowering
experience, and I would like to begin by summarizing a few key points of
than conference.
1) What actually happened in 1915-16?
I gave my considered assessment and said that the papers submitted at this
conference clearly demonstrated that this was no accident, this was not a
marginal or small thing, it was not a geographically or demographically
limited thing, virtually the entirety of Ottoman Armenians has been ordered
to be rounded up, socially deracinated, uprooted, dispossesses, and deported
for no reason other than that they were Armenians and, secondly, that there
was very strong evidence that the accompanied violence and massacres had not
started spontaneously or despite the best intentions of the state to protect
the convoys of the deportees. Rather, there was strong evidence to the
effect that there were orders issued, disseminated, and executed through the
Tekilt- Mahsusa and that this in turn triggered secondary and tertiary
rounds of violence and massacres once it became clear that the Armenians
were fair game and that the shooting season was open on them.
Such situations bring out the best and worse in people, as in the case of
Germany. Some people were helping, trying to protect the Armenians, and some
people were just jumping on the bandwagon of violence, and there is no easy
way to know whether it was the Lockian or Hobbesian side which dominated. We
don't have an easy guide into how people behave in such circumstances; the
ball seems to bounce that way and this way.
Comment