BY HARUT SASSOUNIAN
Canadian Turks launched a petition last month seeking the removal of all references to the Armenian Genocide from the 11th grade curriculum of Toronto high schools.
This petition is a part of Turkish denialists’ long-standing efforts to reverse the Toronto District School Board’s (TDSB) 2008 decision to educate students about the Armenian, Jewish, and Rwandan genocides. TDSB’s action follows the recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the Canadian Senate in 2002 and the House of Commons in 2004. In addition, since 2006, successive Canadian Prime Ministers have issued official annual statements acknowledging the Armenian Genocide, despite intensive political pressure and economic blackmail by the Turkish government.
Back in 2008, a similar Turkish petition failed to sway TDSB to amend the genocide curriculum, after gathering over 11,000 signatures, mostly from Turkey. Indeed, the Ankara government and its Turkish proxies in Toronto have done everything possible during the past seven years to undermine this curriculum.
Below are the baseless claims made by the Turkish petition against TDSB’s genocide curriculum, followed by my rebuttal:
– Turkish Petition: “As the Turkish/Turkic speaking parents of students attending the Toronto District School Board, we are deeply concerned about the negative impact of the current curriculum module on ‘Armenian Genocide’ and the learning resources adopted by the Board since 2008.”
My response: There has been NO violence or intimidation against a single Turkish student in Toronto schools even though the genocide curriculum has been taught there for several years. The reason is that Armenians do not hold today’s Turks responsible for the crimes committed by the Government of Ottoman Turkey almost 100 years ago, except those who associate themselves with these crimes by their denial. The Republic of Turkey, on the other hand, as successor to the Ottoman Empire, is responsible for the continuing consequences of the Armenian Genocide. Denying the facts of the Genocide has a far more serious negative psychological impact on Armenians than its inclusion in the curriculum on Turks. Furthermore, the truth cannot be concealed in order not to offend the sensibilities of those who wish to cover up historical facts. Would anyone advocate erasing all references to the Jewish Holocaust from history books not offend present-day Germans?
– Turkish Petition: “The textbook on the Genocide of the Armenians and other readers, such as Barbara Coloroso’s Extraordinary Evil, unremittingly discredits one community’s narrative over the other; and, adversely affects the students of TDSB with Turkish and Turkic heritages.”
My response: There cannot be two narratives or two versions of the proven facts of the Armenian Genocide. There can only be one version — the truth!
– Turkish Petition: “We firmly believe that the values of mutual respect, understanding and peaceful coexistence can be achieved through an honest and open dialogue on history. Moreover, fair and unprejudiced learning should be based on historical facts and not solely on the narratives of select communities while ignoring others. It should also be noted that there are no court decisions on any of these historical claims and the opinions of historians differ regarding the details and the definitions of these events.”
My response: ‘Mutual respect, understanding and peaceful coexistence’ cannot be achieved through distortions and lies. Only after acknowledging the truth and making appropriate amends, Canadian Turks can talk about such lofty ideals. Furthermore, contrary to the Turkish claims, there are several court verdicts on the Armenian Genocide, starting with the Turkish Military Tribunals of 1919, and judgments by Argentinean, Swiss, and U.S. courts. Significantly, the UN Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities adopted in 1985 a report acknowledging the Armenian Genocide. The ultimate arbiter of any genocide is the United Nations, since the Genocide Convention is a UN document.
To sum up, this latest Turkish petition is a total failure since its initiator, the Federation of Canadian Turkish Associations, has so far collected less than 2,000 signatures out of a claimed membership of 200,000 in Canada. Interestingly, most of the signatories are not from Canada, but Turkey where the petition has been widely circulated.
A more worthwhile initiative for Canadian Turks would be to start a petition urging the Turkish government to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide and make proper restitution to the descendants of this heinous crime on the occasion of the Genocide’s Centennial.
“Update” Two suspects in Hrant Dink murder case detained in Trabzon
ISTANBUL
Gendarmerie forces have detained two suspects whose arrests were demanded by an Istanbul court in the case into the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, CNNTürk has reported.
Zeynel Abidin Yavuz, who was said to be the first person chosen as part of the conspiracy to murder Dink, was detained by gendarmerie forces in the Black Sea province of Trabzon’s Pelitli neighborhood on Jan. 7 and sent to the courthouse.
Osman Hayal, the brother of Yasin Hayal, who was charged with being the instigator of the assassination, was also captured in Trabzon a few hours later.
Dink, the renowned editor-in-chief of Agos, was shot dead by Ogün Samast in front of his office in Istanbul on Jan. 19, 2007. Samast was subsequently sentenced to over 22 years in jail for the murder.
