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Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide 31-Temel Demirer

September 20, 2014 By administrator

By: Hambersom Aghbashian
ev.owaTemel Demirer is a famous Turkish writer and one of the enlightened intellectuals who have recognized the Armenian Genocide . He has been prosecuted for his daring writings and speeches and because of his remarks on the Armenian Genocide.

Temel Demirer is the author of many books and the co- author of many others. His published works include (Ortadogu Yalanci Bahar – Middle East-False Spring), (Kapitalizmin Ekolojic Sorunlan- Ecological Problems of Capitalism), (Kuresel Intifada – Global Intifada), (Eleveda Nosyan..Merhaba Isyan), (Resmi Ideoloji, Devlet, Milliyetcilik- Official Ideology, State, Nationalism), and the list and goes on and it is too long to be mentioned here.

(1)According to (http://bianet.org/english/minorities/105355A), a day after journalist Hrant Dink’s murder on 19 January 2007, writer Temel Demirer read a press statement in central Ankara, saying that the journalist had not only been killed for being Armenian, but also because he had spoken of an “Armenian genocide.” Around a year later, Demirer has been taken to court under Article 301 and 216 for “denigrating the Turkish Republic” and “inciting to hatred and hostility.” In a previous statement Demirer said that he believed that there was a genocide carried out against the Armenians in the Ottoman period.(2)

K. Mouradian wrote on April 24, in (The Armenian Weekly- April 28, 2010), As genocide commemoration events were being held one after the other in different locations in Istanbul, a groundbreaking two-day conference on the Armenian Genocide began at the Princess Hotel in Ankara. The conference, organized by the Ankara Freedom of Thought Initiative , was held under tight security measures. The conference attracted around 200 attendees, mostly activists and intellectuals who support genocide recognition. Among the prominent names from Turkey were Ismail Besikci, Baskin Oran, Sevan Nishanian, Ragip Zarakolu, Temel Demirer and Sait Cetinoglu. Demirer is an author who has been prosecuted for his daring writings and speeches. That panel turned out into a debate on reparations for the Armenian Genocide.(3)
In his book “Modern Turkey and the Armenian Genocide”, Nikolaus Schrodt quoted then Turkish Minister of justice Mehmet Ali Sahin stating to Today’s Zaman (Nov. 18, 2008), “This man, Temel Demirer, is saying Turkey is a murderer state . I am not going to let anyone call my state a murderer. These expressions are not exercising freedom of speech, these are humiliating the state which is exactly what article 301 criminalizes. (4)
In his article titled “Turkish Writer Temel Demirer: There Was A Genocide In Our History”, Jean Eckian (Independent correspondent-Paris, March 6, 2008) mentioned that Demirer, in his press statement in central Ankara announced that “There was a genocide in our history, it is called the Armenian Genocide. At the expense of its life, Hrant said to us, to all this reality. Those who killed the Armenians yesterday attack our Kurdish brothers and sisters today.. I invite all those of you to commit crimes. Yes, there was a Armenian genocide in this country.”(5)
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1- www.idefix.com/kitap/temel-demirer/urun_liste.asp?
2- http://bianet.org/english/minorities/105355-writer-demirer-on-trial-for-armenian-genocide
3- http://www.armenianweekly.com/2010/04/28/ankara-conference/
4http://books.google.com/books?id=m4_IAwAAQBAJ&pg=PT478&lpg=PT478&dq=Temel+Demirer+and+the+Armenian+genocide
5- http://www.armeniandiaspora.com/showthread.php?125139-Turkish-Writer-Temel-Demirer-

also published on Nor Or, Sept. 18, 2014

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Recognized, Turkish Intellectuals

