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Armenian Genocide denial at the root of vile events in Turkey: Turkish expert

January 17, 2018 By administrator

Publisher of The California Courier Harut Sassounian has unveiled a fresh article about prominent Turkish political scientist Cengiz Aktar who believes that the denial of the Armenian Genocide by the Turkish government is at the root of all vile events that have occurred in Turkey since 1915.

The article reads:

On Dec. 30, 2017, Cengiz Aktar, a prominent Turkish political scientist, journalist and writer, published a candid and compassionate article about the Armenian Genocide. Aktar’s article titled, “Confronting past violence with more violence,” is posted on Ahvalnews.com, an independent overseas website, beyond the reach of the Turkish government’s oppressive regime.

Prof. Aktar begins his article with a stern warning to Turkish denialists: “Unless we, as a society confront a massive crime in our past like the Armenian Genocide of 1915 and unless we commit due reparations to the descendants of innocent victims, impunity will haunt us, and even more evil will follow. This is a century-old ethical predicament with remarkably deep roots.” Aktar not only demands recognition of the Armenian Genocide, but more significantly, “reparations.”

Prof. Aktar believes that the denial of the Armenian Genocide by the Turkish government is at the root of all vile events that have occurred in Turkey since 1915: “Considering that Genocide is a substantially massive crime than any of the public, individual or collective infractions, or the incessant evils of today, if the public consciousness can stomach Genocide, it can easily stomach any lawlessness. And thus, evil begets evil. We as a society have constantly refused to bring up the events of 1915 due to the intensity of the transgressions that followed suit — directly correlated to the impunity of Genocide — as well as voluntary or forced dementia.”

Indeed, violence and injustice have become routine in Turkey due to the reluctance of dealing with the mass crimes of the Armenian Genocide: “…Collective dementia, collective violence, and collective depravity that were imposed after the transgressions of 1915 became our lifestyle. Now we have unlimited violence and depravity everywhere, inside our homes, barracks, workplaces, hospitals — in every arena, from politics to the media — against everything from humans, to animals, nature, cities, and culture. But lawlessness, impunity, injustice, and indifference are everywhere as well.”

Aktar describes the denial of the Armenian Genocide as an on-going ‘curse’ upon Turkey that has led to many of today’s evils in Turkish society: “Some kind of schizophrenia that immediately forces one to forget and try to make others forget the violence it just inflicted. This is a collective sickness that transgresses the delusions of banal everyday politics. However, the suppressed memories of the past violence keep themselves alive in the public sub-consciousness by creating more violence, testing the confines of our dementia. So much so that while trying to forget an evil, we beget a new one! Maybe this is the curse of a society that refuses to face voluntarily its past violence through involuntary confrontation with daily violence with all its sinister consequences.”

At the end of his graciously humanistic article, Aktar reposts another powerful article he had written just before 2015, on the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide, in Taraf newspaper which was deleted from the website by the Turkish authorities.

In his earlier article, Prof. Aktar also blamed all the evils occurring in Turkey today due to the curse inflicted upon Turkish society by the victims of the Armenian Genocide: “Who knows, all the evil haunting us, endless mass killings, and our inability to recover from afflictions may be due to a century-old curse and a century-old lie. What do you think? This is perhaps the malediction uttered by Armenians, children, civilian women and men alike who died moaning, and buried without a coffin. It may be the storms created in our souls by the still agonizing specters of all our ill-fated citizens including Greeks and Syriacs and later Alevis and Kurds. Perhaps, the massacres which have not been accounted for since 1915 and the charge which have remained unpaid are now being paid back in different venues by the grandchildren. The curses uttered in return for the lives taken, the lives stolen, the homes plundered, the churches destroyed, the schools confiscated, and the property extorted…. ‘May God make you pay for it for all your offspring to come’… Are we paying back the price of all the injustice done so far? Does repayment manifest itself in the form of an audacity of not being able to confront with our past sins or in the form of indecency that has become our habit due to our chronic indulgence in unfairness? It seems as if our society has been decaying for a century, with festering all around.”

When Turkish leaders accept the mass crimes committed by their ancestors and make amends for them, as Prof. Aktar suggests, that is when Armenia and Turkey can establish normal diplomatic relations and only then can they put the past behind them. May Allah bestow His blessings on this righteous Turk and his pursuit of Godly justice!

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Cengiz Aktar, Turkey

TURKEY Back in 1915 Cengiz Aktar “Armenia Genocide”

January 9, 2016 By administrator

arton120707-480x320Under the title “Enter 1915” (1) December 31, 2014, I wrote an article to imagine how the ceremonies of the centenary of the Armenian Genocide could happen, and at the same time, imagine how the Centennial curse our inability to face the facts could change.