The trial into his murder resumed on Sept. 17, 2013, with 18 suspects being retried after the Supreme Court of Appeals ruled that all suspects in the case had acted as part of a criminal organization, instead of individually.
A group of activists called the “Friends of Dink” gathered in front of the courthouse and chanted slogans ahead of the hearing.
Popular novelist Ahmet Ümit, speaking on behalf of the group, said their demand to try the public servants who allegedly bear responsibility for Dink’s murder had yet to be heeded.
“Instead, these same public officials have been promoted,” Ümit said.
January/07/2014
California: Assemblyman Mike Gatto introduces resolution to recognize Nagorno-Karabakh
January 07, 2014 | 16:33
Assemblyman Mike Gatto joined with people of Armenian descent around California and the world in calling for the United States to recognize the Nagorno-KarabakhRepublic as a sovereign state. The resolution, AJR 32, invokes strong language from theUnited States’ own history regarding the rights of the people to “self-determination and democratic independence.”
If Gatto’s resolution passes, it would make California the most populous governmental entity to call for Nagorno-Karabakh recognition, or to recognize it outright.
Three organizations that have already expressed support for the legislation are the Armenian Council of America (ACA), the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), and the Unified Young Armenians (UYA).
Assemblyman Gatto has worked closely with each of these organizations on legislation he has authored in the past, including a resolution calling for U.S. recognition of the Armenian Genocide and on legislation extending the statute of limitations for victims of the genocide to file insurance claims. The Assemblyman has also supported events sponsored by each organization, including their stellar efforts to raise money for Armenians in need around the world. “The community is united in support of recognizing Nagorno-Karabakh,” stated Gatto.
“It has been my privilege on this resolution to work with the leaders of the local Armenian American community and their outstanding representatives,” said Gatto. “I am especially honored to introduce this legislation on a day when Armenians around the world are celebrating Christmas with family and loved ones.”
“The introduction of AJR 32 by Assemblyman Gatto is an integral step towards the recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh as a sovereign state,” stated Sevak Khatchadorian, Chairman of the Armenian Council of America. “The Armenian Council of America applauds Assemblyman Gatto for his courageous and heroic effort toward promoting democracy and the right to self-determination in the region. This legislation will not only serve as a triumph for people of Armenian descent, but also as a victory shared by citizens of the world who value democracy, freedom and justice.”
Once passed by both houses of the California Legislature, a copy of AJR 32 will be transmitted to the President of the United States, the Secretary of the United States Senate, the Clerk of the United States House of Representatives, and to each member of the California delegation to the United States Congress.
Armenian Church celebrates Christmas January 6
January 6, 2014 – 16:07 AMT
The Armenian Church celebrates the holy birth of Jesus Christ on January 6. In Armenian tradition, this feast day commemorates not only the birth of Christ, but also his baptism by John the Baptist. The latter is remembered through the “Blessing of Water” ceremony, which follows the Divine Liturgy on January 6.
On the eve of the Feast of the Nativity and Theophany of Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Jrakalouyts Divine Liturgy (the lighting of the lamps service) is celebrated in honor of the manifestation of Jesus as the Son of God (theophany). It is custom for the faithful to hold lit candles during this special service.
On the following day, the mystery of Christ’s baptism in the River Jordan is remembered in the ceremony of the Jurorhnek, or the “Blessing of Water.”
In ancient times, this ceremony was celebrated by the riverside or sea shore, but, for various reasons, it was later confined to the interior of the churches. During the ceremony, the cross is dipped in water, recalling Christ’s immersion in the Jordan River. Blessed oil, or Holy Chrism (Muron), is poured into the water from a dove-shaped container, symbolizing the appearance at the baptism of the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove and the voice of the Father proclaiming to all that Jesus is His Son.
The Holy Chrism is prepared in Holy Etchmiadzin and is blessed by the Catholicos assisted by the bishops. Muron contains olive oil, balsam and the essence of forty different flowers and herbs. At the end of the ceremony, members of the congregation are given the blessed water to drink, thereby sharing in the life giving act of Christ.
Turkish attitude: A chronology
By Garen Yegparian, from The Armenian Weekly
The past year has been rife with intriguing developments on our Turkish (non-Azeri) front. So I thought it would probably be good to put those often-positive-seeming events in some context.
Some 1,000 years ago, Turks arrived in Asia Minor—Anatolia and the Armenian Plateau. That’s when our interaction with them began. These marauding horsemen proceeded to establish rival domains that fought one another until Turkish statehood was consolidated in the form of the Ottoman Empire after the fall of Constantinople in 1453. All along those five centuries, the natives (Armenians and others living further west) were being trampled (figuratively, and probably even literally) under the hooves of these newcomers to our homeland.
