Friday, November 30, 2007

Snow (the book!)

I finished reading Snow this week - it was actually quite nice to read it last Saturday while it snowed all day. For those that don't know, the book is by Orhan Pamuk, who won the Nobel Prize in literature. It took me a good 30 to 50 pages to get into the book, and then it was hard to put down. A fascinating glimpse into the different forces in Turkey (Secular Liberals, Religious fundamentalists, Kurds).

The book takes place in Kars - just a few kilometers from the Armenian border (and greatest historical capital of all, Ani). The references to Armenians are heavily sprinkled throughout the book, including allusions to the Armenian Genocide. Considering he is so famous both in Turkey and out of Turkey, this book has no doubt served as a good reminder to many of the ancient presence of Armenians in a place where today, there are none. Hopefully other Turks will feel more comfortable mentioning a people after decades of having to worry about even saying the word Armenian (forget about the word Genocide).

If you want a very interesting glimpse into what much of Historic Armenia is like today culturally, demographically, architecturally, then you would do well to read this book.

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Thursday, November 29, 2007

King Kocharian imprisons Royal Armenia

HIGHER COURT RENDERS GUILTY VERDICTS IN ROYAL ARMENIA CASE

By Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia’s Court of Appeal on Thursday handed lengthy jail sentences on two prominent businessmen establishing their guilt on charges they were cleared of by the lower court last summer.

Gagik Hakobian, the leading shareholder in the Royal Armenia coffee-packaging company, was found guilty of large-scale organized fraud, smuggling, tax evasion and forgery, and one of the company’s top executives Aram Ghazarian was found guilty of tax evasion, smuggling and forgery. They were sentenced to six and two years in prison, respectively. The Court also ruled on confiscation of half of the defendants’ property, but worth no more than 455 million drams (about $1.5 million) in material damage caused to the state.

Hakobian will also have to pay a dram equivalent of about $556,000 to a private company in compensation of financial damages caused to it.

Presiding judge Suren Ghazarian said the Court of Appeal had found the verdict of the lower court baseless and the charges originally brought against the defendants by prosecutors totally proven.

The judge deducted 21 months from Hakobian’s jail term – the period when he was in pre-trial detention at the National Security Service’s jail. Therefore, his prison term is now four years and about three months, beginning in October 2007.

Aram Ghazarian, who like Hakobian spent nearly two years in pre-trial detention, was released from serving out the main sentence after amnesty was applied to him.

Hakobian and Ghazarian were arrested and charged in October 2005 after publicly accusing senior customs officials of corruption. They spent nearly two years in prison before getting a sensational acquittal by Judge Pargev Ohanian in July 2007.

State prosecutors were quick to challenge the ruling at the Court of Appeals and the latter issued an arrest warrant for Hakobian last September citing his failure to attend the hearings. The businessman, who had returned from Spain, insisted he never intended to flee the country and visited Spain to improve his health condition. The court, however, refused to grant him bail pending trial.

Remarkably, Judge Ohanian was fired by President Robert Kocharian in October after the Justice Council had found him to be in breach of law while adjudicating on a number of unrelated cases. The move, however, was seen by many as retaliation for his controversial acquittal of the Royal Armenia businessmen three months earlier.

Aram Ghazarian, who was released from custody after the verdict was pronounced, told RFE/RL he is going to appeal the verdict at the higher instance “because the appeals court has in fact legitimized the 21 months he spent in detention.”

He said the purpose of the verdict is to take over their business. “I cannot say who wants to do that. But it will be clear shortly,” Ghazarian said.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

290

For those of you who were here in the summer, don't expect an exchange rate of 350 drams to the dollar when you get back. Last weekend, the dollar dropped below 300 for the first time since soon after it was introduced, in fact it dropped 10 percent in one day. It has recovered some of the loss, and today the rate stands at 303, but folks, there's no end in sight from where I'm standing.