At the end of this article, which I reproduce some excerpts below *, I expressed the hope that the centenary could be an historic opportunity to get rid of old habits, understand the “Other” to engage in group therapy. But this hope has remained vain. Instead, the 1915 curse ruled over the whole country. Today, Turkey is suffering from a state of total insanity.

When I say curse, I am referring to any parapsychological observation. I think perhaps that we should not underestimate the weight of the kingdom of dying souls. I would refer rather to the following truth: as long as we refuse to face the facts of this massive crime of genocide and that we’re not absolved, rendering full justice to the little children of the victims, we will pay the price evils that result. This is a fundamental ethical issue. In fact, genocide is a crime of such magnitude that it can not be compared to individual and collective crimes committed ordinarily. But for a company able to “digest” genocide, ordinary crimes are easily accepted. This is how we live evil.

1915 has not been on the national agenda in 2015 as it should be, because of the intensity of the repression that took place last year, and because of the general lack of knowledge in society ; this ignorance is closely linked to our culture of injustice and impunity of a century old.

Let me illustrate this with an example: one of the frequently given explanations about the fate suffered by the Kurds these days is that their persecution was never punished since the installation of the republic. But nobody dares to remember that the Armenians and other non-Muslim groups were persecuted before and that Armenians were particularly oppressed by the Kurds.

A century ago that Turkey is in decline; at the turn of the 21st century, it wallows in the mud and inevitably towards fascism.

“Entering 1915”

“Who knows ? All this evil that haunts us, the endless massacres of mass and our inability to cure illnesses, may be due to an old curse of a century and a lie of the century. Do we ever know ? This is perhaps a spell cast by Armenians – children, women and men civilians – who died, buried still wailing. This is perhaps the storm created by our souls still dying spectra of all our fellow citizens abused, those Greeks and Syriacs including, later, those of Alevis and Kurds.

Perhaps the responsibilities of massacres that have never been sought after 1915 and whose “price” was never paid they are now demanded in different ways by the grandchildren? Curses, launched to the lives taken, stolen lives, homes looted, destroyed churches, schools and extorted seized property … come back they? “May God make you pay for it by you and all your descendants.” Do we pay the price for all the injustices done so far? Payment is it by our refusal to confront our past sins or our cynicism, become common because of our chronic indulgence hypocrisy? It is as if our society was decaying for a century, rotting all around her.

Despite the century-old curse, in 2015 will happen without debate “Are there really was genocide? “Receives a response. We look at how those in power grow every effort to cover this shame and delay any movement towards a confrontation. If it were in their power, they escamoteraient 2015, altogether. The denialist prose which consists of three shriveled arguments, which are summed up in the uprising, collaboration with the enemy, and victimization – it is the Armenians who killed us – will continue to be repeated like parrots repeating in a series of conferences. And we will dance on our own music. On 24 and 25 April 2015, an official ceremony will be held at the Anzac Day in Gallipoli, without any connection with the Genocide. And we will hear abundant stories about heroism in the Dardanelles. But we will not find anyone to listen to our speeches.

How many curses are we still exposed before we are likely:

- To recognize the bloody process of building our nation?

- To learn and remember how a harmless people, hardworking, efficient, talented and peaceful was destroyed by the people of the warriors of Anatolia and to feel empathy for their grandchildren who remember?

- To measure the cruelty suffered by the unfortunate Armenians asking “Our ehir Asdvadz? “(Where were you, God?), In the summer of 1915, as dark and cold as death?

- To realize that the population of Armenians who dénombraient million in the Ottoman Empire in 1915 increased to virtually zero today. The Armenians who remain either hid their true identity, or have converted to Islam.

- To finish with the question “Was it genocide or not? “And the question” who killed who? “And listen only to our conscience?

- To admit, as explained Hrant Dink, that this was a genocide in all its aspects, and a considerable loss of civilization?

- To realize that the greatest loss of this country is that the non-Muslim citizens of these lands are gone?

- To understand how the genocide – that the Armenians of those dark days denominated Great Catastrophe (Medz Yeghern) – is a disaster that does not belong only to Armenians but to the whole country?

- To find that the loss of our non-Muslim citizens were killed, exiled or forced to flee equivalent to a loss of intellectual, cultural, loss of civilization, to a deficit of bourgeois population?

- To assess the scourge of goods, confiscated property and abducted children?

- To adequately understand the wisdom of the author Yasar Kemal, who wrote: “another bird can not thrive in an abandoned nest, and he who destroys a nest can have nest, oppression called oppression.”

- And even realize that those who reject the above points do so only because they lost in the Genocide part of their wisdom?