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide 27 – Maya Arakon

July 31, 2014 By administrator

By: Hambersom Aghbashian

Maya-ArakonMaya Arakon (born 1972 in Istanbul) is an Associate Professor of Political Science and International Relations at Süleyman Şah University (Istanbul).
After graduating from Notre Dame De Sion French High School in 1991, she continued her higher education at Marmara University- Department of Political Science and Public Administration (licensed 1995). She completed her first M.Sc degree (European Union) in 1997, at Marmara University-European Community Institute . Her second M.Sc degree (European Union and Defense Sciences-1999), and PhD degree (Terrorism, Security and Defense Sciences- 2007), were both completed at Robert Schuman University (Strasbourg, France), and her Post Doctorate in 2009, at Paris University-Political Science Institute- International Research and Science Center (Paris-France).(1)
Maya Arakon was one of the Turkish intellectuals who signed a petition against Denialist Exhibit in Denmark, an exhibition which was planned by the Turkish embassy to support their point of view concerning the Armenian Genocide . ” Don’t Stand Against Turkey’s Democratization and Confrontation with its History! ” was the message to the Royal Library of Denmark who has given the Turkish government the opportunity to present an “alternative exhibit” in response to the Armenian Genocide exhibition.(2)
In his article “White Turks, Black Turks and grey debate”, (Hürriyet Daily News – Nov.22.2010), Özgur Ögret asked Maya Arakon to define “White Turks” . She described them as “sympathizers of the Kemalist ideology who perceive themselves as the founders of the Republi ; therefore, a group uneasy with Kurds and religious people, who they believe should be “educated and modernized.” Ögret commented in his article that “According to Arakon, White Turks lack a democratic perspective on human rights and thus cannot truly be Westernized.” Unfortunately, this is the ideology of the most members of the current Turkish government. (3)
According to PanARMENIAN.Net (April 1, 2010), “Some representatives of Turkish intelligentsia urge Turkey, which seeks EU membership, follow Serbian parliament’s example, which recently condemned the 1995 killings of Bosnian Muslims in Srebrenica and apologize to Armenians for 1915 Genocide. The offer was advanced by Maya Arakon, assistant professor of International Relations from Yeditepe University and Soli Özel, professor of International Relations and Political Science at Istanbul Bilgi University. According to Maya Arakon, Serbia which seeks EU membership, tries to whitewash its past; Turkey can initiate similar steps regarding Genocide issue”. (4)
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1- http://www.ssu.edu.tr/dokumanlar/cv/mayaarakon.pdf
2-http://www.aga-online.org/signature/detail.php?locale=am&alertId=6
3- http://archive.today/9wPza#selection-1193.0-1193.415
4- http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/world/news/46423/

also published on

Nor Or, July 31, 2014

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: American Memco Inc. Company opens Armenian Genocide online museum, armenian genocide, recognize, Turkish Intellectuals

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide 18 – Murathan Mungan

May 30, 2014 By administrator

By: Hambersom Aghbashian

Murathan-Mungan

     Murathan Mungan (born 21 April 1955 in Istanbul) is a Turkish author, short story writer, playwright and poet. His family originates from Mardin. After receiving his BA from the Faculty of Letters and Drama at Ankara University, he worked as a dramaturg* before devoting all his time to write poetry, plays, short stories, novels, film scenarios and songs. His first collection of poems, Osmanlıya Dair Hikayat (Stories about Ottomans) was published in 1980, making Mungan an overnight success. His output remained prolific and various poetry books followed . He has written four theatre plays, which earned him wider success. Mahmud ile Yezida, Taziye are two of the most staged plays of the modern Turkish theatre.His short stories were compiled in successful volumes . His screenplay Dağınık Yatak (Messy Bed) was later filmed in 1986. Mungan also wrote lyrics to some of Yeni Türkü‘s songs, and for pop singers .(1)

                             Nimet Seker (http://nimetseker.wordpress.com/english/murathan-mungan/) wrote the following “Born in Istanbul in 1955, Mungan grew up in the city of Mardin in southeastern Anatolia. The easy mix of Muslims, orthodox Christians**, Aramaeans and Yazidi in Mardin instilled in him a sort of instinctive sense of the rudiments of democracy, he would later write of his childhood.(2)