So I haven't shared a conversation in a while...

I'm buying a 2 liter coke with a friend last night, and the guy automatically puts it in a plastic bag. I prefer to carry it 2 buildings over than waste a bag, create more trash, and pull it out, handing it back to him. He's like, huh? And my friend, who knows him, says we don't need it. He says, but, it's shameful! (to carry it without a bag). We laugh - a new "amot" (thing to need to feel shame about).

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Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Hey, jan, ghapama!

GhapamaThanksgiving, one of everybody who's tried its favorite holidays, is right around the corner. Lots of eating with friends and family, and miraculously, no cards or wasteful gift giving!

I'm all ready for pecan and pumpkin pies, things we manage to get our hands on even while in Armenia (they don't even have pecans in this country, shocking, no?). But one thing I recommend for your family to add to the menu in the US, is the famous ghapama! Yup, you've heard Harout Pampoukjian croon about it, you've been wondering what's been missing from your thanksgiving table, and here it is... a second centerpiece... an entire, baked pumpkin, with a delicious sweet rice inside. Oooooookh!

So knock on wood, but the fall has been really great this year, and continues to be relatively so. Hopefully this keeps up through December. Because Armenia celebrates Christmas on Jan 6, and it's not such a big deal here compared to New Years, we still haven't got any Holiday decorations showing up on the streets.

So let me finish the story of the gas shutoff. So after Shooshig warned me there would be no gas, and I got home to indeed find my house in a slow cool, I thought it would be ok, since Shooshig said it should be turned on the next evening. Indeed, I happened upon a posted notice the next day that the gas was being turned off for two days, including the hour it would be turned back on! Who knew I should read those notices posted in the stairwell? So that night, not having showered (since I had no hot water), I anxiously awaited that gas that would not come. In the morning, still no gas. Ouch. So by night, when I was supposed to leave the house, I hear this loudspeaker going outside. You can't make any sense of what they're saying, but it goes on and on. Because it's for so long, I assume the police are trying to clear all the parked cars from the side of the road for an important motorcade, when suddenly, I hear the entire announcement again, and the whole thing makes sense. "Attention valuable customers! We are turning the gas back on! Please follow all safety precautions!!"

I check the gas, and a minute later it's on! I jump in the shower after 3 days and it's heaven... and just in time. I had to head out 5 min later. On my way out, I see what must be the gas guy going door to door as reached the floor below mine. I whiz past, almost stopping to say all's well by me (since he's coming to check safety -they're very paranoid about gas safety here), but decide to keep going. When I get home, no gas again! Another cold night, until I wake up cold and my brain clicks, and I realize, he had turned off my gas, since I wasn't home for him to check if everything was ok!! I go down in my pjs, with a light and some pliers, and sure enough, my suspicion was correct... I crank it back on and go home to wait for things to finally heat up.

Now, I heard a few conspiracy theorists say the government turned off the gas on purpose now, just to remind people what things were like in Ter-Petrossians time (cold!). Now I can't say I believe that theory, but I can say it reminded everyone - regardless of whether that was actually his fault or not.

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Saturday, November 17, 2007

Why are there so many Armenians to bitch if there was a genocide?

Did you find that statement insulting? I certainly did! Here's what's been going on at the SF Weekly site - and I hope you take a moment to actually write to them, or MUCH better yet, call them on the phone! 415-536-8122 I don't think they understand that there are really offended human beings behind the comments they've gotten.

It all started on October 30 with an Op-Ed piece by Benjamin Wachs. The first sentence reads:
In San Francisco, April 24 has been proclaimed “Armenian Genocide Day” every year for the past 7, and I never know what to get my girlfriend for it. A sweater? An orphan? Or just a card?