But despite what might have been expected, and as happened in most other empires, the onset of the Ottoman era brought no real relief, at least in the form of personal safety and economic revival, to the subjects of this new state. Periodic massacres continued, naturally aimed at Armenians, and others, who had to be tamed and controlled.
After Ottoman expansion was halted at the gates of Vienna in 1683, the slow decay of the empire began. One aspect of the self-consumption that plagued the lands ruled from Constantinople was the corrupt, expropriative system of tax-farming that fell heaviest on the peasantry, meaning Armenians. Someone would buy, from the government, the taxation of a certain area. As long as the sultan got his predetermined amount, that person was free to extract as much money from the subjects of “his” area as he wanted and could. This resulted in families losing their lands and and/or having to send sons to the cities to work to pay the exorbitant taxes.
The political benefit of this was the slow removal of “undesirable” populations (Armenians) from their homelands, allowing settlement there by Turks and other Muslims who were being forced out of the periphery of the empire. This gradual ethnic cleansing suited the purposes of the Turkish rulers.
But this was not the totality of the ongoing repression. Armenians—second-class citizens undersharia law as implemented in the Ottoman Empire, despite being a “people of the book” (and therefore deserving of Islamic protection), the loyal millet, and the financial backbone of the empire—were subject to constant persecution, whether it was having their tongues cut out for speaking Armenian (as my grandmother had learned from her father), being forced to convert to Islam, or having no recourse in the country’s courts because of their “infidel” status.
Those four-and-a-half centuries of de-Armenianization of the population of the Armenian Plateau paved the way for the Armenian Genocide, definitive expropriation, and the establishment of a supposedly mono-national Turkish state on the ruins of the occupied western portion of the Armenians’ homeland.
But the genocide wasn’t enough for the murderous Young Turks’ ideological heirs, Ataturk and his Turkish-chauvinist minions. See “Depriving Anatolian Armenians of Education” in last week’s issue of the Armenian Weekly, which tells the story of how Armenians were kept under- or un-educated in the post-1923 time frame. This was nothing but a continuation of the forced removal of Armenians from our homeland.
But of course, this subtle pressure wasn’t enough. During the Kurdish uprising of 1937-38 in Dersim, the more traditional and murderous Turkish techniques reappeared. As had happened for centuries, many Armenians had “become” Kurds during the genocide, and a significant number of those were in Dersim. As the rebellion was quelled, Kurds were promised leniency if they ratted-out those hidden Armenians. Once their identity was revealed, they were killed, and the Kurds who exposed them were also penalized for harboring them!
And with this, we can perhaps accept that the Turks’ bloody ways of eliminating Armenians from “their” (the Turks’) country ended and we transitioned to more “civilized” processes of conducting anti-Armenian campaigns. This might be when the real hatred of Armenians started to wane, since there were no longer significant numbers of Armenians left to hate. All that was left was the “Armenian” as an evil caricature, which is what we must contend with even today. Most, who had not been killed, exiled, or scared away, were concentrated in Bolis (Istanbul).
The 1930’s also witnessed the beginning of the out-of-country external propaganda campaign that Turkey has waged unabated, and has in fact escalated, against Armenians and Armenian interests to this day. Its ambassador to the United States prevented the making of Forty Days of Musa Dagh into a film.
In keeping with its more “civilized” approach, but still manifesting hatred towards Armenians and other non-Turkish, non-Muslim minorities, and still lusting after Armenians’ and others’ un-expropriated possessions, in 1942, Varlik Vergisi—the wealth tax—was enacted as a means of stealing Armenians’ post-genocide holdings. Obviously, this was just another way of driving Armenians out. While abolished just two years later, Varlik Vergisi just confirmed Ankara’s unstated policy towards Armenians: They were to be driven out. Those of our compatriots who remained under Turkish rule suffered the same ignominy as in the pre-genocide period. Properties were stolen, Armenians schools were kept under destructive state scrutiny, and life was generally squeezed to make things uncomfortable. This led to a steady trickling exodus from Bolis, but the community there was replenished, ironically, with those of our compatriots who were even worse off in the “interior” of Turkey (i.e., Turkish-occupied Western Armenia).
Meanwhile, the external front was heating up. As Armenians in the diaspora came to be organized and set on the path of post-genocide economic recovery, we were also becoming more active politically and diplomatically, demanding the 3-Rs—recognition, reparations, return of lands. Naturally, this led to Turkey responding. An excellent example is the 1971-85 saga of the UN Economic and Social Council’s Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities effort to prepare a report about genocide. Inescapably, the Armenian example had a significant place in it, which led to an ultimately unsuccessful Turkish effort to exclude it.