                              According to PanARMENIAN.Net  (May 26, 2013), writer Murathan Mungan said “Every citizen of Turkey has a moral obligation to the victims of the 1915 Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire”. At an Istanbul-hosted Democracy and Peace Conference, Mungan urged for an end to the denial ahead of the Genocide 100th anniversary in 2015. “Not only Kurds and Turks, but Armenians as well live in this country. We all have a debt to the victims of the Genocide, and we have to cover it in 2015,” he stressed.(3)

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*A dramaturge or dramaturg is a professional position within a theatre or opera company that deals mainly with research and development of plays or operas

** To avoid mentioning The Armenians , some writers use Orthodox Christians instead of that.

1- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murathan_Mungan

2- http://nimetseker.wordpress.com/english/murathan-mungan/

3- http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/159861/

also published on

Nor Or , May 29,2014

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Murathan Mungan, Recognized, Turkish Intellectuals

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide Ayşe Hür

May 23, 2014 By administrator

By: Hambersom Aghbashian

Ayse Hur (b. 1956, Artvin ), is a Turkish researcher, author , historian and columnist. Her parents ( father of Pomak*- Bulgarian speaking Muslim- origin and her mother of turkish-Intelctual-17Turkish origin) were both teachers (1) .She lived with her parents in Urfa and Edirne, then moved to Istanbul. Having completed her double major in 1992 from the departments of history and international relations at Bogazici University, she joined the History Foundation of Turkey and worked on such projects as the Istanbul Encyclopedia. In 2004, she completed her master’s thesis on “The European Union’s Policies of Reconciling with History and the Armenian Question” at the Ataturk Institute of Bogazici University, then  pursued her doctorate degree at the same institution. She is a member of the editorial board of Social History, and writes historical and political articles in various newspapers and journals, including Taraf, Radikal, Birikim, and Agos.(2)

                              According to Turkish literatureblog.wordpress.com (Dec.8, 2013), ” Being a historian, Ayşe Hür is particularly known for her articles in the widely read Turkish newspaper Radikal. Her texts often deal with current political issues and provide related historical insights at the same time. In her articles entitled “I apologize for not apologizing” published in the Armenian Weekly in 2009,  she wrote about the Armenian genocide and the very sensitive topic of collective amnesia as opposed to cosmopolitan memory. She attempts to make peace with the past.(2)

In a  speech which  was delivered at a conference on the Legacy of the 1915 Genocide in the Ottoman Empire, held in Stockholm, Sweden on the 23 March 2009, Ayse Hur  recalled  the reply of Kiazim Karabekir to Georgi Chicherin in the early 20’s: “In Turkey there has been neither an Armenia nor territory inhabited by Armenians” . Since then indeed, Turkey’s policies didn’t really changed up to the eve of the 21st century. Basically, it followed the classical patterns of inconsistent denial, i.e. gross minimization, condoning, rationalization and trivialization. These patterns which are not specific to the denial of the Armenian Genocide but which are common to any Genocide denial: they have been extensively described by many prominent scholars. The old-style Kemalist denial aimed at reaching the provisional acquittal of Turkey. The new-style denial aims at the permanent deferment of the verdict.She concluded her speech  by an optimistic observation” How malicious is this new denial strategy, it could eventually turn against its promoters.”(3)

                                     Ayşe Hür was one of the Turkish intellectuals who signed a letter asking  the Royal Library in Copenhagen” not to  Stand Before Turkey’s Democratization and Confrontation with its History”. The Turkish embassy’s initiative to open an alternative exhibition at the Royal Library in Copenhagen, where the exhibition “The Armenian Genocide and the Scandinavian Response” opened on November 6 ,2012 was the motive to the letter where they mentioned that ” Over one million Ottoman Armenian citizens were forced out of their homes and annihilated in furtherance of an intentional state policy. What exists today is nothing other than the blatant denial of this reality by the Turkish government.(4)

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*Pomaks (Bulgarian – Turkish: Pomaklar) is a term used for Bulgarian-speaking Muslims who are indigenous to southern Bulgaria, Northern Greece, Turkey, Albania, Republic of Macedonia and Kosovo.