This is followed a week later by an excellent response by Haig Baghdassarian, which Benjamin responds too, without any mention or apology for the above insult.
Yesterday, the SF Weekly decides Armenians have not had nearly enough abuse, and writes something I'd think no publication would ever print:
Oh, yeah, lastly, we also toast to the commenters worldwide that liked our WordPress profile, as well as the ones that promised to launch an advertising boycott against us over our Armenian Genocide coverage. Seventy-three comments, goddamn!

Riddle me this, Armenians:

If there was a genocide, then why is there so many left of you around to bitch?

ZING!
They claim to be "San Francisco's smartest publication". It seems that they've confused being a racist ass, with being clever or irreverent. Please, inform them of the error of their ways!

Friday, November 16, 2007

Chilly

IMG_4459So it's rather chilly out now, and we're already at the time of year when an early snow is possible - though nothing to count on. Unfortunately, it's chilly inside my apartment too, as for some reason the gas has been turned off in the center. Shooshig warned me of this yesterday, and unfortunately, she was right.

I just found the blog of an Iraqi-Armenian who has moved to Armenia. It's quite interesting to get the Iraqi-Armenian perspective.

Today is the 2nd Ter-Petrossian speech at the Opera (tonight). I don't know if I'll go - most the people I know who have gone have been rubberneckers, not supporters, and I am not sure I want to contribute to the swelling of his supposed ranks with rubberneckers. However, he is supposed to provide an explanation for his shortcomings today, which would be quite interesting - though I'm not sure I'd understand all the academic Armenian.

This morning is, unless they changed the date, is the official opening of the Northern Avenue! Now, people have been using it already for weeks, but yesterday it was cordoned off and police were keeping people out, while last minute work was frantically being done. In case you don't know, the Northern Avenue is the new pedestrian avenue linking the two hubs of central Yerevan - the Opera and Republic Square. Most of the buildings lining it are not quite done yet, but the exteriors are for the most part complete. The photo is from just 2 weeks ago.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Albright and Cohen Drilled on Genocide Hypocrisy

Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and former Secretary of Defense William Cohen gave a press conference on their new genocide prevention initiative when hit by drilling questions by reporters on their letter to Speaker Pelosi urging the Genocide Resolution be killed.

I couldn't believe how wordy they have gotten to avoid talking about this issue. The hypocrisy was apparently picked up by an unknown reporter who continued to figure out their logic. See the heated exchange below, and reports on the press conference here:

Herald Tribute

ANCA Press Release

Letter to Speaker Pelosi




Excerpts from the Press Conference Announcing the Genocide Prevention Task Force with Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and former Secretary of Defense William Cohen

National Press Club
November 13, 2007

Q: Aram Hamparian (ANCA / Armenian Weekly)

How do you reconcile your work in trying to build a moral American sentiment, an unconditional consensus against genocide, when just very recently both of you signed letters urging America not to recognize the Armenian Genocide?

[5 second pause]

A: Secretary Madeleine Albright

Well, first of all, I think that this commission is basically about the future, as we both said. We want to look at ways to try to prevent genocide and mass killings. That is the purpose of this commission. And I also think that every former Secretary of State and the [current] Secretary of State recognized terrible things happened to the Armenians - a tragedy. The letter was primarily about whether this was an appropriate time to raise the issue.

A: Secretary William Cohen

First of all, it wasn't a tough question, it was a good question and it's one that we should address head on. The fact is that all the former Secretaries of State, former Secretaries of Defense were concerned about the human suffering that took place between 1915 and 1923. It was also a very deliberate decision to say that we are engaged in warfare at the moment. That we have our sons and daughters who are at great risk and that we felt that to have the resolution brought before the full floor might result in reactions on the part of the Turkish government that could place our sons and daughters in greater jeopardy. So it was a very practical decision that was made. This is not to say that we overlooked what took place in the past and, in any way, are absolving anyone from what took place in the past. But, rather, to say that we can look back and have some lessons learned but say from this point forward, what do we do? How do we marshal public opinion? How do we marshal political action? How do we generate the will to take action in a
society that has been reluctant to do so in the past? . . . This is the way that will preclude things that have taken place in the past from taking place in the future.