Starting in 1975, a roughly decade-long string of attacks on Turkish diplomats commenced. Unsurprisingly, this elicited a response from the Turkish government. But this response did not just consist of the one that commonly comes to mind (Turks calling Armenians murderers and trying to cover up their crimes). In 1978, the Turkish government quietly reached out to the leadership of the ARF to meet and come to some arrangement. The ARF immediately involved the Hnchags and Ramgavars and met with the Turks. Not much came of it since all that was proffered was some form of recognition. But, we’ll never know since the third of Turkey’s four coups cut the process short. Perhaps this marked the very beginning of Turkey’s “split personality” regarding Armenians and Armenian issues.
The 1980’s witnessed unabated anti-Armenian attitudes. Examples abound. On a very personal level, the first time I encountered a living human being who unabashedly denied the genocide was in 1980 when then Turkish Foreign Minister Ilter Turkmen spoke at the University of Pennsylvania’s law school. There was the 1982 conference about genocide that ultimately was held in Tel Aviv, with the Israeli government withdrawing its sponsorship after tremendous Turkish pressure, in which the Armenian Genocide was addressed. Turkey’s efforts on the academic front really took off, with the poster-child of denialism becoming UCLA’s Stanford Shaw. In 1982, the beginnings of what is now New York’s Turkish parade began under the guise of celebrating “Children’s Day,” which falls oh-so-conveniently on April 23 in Turkey. Also in the summer of 1982, a trip to occupied Armenian territories by a small group of Diasporan Armenians (including future Armenian foreign minister and almost-president Raffi Hovannisian) ended badly with inappropriate searches conducted of their persons by Turkish authorities who confiscated most of the photographs they had taken.
But something must have been changing in Turkish society. The repressive regime installed by Ataturk was starting to come apart. Plus, the assassinations of the Turkish diplomats and the genocide related publicity and activity in parliamentary and diplomatic sections, which must have triggered some thinking Turks to inquire what the hullabaloo was all about.
In 1988, Armen Aroyan started taking groups of Armenians to visit their ancestral homes and homeland. He has continued since then. This could not have happened without the knowledge and tacit acceptance of the Turkish authorities. His were not the first, or only, trips. I already mentioned one. Another happened in 1965 by Moushegh Kheteyan (Mitch Kehetian), the same year my grandmother visited Giligia and elsewhere in what’s called Turkey. This is evidence of something shifting.
In 1990, the Turkish Historical Society, the seat of official genocide denialism, held its 11thCongress of Turkish History in Ankara, where 16 papers on Armenian topics were presented. One of those was by Levon Marashlian who was the first of us to dare to venture into that lion’s den and present reality to a denial-addled Turkish society. This was not an easy step to take. I remember how both Levon, and Armen Aroyan, were viewed with some consternation for their activities. It was also in the 1990’s that the partially, selectively opened Ottoman archives started being researched by people who were not Turkish government lackeys. Meanwhile, more Turkish scholars were looking into Armenian issues and deciding to escape the denialism of their society. More evidence of shifting…
Yet all along, formal Turkish policy remained unchanged. Whether it was opposing passage of commemorative resolutions in the House or Senate of the U.S. Congress and legislatures around the world or pressuring (in 1995) Argentina’s President Menem to veto a law recognizing the Armenian Genocide, the Turks kept battling truth and simple reality on every “battlefield” imaginable—not just legislatures and presidents, but all diplomatic venues, the media, and academia. Yet something had to be brewing.
Then came 2002 and what I’ll call the “AKP shift” when the Adalet ve Kalkinma Partisi (Justice and Development Party) was elected to power. Our compatriots in Bolis indicated this was an overall positive step. Things started to loosen up internally and Turkish civil society seemed to commence a very early, and fragile, spring bloom, despite the Islamic/religious basis of this new ruling party. Now, more activists inside Turkey were coming around to truth. In 2005, at Bilgi University in Bolis, a conference somewhat grandiosely titled “Ottoman Armenians During the Decline of the Empire: Issues of Scientific Responsibility and Democracy” was held after two previous attempts to convene it were blocked. In 2007, the murder of Hrant Dink turned thousands of Turks out onto the streets claiming, “We are all Armenians.” Things really seemed to be improving or changing, at least on the non-governmental side of life in Turkey. This decade seemed to deepen, enshrine, and confirm the split personality I noted earlier. Turks want to know the truth, but simultaneously can’t handle it because it involves admitting to monstrous acts by their close relatives. The government wants to be rid of the “Armenian problem” but doesn’t have the political will or a society prepared to handle the ramifications.