1- http://tr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ay%C5%9Fe_H%C3%BCr

2- http://www.armenianweekly.com/author/ayse-hur/

3-http://turkishliteratureblog.wordpress.com/2013/12/08/ayse-hur-a-free-spirit/

4- http://eurotopie.leylekian.eu/2009/06/turkeys-policies-and-holes-with-regard.html

5- http://www.armeniapedia.org/wiki/The_Armenian_Genocide_and_the_Scandinavian_Response

Also Featured on

Nor Or, May 22, 2014

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Recognized, Turkish Intellectuals

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide. Ali Bayramoglu

May 16, 2014 By administrator

By:Hambersom Aghbashian

Ali Bayramoğlu (b. 1956) is a Turkish writer and political commentator. He is a columnist in the Turkish daily newspaper Yeni Safak, writing from a liberal pro-Islamic viewpoint. He has campaigned against ultra-nationalism, militarism Ali-Bayramogluand restrictions on Islamic political parties in Turkey, and in favor of greater recognition of, and accommodation with, the Kurdish population of Turkey, and a break with what he sees as Ottomanist tendencies which prevent Turkey from moving forward on issues such as the Armenian genocide.(1)

                       Ali Bayramoglu is a journalist specialized in social movements in Turkey, and was a Senior lecturer in the political and administrative studies in Marmara University in Istanbul, then a lecturer at Istanbul Kültür Üniversitesi. He wrote a thesis about the role of the army in the Turkish political life. He was also a political commentator in several Turkish daily papers before joining the daily Yeni Safak. In 2005 he published “Les laïcs et les religieux face au processus de democratisation”, research conducted for TESEV, published at the editory house The Foundation for economical and political studies about Turkey.(2)

                         According to ” thegurdian”, Dec. 7, 2008, Academics and writers in Turkey have risked a fierce official backlash by issuing a public apology which 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.” Breaking one of Turkish society’s biggest taboos, the apology comes in an open letter that invites Turks to sign an online petition supporting its sentiments. 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)

                            On March 15, 2011,  Ali Bayramoğlu participated in  ” BUILDING AWARENESS OF TURKISH SOCIETY REGARDING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE” international conference in Yerevan where he moderated one of the panels where ” Turkey’s Denial of the Armenian Genocide. History, Current Trends, Prospects “, ” Developing a Policy of Memory in Turkey” and other issues were discussed.(4)

During his talk in the conference on the ‘I Apologize’ campaign, Ali Bayramoğlu stressed that recognition of the genocide is not enough; relationships must be repaired and the political and cultural connections between Turks and Armenians must be mended.(5)

                           According to www.demotix.com “Activists gathered together at Taksim Square in Istanbul to commemorate ninety-eighth anniversary of the Armenian genocide. Journalist Ali Bayramoglu was among the participants.”(6)

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1-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ali_Bayramo%C4%9Flu

2-http://www.recon-project.com/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=28&Itemid=159&lang=en

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

4- http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=4&ved=0CD8QFjAD&url=http

5- http://crrc-caucasus.blogspot.com/2011/03/conference-summary-building-turkish_24.html

6- http://www.demotix.com/photo/1991389/armenians-and-supporters-commemorate-armenian-genocide

also Published on

Nor Or, May 15, 2014

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Recognized, Turkish Intellectuals

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide. 8- Kemal Göktaş 8- Kemal Göktaş

May 10, 2014 By administrator

By:Hambersom Aghbashian

Vatan newspaper journalist Kemal Göktaş  faced a five years prison sentence for writing and publishing his book “The Hrant Dink Murder: Media, Judiciary, State”. The book revealed background