Q: Elizabeth Chouldjian (ANCA/Asbarez Armenian News Service):

If we're saying that this isn't the right time to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide, does that mean that you're essentially arguing that for political expediency purposes we shouldn't be taking action on future genocides because of what it could mean to U.S. interests?

A: Secretary Cohen

We're saying there are no absolutes in this. We are going to try to set forth a set of principles that will serve as a guide and hopefully that guide will allow political leadership in this country and elsewhere. This is not something where the United States is advocating unilateral action. What we're talking about is the United States taking a lead in helping shape public opinion, certainly domestically but also internationally. That will involve multiple considerations, multiple political factors that have to be taken into account. What we're saying is that this is an endeavor that's worthwhile, we intend to pursue it, and hopefully we'll be successful in preventing mass killings and genocides in the future
as a result.

A: Secretary Albright

I also do think that it's very important to recognize the fact that even if terrible things happened in the past they do not need to happen in the future. And that is what this is about. In no way does it put a house keeping seal of approval on anybody's behavior.

Q: Reporter [name unknown]

It sounds as if both of you are saying that 'if our friends do it, it's not genocide, if our enemies do it, it is genocide,' with relation to the Armenian Genocide. So, for example, a professor at the University of Haifa in Israel, Ivan says he believes a genocide is ongoing in Gaza and ethnic cleansing in the West Bank. But you folks wouldn't agree with that because Israel is our friend and, therefore, we couldn't say that about Israel. And we can't say that - I just heard you Secretary Cohen, if I could summarize, state - we can't say that about Turkey and the Armenian Genocide because 'our boys and girls are in harm's way.' So if we're going to define genocide by who does and not by what it is, I think your commission is in trouble.

A: Secretary Cohen

Well I don't think either one of us have made that statement. I don't know that the UN has declared that genocide occurred in the Armenian situation. So, we're trying to look forward rather than backwards and the issue of whether genocide is taking place in the West Bank or in Gaza certainly will be part of the task force looking at that as well.

There is an element of pragmatism. If someone else's son or daughter is in harm's way, that's a factor that I, as an American citizen, and I, as a former Secretary of Defense, have to take into account, and would. I think anyone serving in public office necessarily has to have a set of balancing factors to take into account.

It's not an absolute. This will not be a document that says, 'this is when the line is crossed and this is the action we will take.' These are going to be guidelines. I think they, in themselves, will serve a very valuable purpose because it will help to at least raise the issue to a level of both domestic and international concern. Hopefully stirring action that will prevent them from taking place. That is our goal.

A: Secretary Albright

Let me just speak to this because I think that you have pointed out why this is difficult. These are issues people have talked about a long time and they may come out in statements and then, ultimately, when you're in the government (as we both have been) and you have to make very tough decisions, you have to look at the overall picture. I think we have to admit that. Otherwise, we're not going to get off the ground here. These are very, very hard issues.

I definitely would not accept your definition that if friends do it it's okay, if enemies do it it's not. I find that just an unacceptable premise. I do think that it is very important to keep in mind what this task force is going to do. It is going to set forth guidelines for practical action by, primarily, the United States government. Which is why we want to present it by the end of next year. And the point here is, and I've been in enough discussions where you can have all kinds of emotional arguments about why something is wrong and then you never get it off the ground, because you ultimately have to take practical action. And that is what's happening in the United States about Darfur at the moment, where people need practical steps in order to deal with that. And that is what this task force is going to do. We're not going to, I hope, get ourselves into emotional appeals because that does not work.

Q: Nareg Seferian (Armenian Reporter)

As has been previously mentioned, the two of you have personally worked towards ensuring that the United States government does not take a stand recognizing the Armenian Genocide . . . How can you provide credibility that your recommendation will be of practical use to the United States in its foreign policy and will not be just words on a piece of paper that will be acceptable, but which the US will not follow up on because it's simply not politically expedient?

