comments
Sunday, April 17, 2005
******************************
Edouard Balladour (identified as an Armenian by some) in a recent interview in LE POINT (Paris: March 24, 2005) on French responsibility of the massacres in Rwanda: "It wasn't at all easy to tell Hutus from Tutsis."
In her memoirs of the Russo-Turkish war in Van, Tatyana Tolstoy says something very similar about Armenians and Turks.
One is justified therefore in wondering if Hutus looked like Tutsis, and Armenians like Turks, how many of them were victims of friendly fire?
*
I am reminded of George Orwell's final words in ANIMAL FARM. The men looked so much like pigs, Orwell writes here, and the pigs so much like men that it was impossible to tell them apart.
*
If we call them "Asiatic barbarians," and they retaliate by calling as "Armenian bastards" (the word "pij" in Turkish is a much more wounding insult), what can we hope to achieve? Except perhaps exposing the fact that as nations we have not yet emerged from an infantile and primitive stage of underdevelopment.
*
Racism and diplomacy are mutually exclusive concepts.
*
During a visit to Detroit, when he was invited to make a brief appearance at an Armenian community center, Saroyan is said to have replied with a blunt, no thanks! I did not understand this refusal then, but I do now.
*
Learning from history is an art form that requires a certain talent, which consists in admitting that, (one) we did not know everything; (two) we don't understand everything; (three) we are not infallible; (four) we are not as good as we think we are, (five) our adversaries may not be as bad as we say they are, and (six) most of them may well be brainwashed dupes of nationalist propaganda.
#
Monday, April 18, 2005
******************************
Never, never say to an Armenian writer, "It's easy for you to say." Only readers who know nothing about the history of our literature are capable of uttering such nonsense. Being a writer, being an Armenian writer, being an honest Armenian writer has never been easy. As a boy, my elders repeatedly warned me of this, but I ignored them. Which goes to show that idealism can lead one to hell as surely as a life of crime.
*
The Arabs and the Azeris have oil, the Israelis and Turks have American support, and the Georgians were successful in overthrowing their rascals. What do we have on our side? - except a corrupt bureaucracy, unemployment, poverty, hostile neighbors, the possibility of another devastating earthquake, and in the words of Avedik Issahakian, "imbeciles for leaders." At this rate and if nothing changes, a hundred years from now only ants and scorpions will survive in our homeland.
*
G.K. Chesterton: "It isn't that they can't see the solution. It is that they can't see the problem."
*
I have read and reviewed enough travel books on Turkey to know that not all Turks think alike on Armenians, probably because many of them remember an Armenian grandparent or relative who was not a threat to the territorial integrity of the nation. The average Turk may even be more tolerant of Armenians than some Armenians are of their fellow Armenians.
*
We grew up as racists and deep inside somewhere we continue to be racists. That does not mean we should legitimize, preach and promote racism. On the contrary, we should make an effort to move in the opposite direction if we hope the generation that follows us to be an improvement on ours. To say otherwise is to subscribe only to technological progress and to dismiss moral progress as an unattainable, unrealistic, and undesirable goal.
*
Stanislaw Lec: "Is it progress if a cannibal uses knife and fork?"
*
A wise man once defined progress as "the triumph of laughter over dogma."
#
Tuesday, April 19, 2005
******************************
Who could have guessed that some day the Pope and the Vatican would attract as much U.S. media attention as Monica Lewinsky?
*
In life, the choice is not always between right and wrong, or good and evil, but between evil and a lesser evil.
*
Some readers don't approve of my ideas because they have not bothered to read the ideas of my predecessors.
*
When shortly before the Genocide, Krikor Zohrab warned his fellow Armenians to get out because "this time around they will exterminate us," he was dismissed as an alarmist. "Zohrab effendi is exaggerating," they said.
Hagop Oshagan, Gostan Zarian, and Zabel Yessayan got out in time and survived. A good number of ARF leaders also survived to write their copious memoirs, some of which are longer than Tolstoy's WAR AND PEACE and Dostoevsky's BROTHERS KARAMAZOV combined.
*
There is an old Greek saying: "He who wants too much, will lose even the little that he has."
*
Perhaps we lost everything because our greed knew no bounds. We wanted the keep our ancestral homes; we demanded freedom from tyranny, we wanted independence, our historic lands, and the total disintegration of the Empire. And why not? After all, Russia and the Great Powers were on our side, also the Kurds and Greeks, not to say the Good Lord Himself, who, as every Christian knows, is on the side of Christians and against infidels. And yet…
*
"And yet!" - the two saddest words in the English language, it has been said.
*
When life becomes unbearable, our need for illusions becomes overwhelming.
*
The trouble with our partisans is that they haven't had a new idea for a hundred years.
#
Wednesday, April 20, 2005
********************************
Solidarity means admitting the obvious: namely, that we depend on one another. An Armenian who says, "I depend on no one," speaks as a dupe of divide-and-rule tactics devised by our gravediggers.
*
It is always safe to assume that things are not always as bad as we think they are. Sometimes they are worse than we can imagine.
*
Emily Lotney: "A converted cannibal is one who, on Friday, eats only fishermen."
*
I have never been successful in winning an argument with a fellow Armenian without making him an enemy for life.
*
The question I ask myself repeatedly is: We survived the Turks. Will we survive ourselves?
*
For six centuries they were our lords and masters. No one will ever convince them they are not better than we are. In the same way that no one will ever convince even the dumbest Armenian that he is not better than they are. That's because, in the words of Gordon W. Allport: "The easiest idea to sell anyone is that he is better than someone else."
*
Racism has been defined as "the maximum of hatred for a minimum of reason."
*
The purest races now in existence, according to Bertrand Russell, are "the Pygmies, the Hottentots, and the Australian aborigines."