Kemalinformation on the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in 2007.(1)

                          On July 10, 2009,  Vercihan Ziflioğlu wrote in Hurriet Daily News ” A book written by journalist Kemal Göktaş delves into the bigger picture behind the assassination of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in front of his office in Istanbul in 2007. Göktaş explores the role of the media in turning Dink into a target and how the state and judiciary also played their part in the incident leading to Dink’s murder. Dink was gunned down in front of the Agos newspaper office, where he was editor-in-chief, in central Istanbul on Jan. 19, 2007. At the time he was being tried for “insulting Turkishness” under the infamous Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code. Other authors such as novelist Elif Şafaf and Nobel winner Orhan Pamuk have also faced prosecution under the same article and widespread media coverage of their trials forced Pamuk to seek refuge abroad fearing for his life while Şafak opted for silence”.(2)

                           On February 17, 2010 , Mustafa Turan wrote in Today’s Zaman “Kemal Göktaş, a correspondent for the Vatan daily in Ankara, said in an Istanbul court yesterday that the Istanbul Police Department knew that Turkish-Armenian writer Hrant Dink was to be killed but did not take any precautions. In a hearing at Istanbul’s 2nd Court of First Instance, Göktaş, who is being tried for revealing secret documents and jeopardizing the state’s police department, said in his defense that the Trabzon Police Department had informed the Istanbul Police Department about the plans for Dink’s murder. In his book, Hrant Dink’s Murder — Media, Judiciary and State, Göktaş had revealed how the Istanbul Police Department ignored warnings from the Trabzon Police Department about Dink’s murder. Göktaş said in his own defense that Intelligence Chief Ramazan Akyürek and the Istanbul Police Department filed a criminal complaint against him for publishing the document which showed how Hrant Dink was going to be murdered and [proved that] police knew it beforehand. It shows that a group headed by Yasin Hayal was to kill Dink”. (3)

                          Göktaş was among the 10 Turkish journalists that traveled to Armenia in a joint venture by the International Hrant Dink Foundation and the Heinrich Böll Foundation. “I went to Armenia for the first time. It was a very impressive trip. The Armenians are experiencing a trauma and mourning passed on from generation to generation. Most of the people I’ve met had their roots in Anatolia; they were very friendly to us,” Göktaş said.(2)

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1- http://www.bianet.org/english/freedom-of-expression/120102-two-journalists-at-court-for-pursuing-dink-murder

2- http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/english/domestic/11831179_p.asp

3- http://www.todayszaman.com/newsDetail_getNewsById.action;jsessionid

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Turkish Intellectuals

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide 15- Murat Belge

May 9, 2014 By administrator

By Hambersom Aghbashian

Murat Belge (born March 16, 1943 in Ankara, Turkey) is an outspoken left-liberal Turkish intellectual, academic, translator, literary critic, columnist, and civil rights activist. Sinevce 1996 he has been a professor of comparative literature at Istanbul Bilgi University. For several years he wrote columns for the daily Radikal, before shifting to Taraf in June 2008. Belge has translated works of James Joyce, Charles Dickens, D. H. Lawrence, William Faulkner and John Berger into Turkish.
Murat Belge was a member of the organizing committee for a two-day academic conference that started on September 24, 2005, held at Bilgi University in Istanbul, titled “Ottoman Armenians During the Decline of the Empire: Issues of Scientific Responsibility and Democracy”. The conference offered an open dispute of the official Turkish account of the Armenian Genocide, and was denounced by nationalists as treacherous. This is a fight of “can we discuss this thing, or can we not discuss this thing?”. This is something that’s directly related to the question of what kind of country Turkey is going to be.(Belge, during the conference opening). Belge’s remarks led to his facing a ten-year jail sentence for criticizing the judicial ban; he was acquitted.(1)
The conference was held after two previous attempts which were blocked by the Turkish government. The self-avowed goal of the conference was to call into question the official Turkish account of events. The participants discussed the plight of the Armenians in the final days of the Ottoman Empire, a politically correct way in Turkey of saying the Armenian Genocide. It was the first time this subject was ever discussed so openly in Turkey. Discussing the mass killings of Armenians has long been taboo in Turkey, and scholars who use the word genocide can be prosecuted under a clause in the Turkish penal code on insulting the national character.(2)