Yet, during the same first decade of this century, we had the 2005 disclosure by whistleblower Sibel Edmonds of what can only be described as the bribery of Dennis Hastert, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, by Turks so he would block passage of a resolution commemorating the Armenian Genocide, which he did.
That same year, we had Dogu Perincek going to Switzerland to pick a fight over the ability to deny the genocide despite Swiss law. This led to his being found guilty and a series of appeals which just days ago absolved him of wrongdoing because his freedom of expression had allegedly been abridged, since the Armenian Genocide is not a “fact” in the same way the Holocaust is, according to five of the seven judges of the European Court of Human Rights that heard the latest appeal.
Of course, there is the 2007 murder of Hrant Dink by a 17-year old. What does that age say about where Turks’ minds are when it comes to Armenians? The murder happened on the cusp of Turkish government and society interface—a boundary still murky, as who exactly organized the murder remains hidden and the subject of ongoing court cases.
Of course, the infamous 2008-09 Armenia-Turkey protocols are an outstanding example of Turkish government duplicity and commitment to evading responsibility for the genocide and the expropriation of Armenian land and property.
Moving to the current decade, the reopening in 2010 of Sourp Khach on Lake Van’s Akhtamar Island aroused both hope and suspicion. It is now formally a museum, absent a cross on the dome, with extremely limited rights of use by the Armenian community as a church and with what some have argued was inappropriate material used in the renovation. But 2010 also witnessed a failed attempt to put a monument of Ataturk in a public place in Buenos Aires. Interestingly there’s a similar process afoot in the Los Angeles basin’s City of Carson even a now. A fundraiser for it was held just two weeks ago! What purpose does erecting a statue of a mass murderer serve?
The year 2011 witnessed the removal by the central government of a Turkish-Armenian friendship monument that had been erected by local authorities in Kars. A French attempt to pass a law criminalizing genocide denial was thwarted, at least in part due to Turkish pressure. Yet in 2012, the Sourp Giragos Church of Dikranagerd was reopened and returned to the Armenian Patriarchate by the local authorities, this time by Kurds, who have been making ever-stronger overtures of friendship to Armenians.
Just weeks ago, a conference was held in Bolis about crypto-Armenians, eliciting some heart-wrenching discussions. Yet we learn from Asbarez that, simultaneously, the “Turkish Government Targets Academics Studying Genocide.”
Need any more evidence of the confusing, split personality of Turkey, its society, and the humans composing it? This situation makes it very difficult and risky for Armenians to engage. But engage we must, and we are. Research about the Hamshentsis has been going on for a number of years. These are Armenians who were Islamicized over two centuries ago, yet still retain bits and pieces of Western Armenian in their rapidly disappearing local dialect. Obviously, the Turkish government knows of this and allows it, much like the tours of Western Armenia. Yet this is the same government that destroys Armenian monuments—actively in the past and through neglect in the present.
While some scholars, intellectuals, and sectors of civil society are soul searching and reaching out to Armenians, trying to find a way to make progress, other parts of Turkish society are busy spouting anti-Armenian hate. One example is the attempt to attribute Armenian origins or connections to the Kurdish movement, which has led to much loss of life and fear in Turkey over the past three decades. There are the ongoing efforts to block Armenian Genocide resolutions/proclamations and school curricula implemented by governments outside Turkey. Now, this is increasingly taken on by the non-governmental Gulen movement. It is the same religious sector of Turkish society that helped bring the AKP to power a decade ago, leading to the “opening” in Turkish society we’ve been witnessing. And, in what might be the height of cynicism, Turks are reaching out to Native Americans, themselves victims of genocide, in what can only be explained as a way of deflecting the charge of genocide that attaches so strongly to Turkey.
All of this is the cauldron of confusion that constitutes Turkish society. This doesn’t even include the anti-Armenian activity of Azerbaijan’s government, a parallel track to Turkey’s efforts, both aimed at delegitimizing our rightful claims for restorative justice.
But the confusion, the lack of clarity, and the absence of a societal consensus in Turkey regarding Armenians and Armenian issues cannot last forever. At some point, some force, governmental or otherwise, will succeed in forging a consensus. The more we push and engage, the better that outcome is likely to be. But I cannot imagine an outcome that I would describe as being “good” for at least another generation. In fact, we may end up seeing a few cycles of split personality/confusion/new consensus before Turkey finally escapes its self-built trap of denial.