#
Sunday, April 17, 2005
******************************
Edouard Balladour (identified as an Armenian by some) in a recent interview in LE POINT (Paris: March 24, 2005) on French responsibility of the massacres in Rwanda: "It wasn't at all easy to tell Hutus from Tutsis."
In her memoirs of the Russo-Turkish war in Van, Tatyana Tolstoy says something very similar about Armenians and Turks.
One is justified therefore in wondering if Hutus looked like Tutsis, and Armenians like Turks, how many of them were victims of friendly fire?
*
I am reminded of George Orwell's final words in ANIMAL FARM. The men looked so much like pigs, Orwell writes here, and the pigs so much like men that it was impossible to tell them apart.
*
If we call them "Asiatic barbarians," and they retaliate by calling as "Armenian bastards" (the word "pij" in Turkish is a much more wounding insult), what can we hope to achieve? Except perhaps exposing the fact that as nations we have not yet emerged from an infantile and primitive stage of underdevelopment.
*
Racism and diplomacy are mutually exclusive concepts.
*
During a visit to Detroit, when he was invited to make a brief appearance at an Armenian community center, Saroyan is said to have replied with a blunt, no thanks! I did not understand this refusal then, but I do now.
*
Learning from history is an art form that requires a certain talent, which consists in admitting that, (one) we did not know everything; (two) we don't understand everything; (three) we are not infallible; (four) we are not as good as we think we are, (five) our adversaries may not be as bad as we say they are, and (six) most of them may well be brainwashed dupes of nationalist propaganda.
#
Monday, April 18, 2005
******************************
Never, never say to an Armenian writer, "It's easy for you to say." Only readers who know nothing about the history of our literature are capable of uttering such nonsense. Being a writer, being an Armenian writer, being an honest Armenian writer has never been easy. As a boy, my elders repeatedly warned me of this, but I ignored them. Which goes to show that idealism can lead one to hell as surely as a life of crime.
*
The Arabs and the Azeris have oil, the Israelis and Turks have American support, and the Georgians were successful in overthrowing their rascals. What do we have on our side? - except a corrupt bureaucracy, unemployment, poverty, hostile neighbors, the possibility of another devastating earthquake, and in the words of Avedik Issahakian, "imbeciles for leaders." At this rate and if nothing changes, a hundred years from now only ants and scorpions will survive in our homeland.
*
G.K. Chesterton: "It isn't that they can't see the solution. It is that they can't see the problem."
*
I have read and reviewed enough travel books on Turkey to know that not all Turks think alike on Armenians, probably because many of them remember an Armenian grandparent or relative who was not a threat to the territorial integrity of the nation. The average Turk may even be more tolerant of Armenians than some Armenians are of their fellow Armenians.
*
We grew up as racists and deep inside somewhere we continue to be racists. That does not mean we should legitimize, preach and promote racism. On the contrary, we should make an effort to move in the opposite direction if we hope the generation that follows us to be an improvement on ours. To say otherwise is to subscribe only to technological progress and to dismiss moral progress as an unattainable, unrealistic, and undesirable goal.
*
Stanislaw Lec: "Is it progress if a cannibal uses knife and fork?"
*
A wise man once defined progress as "the triumph of laughter over dogma."
#
Tuesday, April 19, 2005
******************************
Who could have guessed that some day the Pope and the Vatican would attract as much U.S. media attention as Monica Lewinsky?
*
In life, the choice is not always between right and wrong, or good and evil, but between evil and a lesser evil.
*
Some readers don't approve of my ideas because they have not bothered to read the ideas of my predecessors.
*
When shortly before the Genocide, Krikor Zohrab warned his fellow Armenians to get out because "this time around they will exterminate us," he was dismissed as an alarmist. "Zohrab effendi is exaggerating," they said.
Hagop Oshagan, Gostan Zarian, and Zabel Yessayan got out in time and survived. A good number of ARF leaders also survived to write their copious memoirs, some of which are longer than Tolstoy's WAR AND PEACE and Dostoevsky's BROTHERS KARAMAZOV combined.
*
There is an old Greek saying: "He who wants too much, will lose even the little that he has."
*
Perhaps we lost everything because our greed knew no bounds. We wanted the keep our ancestral homes; we demanded freedom from tyranny, we wanted independence, our historic lands, and the total disintegration of the Empire. And why not? After all, Russia and the Great Powers were on our side, also the Kurds and Greeks, not to say the Good Lord Himself, who, as every Christian knows, is on the side of Christians and against infidels. And yet…
*
"And yet!" - the two saddest words in the English language, it has been said.
*
When life becomes unbearable, our need for illusions becomes overwhelming.
*
The trouble with our partisans is that they haven't had a new idea for a hundred years.
#
Wednesday, April 20, 2005
********************************
Solidarity means admitting the obvious: namely, that we depend on one another. An Armenian who says, "I depend on no one," speaks as a dupe of divide-and-rule tactics devised by our gravediggers.
*
It is always safe to assume that things are not always as bad as we think they are. Sometimes they are worse than we can imagine.
*
Emily Lotney: "A converted cannibal is one who, on Friday, eats only fishermen."
*
I have never been successful in winning an argument with a fellow Armenian without making him an enemy for life.
*
The question I ask myself repeatedly is: We survived the Turks. Will we survive ourselves?
*
For six centuries they were our lords and masters. No one will ever convince them they are not better than we are. In the same way that no one will ever convince even the dumbest Armenian that he is not better than they are. That's because, in the words of Gordon W. Allport: "The easiest idea to sell anyone is that he is better than someone else."
*
Racism has been defined as "the maximum of hatred for a minimum of reason."
*
The purest races now in existence, according to Bertrand Russell, are "the Pygmies, the Hottentots, and the Australian aborigines."
#
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