http://www.opendemocracy.net mentioned that ” Murat Belge, one of the Turkish journalists facing trial in Istanbul over public discussion of the 1915 Armenian massacres, sees his case as an emblem of Turkey’s struggle against the country’s anti-democratic “deep state”.(3)
Murat Belge’s book, titled “Armenians in Literature”, was published in Turkey by Yayın İletişim publishing house (News.am- Sept.23, 2013). The new work by Belge, who is known for his studies on the Armenian Genocide, is devoted to the Armenians that lived in the Ottoman Empire. The book looks into what role the Armenians had in which period and in which novel, how the Armenians—who were a part of the Ottoman society—became enemies, and how the Armenians are portrayed in the post-Genocide novels.
To note, Murat Belge was a friend of Hrant Dink, founder and chief editor of Istanbul’s Agos Armenian bilingual weekly, who was gunned down in 2007 in front of his office building. During a discussion in Armenia, Belge had stressed that Turkey should recognize the Armenian Genocide.(4)

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1- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murat_Belge
2- http://www.armeniapedia.org/index.php?title=Conference:_Ottoman_Armenians_During_the_Decline
3- http://www.opendemocracy.net/author/murat-belge
4- http://news.am/eng/news/172746.html

Also Published on Nor Or, May 8, 2014

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Recognized, Turkish Intellectuals

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide 14- Murat Bardakçı

April 25, 2014 By administrator

By: Hambersom Aghbashian
Murat Gökhan Bardakçı (born 1955) is a Turkish journalist working on Ottoman history and Turkish music history. He is also a columnist in Habertürk newBook by Muratspaper. Bardakçı was trainMurat Bardakcied in Turkish classical music in tanbur and singing at first, with his primary interests directed more towards theory and musical history later. He published several researches on musical history . With the start of a journalistic career in Hürriyet, he expanded the scope of his writings on Ottoman and general Islamic history, with marked emphasis on the 19th and the early-20th centuries. Two of his books on the end of the Ottoman dynasty, “Son Osmanlılar” (The Last Ottomans) and Şahbaba, a biography of Mehmed VI Vahideddin, became best-sellers . Murat Bardakçı is the editor of Talat Pasha’s Black Book *.The 1915-1916 resettlements cited in Talaat Pasha’s Black Book of 702,905 Turks from regions under threat of occupation by Russian forces and of 924,158 Armenians in accordance with 27 May 1915 Tehcir Law are qualified as exposing the genocide. (1)

The proportion of the Armenian population deported and missing in 1917 according to Interior Minister Talaat Pasha’s Black Book is shown in black. (2)

” The New York Times ” correspondence Sabrina Tavernise , wrote on March 8, 2009 from Istanbul , “According to a long-hidden document that belonged to the interior minister of the Ottoman Genocide mapEmpire, 972,000 Ottoman Armenians disappeared from official population records from 1915 through 1916. The documents, given to Mr. Bardakci by Talaat’s widow, Hayriye, before she died in 1983, include lists of population figures. Before 1915, 1,256,000 Armenians lived in the Ottoman Empire, according to the documents. The number plunged to 284,157 two years later, Mr. Bardakci said.” (3)

According to ” http://www.gomidas.org/campaigns , ” A number of Turkish commentators criticized Bardakci’s analysis of Talaat’s statistics, but they were not in a position to take their criticism further. Meanwhile, official Turkish historians attacked Bardakci and played down Talaat’s statistics on Armenians as unimportant. Moreover it mentioned that “Talaat Pasha’s Report on the Armenian Genocide poses a serious challenge to deniers of the Armenian Genocide. The document was found in Talaat’s private papers, and the authenticity of its content can be established with Ottoman records in Turkish archives today. This report puts the number of Ottoman Armenians in 1914 at over 1,500,000 people. This figure is significantly more than the number of Ottoman Armenians claimed by official Turkish historians. The report also finds over one million of these Armenians missing by 1917. “(4)