The first of these cycles, the one we’re in now, may well come to a close in 2015 with the 100thanniversary of the Armenian Genocide. The outcome might be the offer of immediate citizenship in Turkey and the right to return for all descendents of genocide survivors. Turkey’s government could announce this without ever using the word genocide; just “descendents of former inhabitants” might be its formulation. What an ingenious trap! And it’s very possible since I hear that this idea, of granting citizenship, is often broached in casual discussions by Turks with connections to officialdom. Turkey could trumpet its “magnanimity” while calculating that very few Armenians are going to take up its offer. And, even if many or most did, what would that change? Anyone returning would be under the government’s thumb. What would we return to? Would our ancestral lands be handed back over to us or would we have to buy homes? What rights would we have? What guarantees of representation, of personal safety?
Let’s keep pushing, engaging, educating, watching, and optimizing every opportunity when it comes to Turkey and Armenian rights, but always with extreme discernment and caution.
‘Silence’, this time in Ankara Armenians broke (‘Sound of Silence III )
Translated from Turkish:
Hrant Dink Foundation oral history project conducted since 2011, which is the third book of the ‘Sound of Silence III – will speak in Ankara Armenians’ met with the reader. Ferda within the book compiled by Balancar in 2013, 40 interviews were carried out by Armenians in Ankara.
ERT EMRE NEW
is emreertani@agos.com.t
Hrant Dink Foundation oral history project conducted since 2011, which is the third book of the ‘Sound of Silence III – will speak in Ankara Armenians’ met with the reader. Ferda within the book compiled
Armenian. Istanbul and Ankara Ankara residents who live in France and Austria, as well as a result of the interview with the Voice of the Silence in the third book of the series appeared.
In the book, six men and four women 10 Ankaralı narratives compiled from interviews with Armenian ranks. Ferda Balancer, in the preface, “that is not in the book or interviews in general, it is not easy to live as Armenians in Ankara show. The challenges posed by the cause of his interview with our resource person noted, ‘This is the capital of the state bureaucracy’s heart, is Armenian here controlled’re going to be’ in the words found expression can say that, “he says.
Kevorkian’s foreword
Before leaving Aras Publishing last year ‘1915 Armenians in the Ottoman Empire ‘author of Raymond H. Kevorkian, books his introduction to the text in Ankara on Armenian presence of information regarding conveys: “The First World War, on the eve Ankara flag in the 28 thousand 858 students of the Armenian population half the province’s administrative center in Ankara, which was living. Catholic community in Ankara distinguishing feature was the proportion of those belonging to the sect: According to a census in 1914, 70 percent of the Armenian population in the city corresponding to 11,246 people had. The other features of written language used Turkish Armenian letters, although the Turkish language in spoken language were to be adopted. “
July 1915 in the middle, Ankara Armenians non-Catholic elders arrested reminiscent Kevorkian, within a few days of detainees list thousand 200 people to cover the expansion, noting that this group, the Union and Progress by volunteers, local farmers and prisoners executed to ‘privately held’ in Ankara With the help of butchers and tanners, five, six days, draws attention to the massacre. Catholic Armenians in Ankara, the eyes of Europeans wishing to enter the protected temporarily by Talat Pasha, which underlines Kevorkian, it killed on the spot rather than be deported towards the Syrian desert meant to say.
The book’s epilogue, the researchers Free Honey, his 2000 has accomplished in Ankara Armenians on research comparing Ankara Armenian identity and spatial perception assessment: “homogenizing implications and symbolic references because of the negative perception towards the initial assumption as distinct from many narrator, Ankara’s ‘modern’, ‘Western’, ‘urbanized’, ‘civilized’, ‘intellectual’, ‘diverse’ structure, emphasis has made; their collective identity different individual forms of expression, allowing anonymity and hence invisibility by providing life easier as factors that have interpreted. Ankara, in this narrative, usually very busy with the past is expressed as ‘home’, ‘home’ is defined as. ”
My first Armenian state officer
I went to the municipality as a worker. In that year, the overtime wage workers were taking charge of something much better. Already Armenian civil servants could not be until 1963. In 1963, the law on technical services, as something that engineers have started to be taken as a clerk Armenians. Was said that after September 12, the workers back to work, while sitting at your desk officer will be. And I know that there is something graders how I’d have preferred to be compared but there is a shortage of officers began: my salary has dropped by half. Made me as an interpreter of civil servants and general administrative services from the class about it, I’m also a first.
Mehmet Murat Karayalçin in the period after Altınsoy, I continued to work on specific items.Karayalçın as the director of special items brought Birsen Hanim have tried compatible. I have worked for five years during the Karayalçin. In 1994, the president Melih until you are interpreting the Clerk mission continued. Melih Bey knew me Altınsoy period but did not choose to work actively with me, I did not personally served. I ignored the municipality. In these circumstances, I retired in 1999.