The Armenian Genocide is the Great Catastrophe of Anatolia, and the mother of taboos on these lands. His curse will continue to haunt us as long as we avoid talking about it, to recognize, understand and evaluate. Its centenary offers us a historic opportunity to rid ourselves of our habits, understand the Other, and start group therapy. “

Zaman

Cengiz Aktar

January 6, 2016

(1) read in full, in English, by the www.todayszaman.com/columnist/cengi-z-aktar/entering-1915_368487.html link

Translation Gilbert Béguian

http://www.todayszaman.com/columnist/cengi-z-aktar/re-entering-1915_408938.html

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: 1915, armenian genocide, Cengiz Aktar

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide 22- Cengiz Aktar

June 26, 2014 By administrator

 By: Hambersom Aghbashian

Cengiz Aktar, (Born in 1955 in Istanbul),  is a Turkish Professor, Senior Scholar, journalist and writer. He graduated from the Lycée de Galatasaray(Galatasaray High School ) and completed his tertiary education at Cengiz-AktarPanthéon-Sorbonne where he received his PhD degree on Economic Epistemology in 1982. He is a member of the Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences (professor at Bahcesehir University)(1). He is the Chairman of the Department of EU Relations in Istanbul, also a weekly columnist for daily Vatan. Aktar is an expert for Turkey-EU relations, but is also intensively involved in civil society initiatives in Turkey dealing with minority issues.(2).

                         Cengiz Aktar  was one of the initiators of the apology campaign launched in December 2008, as a part of which Turks and Kurds expressed their sympathy for the victims of the events of 1915 (2). The apology came in an open letter that invited Turks to sign an online petition  supporting its sentiments. It reads: “My conscience does not accept the insensitivity                                                                                                                                                           showed to and the denial of the Great Catastrophe that the Ottoman Armenians were subjected to in 1915. I reject this injustice and for my share, I empathize with the feelings and pain of my Armenian brothers. I apologize to them.” The contents expose its authors – three scholars, Ahmet Insel, Baskin Oran and Cengiz Aktar, and a journalist, Ali Bayramoglu – to the wrath of the Turkish state, which has prosecuted writers, including the Nobel prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk, for supporting Armenian genocide claims. (3)

                        As a former director at the United Nations where he spent 22 years of his professional life, Aktar is one of the leading advocates of Turkey’s integration into the EU. Also he  is involved in studying policies of memory regarding ethnic and religious minorities in Turkey. Since 1999 he has taught courses on various EU policies at Galatasaray University and Bahçeşehir University. He is also a columnist for daily Taraf and Today’s Zaman, as well as regular commentator at Açık Radio on EU related developments since 1999.  Aktar has published nine books and numerous articles in Turkey and abroad. He is a member and advisor to the French periodical La Revue du Mauss, the Turkish ecological NGO Buğday, the Hrant Dink Foundation and the Aladin Project. He is also a reviewer for the European Commission, DG Research.(4). He met late Hrant Dink In 1999 and  had established a close friendships with him.(1)

———————————————————————————————————————

“Armenian genocide: Turkey has lost the battle of truth”, this was Cengiz Aktar’s (Opinion – aljazeera-24 Apr 2014), where he mentioned that An empowerered Turkish society is now challenging the state’s denialist paradigm on the tragic events of 1915. According to him ” Today, three patterns emerge in Turkey’s traditional policy towards the events of 1915. First, denialist lobbying activities abroad and efforts to influence the lawmakers, especially in the US ( now co-sponsored by Azeris). Secondly, denials cloaked in scientific covers aimed at persuading the Western academic world, replacing the vulgar denialism. And thirdly, there is a clear attempt to substitute other events for 1915. Dardanelles battle victory in the west and the military debacle of Sarikamis in the east, are being flogged in the official narrative as the historical substitutes to what occurred to Armenians in 1915. Despite these endeavors, Turkey has long lost the battle of truth. The destruction of the Armenian population on its ancestral land is a sheer fact, whatever else you might call it. April 24, 1915 was the dark day when the decision to erase Armenians from Anatolia began to be implemented by the Ottoman government of Young Turks, or the Ittihadists. The rationale behind it was to engineer a homogeneous population composed of Muslims designated to form the backbone of the “yet to be invented” Turkish nation. Thus, there was no place for Christian populations despite their historic presence on those lands. No one is capable of evaluating the consequences to human, political and economic relations throughout Anatolia once the Armenians were eliminated. It is, however, quite certain that the effects of such a wide-reaching elimination operation were enormous.(5)”

1-http://tr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cengiz_Aktar

2-http://www.esiweb.org/index.php?lang=en&id=322&debate_ID=4&slide_ID=24

3- http://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/dec/08/armenian-genocide-turkey-apology-petition

4-http://ipc.sabanciuniv.edu/en/people/cengiz-aktar/

5-http://www.aljazeera.com/category/person/cengiz-aktar

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Cengiz Aktar, Recognized

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