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*Talat Pasha’s Black Book (printed as “Talat Paşa’nın Evrak-ı Metrukesi”) refers to the handwritten notes printed in a personal notebook form by the Ottoman Minister of Interior on the relocations of both Turkish-Muslim and Armenian Ottoman citizens during World War I. It is disclosed in 2005 by the Turkish journalist Murat Bardakçı. The book was handed over to him by Talat Pasha’s widow, Hayriye Talat Bafralı. Along with a batch of other documents comprising letters he had sent her and telegrammes exchanged between Committee of Union and Progress members. In April 2006, Bardakçı re-edited the black book in full, adding parts that were missing in the first publication with the name “Talat Paşa’nın Evrak-ı Metrukesi”.

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1- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murat_Bardak%C3%A7%C4%B1

2- http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2009-03-13-talaat-pasha-s-black-book-document

3- http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/09/world/europe/09turkey.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

4-http://www.gomidas.org/campaigns

also featured on

Nor Or, April 24, 2014

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Recognized The Armenian Genocide, Turkish Intellectuals

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide 13- Selim Deringil

April 18, 2014 By administrator

By Hambersom Aghbashian

Selim Deringil (born Ottawa, 1951) is a Turkish academic and professor of history at Boğaziçi University, Istanbul. He  earned his doctorate from the University of East Anglia in 1979 and joined Boğaziçi University the same selim-deringilyear ( The University of East Anglia -UEA- is a research-intensive public university located in the city of Norwich, England ). He is a notable lecturer on Late Ottoman History, Ottoman Islam and relationships between Ottomans and Europe. He has lectured in the United States, England, France, Lebanon and Israel. He has written several essays on the fall of the Ottoman Empire and the history of the Republic of Turkey. His book “The Well-Protected Domains: Ideology and the Legitimation of Power in the Ottoman Empire 1876-1909” was awarded the “Turkish Studies Association Fuad Köprülü” prize in 2001.(1)

According to http://outlookaub.com, “Selim Deringil is a Howell Chair visiting professor at the History Department from the Bogazici University where he is a full-time faculty member. He has held various academic positions in U.S., Britain and France, where he has taught late Ottoman History. Deringil is one of the few Turkish historians who openly accept the Armenian Genocide.”(2)

Presenting his analysis of Turkish- Armenian relations at Bosporus University in Istanbul, Prof.  Selim Deringil said, “This was the most difficult paper I have ever written in my life.” “Venturing into the Armenian crisis is like wandering into a minefield.” (www.hr-action.org, 15 May 2000). (3)

According to www.topix.com (April 1, 2010), under the head line (Selim Deringil, Turkish Historian Affirms Armenian Genocide),it mentioned that a prominent Turkish historian told Taraf newspaper in an interview published days before, that “the Young Turks planned to annihilate the entire Armenian population.” Historian Selim Deringil told Taraf that there was also a distinction between the aims of the Young Turks and their predecessor Sultan Abdul Hamid at the turn of the 19th century.(4)

During 25-27 May 2005, the first conference on the Armenian Issue was organized in Istanbul, Turkey. The conference was organized at Boğaziçi University. Selim Deringil was one of the chair persons and participated with his research “Archives and the Armenian Question: “Grabbing the Document by the Throat”(5). Asbarez.com mentioned that “According to organizers–the time has come–ninety years after 1915–that “this tragic event in the history of our country–for Turkey’s own academics and intellectuals to collectively raise their voices that differ from that of the official [state] theses and put forth their own contributions. (6)

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1- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selim_Deringil