Difference from Istanbul to Ankara
Ankara, Istanbul not like. Istanbul, always because it is a very cosmopolitan place, there it was easy to protect your own identity as Armenians. Ankara is not so. Here, a handful of Armenians. There are also economic and social power. So without revealing himself, have chosen to live with a slight concealment case. For example, residents of Istanbul, the Turkish name do not put too much but here is the Turkish name that puts a lot.
Tension between the Gregorian-Armenian Catholics in Ankara, formerly had markedly.Armenians in Ankara, where a small group together for entanglements, but I expected aid, since my childhood I never had such a weather. As I see Gregorians in Ankara, Istanoz consisted of peasants who had migrated from. Catholics living in the city more than the economic situation and a better cut. There are more flashy life of Catholics. Catholics, we think that the Gregorian downplayed.
My daughter has returned the Turkish identity
My wife and I, we were Austrians, but we also protect Turkey’s his birth certificate. My daughter gave it back to the Turkish consulate identity, because at the age of 10-11, at the airport on our arrival and departure to Turkey, customs, we experienced difficulties with the police, it was very annoyed. In the early 1980s, he was 11 years old again. We were looking undressed. They also mocked on a team. They were never forget. With the Austrians are married, go to the consulate and identity of Turkish passport was returned. Did not come to Turkey for many years, but they’re coming along with her husband after marriage Austrians.Has returned as a stranger … Turkish identity in the family home but we still speak Turkish.Not against children learn Turkish as well.
Where was Hrant Dink emerged to these people?
In addition to the socialist past and Turkey also critical look at the history of the socialist movement because of this issue. Hrant Dink, Agos Where was occurring to these people?Turkey left in my generation, or earlier has always ignore this issue. Located in the recent history of this country in the face of genocide Turkey left 10 years ago was so quiet. Woe to our left to our history.
My daughter’s mood different from me. His identity hybrid than me. Kurdish identity from his father, there is also the Alevi identity. All of these identities for her invaluable. None not in front of the other. I recently said he wanted to shoot a short film in Armenia. He wants to go in May. I would very much like to see Armenia. To visit the genocide memorial, a Mount Ararat from there I want to look.
I am from Ankara count of …
In Ankara, baptism, wedding and funeral lArInAydI Gregorian Armenians alone. In my childhood, wedding, baptism and the priest would come to Istanbul for the funeral. Now I do not know how. Not at church in Ankara. French church has one. So nothing left from the asset. All but vanished. I am from Ankara, when we say “Are you Catholic?” They ask. They were natives of Ankara, Armenian Catholic, I understand. Gregorian also may have migrated from other cities.
Because my brother was an Armenian officer could be
Very difficult to live as Armenians in Ankara. For example, my uncle, my sister and the General Directorate for Foundations (VGM) has put there, the first entry on a contractual basis, then my uncle’s situation pretty well. MPs, ministers are always friends. now my brother will DGF staff, although not as strong as it did not pass my uncle. Because the Armenians did not pass. My sister on the birth certificate could not be Christian because he wrote the officer. If I remember correctly they were 2000s. ANAP was the period.
by Balancar in 2013, 40 in Ankara Was conducted interviews with
İzmir Turkey: Sevan Nişanyan was arrested, when will come the unknown!
İzmir’s Selçuk district’s tourist village Şirince’de historic site in the area of land twice sealed Although the house on the grounds that his two-year imprisonment by the Supreme Court upheld the Sevan Nişanyan, bagged Open Prison going to deliver, “while what I did not regret it, I’m proud of “he said.
Writer, linguist Sevan Nişanyan, illegal construction of the proceedings bagged to take the two-year sentence was delivered yesterday to the Public Criminal Enforcement Agency.Tömbekic ex-wife of gospel, children with Tavita Arsen Nishanyan Nishanyan from prison with reporters, said he was proud of what they did. Nishanyan, the description on the front of the prison, said:
“Turkey, unfortunately, without horizon, vizyonsuz, Caps humans, dwarves are managed by.It is a shame to the country. All of us, all of you are worthy to better. We hope that, with a vision that one day, that can separate the good with the wrong people in management will
Pointing out that someone they do not bother Nishanyan, he continued:
“A person who did not play the role assigned to him had to be punished. Devised a way that way. Şirince’de erstwhile what we say, what we write about what we do about dozens of criminal cases opened. Political power in the hands had the opportunity to fix this crap. They chose not to use. Are its sole discretion. He got up on the case, I do not know how to calculate them. Even a mathematician, an account will not get out of. But I know I will stay inside for a long time. ”
‘All we continue our way’
Sirince and what they do for the country, indicating that in a philosophical consistency Nishanyan, after being evacuated will walk the same road is no doubt wanted to be:
“Şirince’de the work we do are good things, the right things. Is work to be an example for the country. Remove the concern is not with a philosophical consistency is the work done with the concern. This work is a team of people who do not like nonsense, it is not going to be stopped. Course will continue. Legal permissions if we continue on our way legally, but they also know they will not give legal permission thing. We will continue to be illegal way. But we will continue our way all kinds. Likewise, public affairs, the country’s values and correct what I said about the same consistency and the same determination that is no doubt you’re saying. I’m proud of what I’ve done, I’m doing the right things, I’m sure I’m doing useful work for people in the community. I see this value. ”
Case on a question to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) will carry the Nishanyan expressing, then said goodbye to the children and old wives went to prison. The Nishanyan bag he brought with intake, ex-wife also gave their money on.