2- http://outlookaub.com/2013/03/12/faculty-profile-selim-deringil-visiting-professor/

3- http://www.zoominfo.com/p/Selim-Deringil/694724929

4- http://www.topix.com/forum/world/armenia/THHTJ79VS5UIL0F6K

5- http://h-net.msu.edu/cgi-bin/logbrowse.pl?trx=vx&list=h turk&month =0505&msg  =OhUMtrurxCUxe4jj4FVlKg

6- http://asbarez.com/52201/first-conference-on-the-armenian-issue-organized-in-turkey/

Also Published on

Nor Or, No 16, April 17, 2014

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Turkish Intellectuals

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide 12- Halil Berktay

April 12, 2014 By administrator

By Hambersom Aghbashian

Halil Berktay (born August 27, 1947  ) , is a Turkish historian and social scientist at Sabancı University and columnist for the daily Taraf. He is the son an Halil-Berktayintellectual Turkish Communist family. As a result of his family’s influence, Halil Berktay remained a Maoist for two decades, before becoming “an independent left-intellectual”.

After graduating from Robert College in 1964, Berktay studied economics at Yale University receiving his Bachelor of Arts in 1968 and Master of Arts in 1969. He went on to earn a PhD from Birmingham University in 1990. He worked as lecturer at Ankara University between 1969–1971 and 1978–1983.Between 1992–1997, he taught at both the Middle East Technical University and Boğaziçi University. He was a visiting scholar at Harvard University in 1997, and taught at Sabancı University before returning to Harvard in 2006. His research areas are the history and historiography of Turkish nationalism in the 20th century. He has also written on the construction of Turkish national memory. In September 2005, Berktay and fellow historians, including Murat Belge, Edhem Eldem, Selim Deringil, convened at an academic conference to discuss the fall of the Ottoman Empire.

Berktay has uncovered that the Turkish government purged many of the evidence’s and documents regarding the Armenian Genocide found in the Turkish archives. According to him, the archive cleansing was “most probably implemented by Muharrem Nuri Birgi, a former Turkish ambassador to London and NATO, and Secretary General of the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs.” Berktay also claims that “at the time he was combing the archives, Nuri Birgi met regularly with a mutual friend and at one point, referring to the Armenians, ruefully confessed: ‘We really slaughtered them.’(1)

In an interview with K.Muradian (Aztag Daily- Beirut, Nov. 12, 2005,),  Prof. Berktay said “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”, 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 and it was very clear that simultaneously, extra-legal secret orders for massacres to be organized were sent out to the Teskilât-ı Mahsusa, the special organization of the Committee of Union and Progress.(2)

 

According to Radikal newspaper (Istanbul, June 30, 2000), Nese Duzel asked Berktay in an Interview ” The Armenian genocide question has again been put on the agenda. In Turkey this subject is taboo. We cannot even discuss it amongst ourselves. No one fully understands the matter’s internal dimensions or where these claims originated. In what year and how he events that are the subject of the genocide claim began? Prof. Berktay replied that           “Violence reached its peak in 1915 but these were events that had continued since the 1890s. That is to say that the events began much before the 24th and 25th of April 1915, which the Armenians symbolically mark as a national day of mourning. On the 24th and 25th of April the leaders of Armenian organizations in Istanbul were arrested”. As an answer to another question he sais ” In that period 1.75 million Armenians lived in eastern Anatolia. The official decision to expel the Armenians made by the military regime of the triumvirate was organized in a way to include without exception the entire Armenian population of the region. (3)

As a supporter of open dialogue in Turkey regarding the Armenian Genocide and Turkey’s denial, Berktay has received threats in his country.(1)

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

1- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halil_Berktay

2- https://www.google.com/search?q=berktay&ie( The Specter of the Armenian Genocide Halil Berktay)

3- http://www.atour.com/~aahgn/news/20010105d.html

 

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Halil Berktay, Recognized, Turkish Intellectuals

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