Source: agos
Report: Turkey seizes arms in truck bound for Syria
AFP, Istanbul
Thursday, 2 January 2014
Turkish security forces have seized a truck laden with weapons bound for Syria and arrested three people including a Syrian, local media reported on Thursday.
Acting on a tipoff, security forces on Wednesday stopped the truck in the southern province of Hatay on the Syrian border, Hurriyet newspaper reported.
A significant quantity of ammunition and weapons were discovered in the truck, whose drivers claimed they were carrying aid on behalf of the pro-Islamic Humanitarian Relief Foundation (IHH).
But IHH dismissed the allegations as “slanderous”.
“Our organization has nothing to do with this case,” a spokesman for the relief group told AFP.
Turkey is a vocal critic of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and has openly supported the rebels fighting his regime, but has always denied arming them.
In December, local media reported that Turkey had shipped 47 tons of weapons to the rebels since June.
But Defense Minister Ismet Yilmaz denied weapons of war had been sent to Syria, saying only hunting rifles had been exported.
Turkey, which has been accused of turning a blind eye to fighters crossing its border into Syria, is sheltering about 600,000 Syrian refugees who have fled the civil war as well as the main Syrian opposition group.
China To Give Military Aid to Armenia
Armenian military scouts perform to mark the anniversary of the Armenian Armed Forces reconnaissance troops formation. (Agence France-Presse)
WARSAW — China agreed to provide Armenia with 5 million yuan (US $830,000) in military aid per year, the Armenian Ministry of Defense said in a statement.
A cooperation agreement was signed by Armenian Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan and Chinese Minister of National Defense Gen. Chang Wanquan Dec. 26 during the former’s official visit to Beijing. The discussed topics included military cooperation in training and technical assistance, the statement said.
Ohanyan said relations with China are a priority for Armenia’s foreign policy, and Yerevan aims to enhance military cooperation with Beijing in various fields, Chinese news agency Xinhua reported.
During his visit, Ohanyan met with senior Chinese military officials, including Deputy Chairman of China’s Central Military Commission Gen. Xu Qiliang. In addition, the Armenian minister visited a number of military units of the People’s Liberation Army and headquarters of Chinese defense companies, according to Armenia’s MoD.
The latest agreement is part of China’s wider efforts to boost ties with Armenia. In 2012, Beijing agreed to provide Yerevan with 70 million yuan in grants under an economic and technical partnership agreement.
Source: http://www.defensenews.com/
Gülen’s lawyer denies claims of AK Party official, PKK commander
Nurullah Albayrak, Gülen’s attorney, said in a written statement that no conversation has taken place between his client and the judge, and rejected the allegations that the judge had sought the scholar’s opinion before delivering the final verdict concerning a businessman, who was convicted in the case.
Former Justice Minister and Justice and Development Party (AK Party) Deputy Chairman Mehmet Ali Şahin claimed that a high-level judge at the Supreme Court of Appeals had acted contrary to legal procedure and contacted Gülen before issuing his final verdict in the case against the businessman several years ago.
“What should I do in this case?” asked the judge, according to the claims of the former justice minister. He went on to say that Gülen had allegedly told the judge to do what justice requires.
Şahin’s claim came at a time when the AK Party government has accused prosecutors, who have launched a far-reaching investigation into corruption and alleged bribery, fraud and tender rigging that involves high-level officials and ministers, of acting according to the group interests of “an illegal structure and a gang within the state.”
Albayrak rejected the allegations and denied any contact between Gülen and the judge.
Gülen’s lawyer also rejected the claims of a senior terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) commander who had said the Gülen movement might be behind last year’s assassination of three female PKK militants in Paris.
The bodies of three Kurdish women, including that of a co-founder of the terrorist PKK, were found in early January at the Information Center of Kurdistan in Paris. All three had been shot.
The killings took place at a time when Turkey was having talks with the terrorist PKK to resolve the country’s long-standing Kurdish problem.
Sakine Cansız, Fidan Doğan and Leyla Söylemez were discovered dead in the building in Paris.
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