A: Secretary Cohen

You talk about political expediency. As Secretary of Defense, I had responsibility for every man and woman who is serving in our armed forces. And, yes, I would have to take into account whether or not I was placing them in greater jeopardy in order to go back and make a declaration about something that happened back in 1915 and 1923. I would have to weigh that. Frankly, I think the former Secretaries of Defense, Republican and Democrat alike, all came to the same conclusion: we would not put our men and women in greater danger under these circumstances. Now, does that mean that we are not in a position to look forward in saying, 'here are some of the things that have happened in the past, here are some of the things we did not do in the past, here are some things we think need to be done in the future.' And future leaders will have to take into account the same sort of moral considerations. There is no absolute right or wrong. It's not all black and white. We're going to have to take these into account. You as a private citizen, will be in a position to say, 'Here is a document issued by this esteemed group. What do you Mr. President, what do you Mr. Secretary intend to do about atrocities currently taking place in x country?'

... So I think that we are certainly in a position, having dealt with ethnic cleansing in the past, to take that experience as well as what took place in Armenia, as well as what took place in Rwanda, now in Darfur, and say, 'this is how we have to move in the future.'

A: Secretary Albright

Let me also say, I think it's important that you know what we actually meant in the letter and I think that all the former Secretaries, in fact, while we were Secretaries recognized that mass killings and forced exile had taken place. And that we also said that the US policy has been, all along, for reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia on this particular issue. I do think that one of the things this task force will ultimately recommend is that the parties to the problem have to acknowledge what happened and I think that is part of what the issue is. . . We are trying to put this within a context that will make practical activity at the time something that the US government can undertake. There is not one answer to it all. And that is one of the things we are going to be looking at. I honestly think that is essential that we make clear that this task force is about the future, about preventing genocide and also looking at what the circumstances are.

Monday, November 12, 2007

How to cheat an Armenian...

If you're an airline, this year's answer for November is to switch from quoting prices for plane tickets in dollars, to Euros. No big deal, right? So a $900 ticket on October 31 costs 612 Euros - and the price in dram of course is unchanged. WRONG! The $900 ticket of October 31 is now about 900 euros, and the price in dollars and dram just shot up a WHOPPING FORTY SEVEN PERCENT! (Yes, 47%).

Let me be the first to wish you a Shnorhavor Nor Dari yev Surp Dz'nunt on behalf of the airlines here. You need not wish them a happy new year in return, because already it's going to be the best they've ever had!

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Friday, November 09, 2007

Georgia beatings

It's disappointing to see that the last vestiges of Georgia's democratic government credentials have now crumbled as well. In events that mirrored those in Yerevan 3 years ago quite closely, peaceful opposition demonstrators had the crap beat out of them for blocking traffic in front of the parliament building. I watched the footage on a few channels with CNN showing very minor stuff, BBC showing more, and EuroNews showing some very serious ass-whooping with batons and boots, clearly targeting perfectly peaceful people. The national ombudsman, observing the events was also given a good beating which he says only got worse when he told them who he was.

The differences are also interesting. Saakashvili declared a state of emergency first in the capital, then the whole country. And now he has announced early presidential elections (in 2 months). And though I am uneducated on this topic, I tend to feel that Georgia's opposition has more legitimacy and support than the opposition in Armenia. There is also talk of earlier Parliamentary elections, but anyway we'll see how things turn out there. Certainly the largely corrupt batch of opportunists here in Armenia which we call our opposition is watching these events closely, as their last major protest (which ended in the aforementioned beatings) were themselves inspired by the Rose Revolution in Georgia a year before that!

I read a totally unrelated article about a nicotine vaccine that's been developed. It stops the affects of nicotine on the brain. Quitting rates shot up from a pathetic 6% to a slightly less pathetic 16% - but those who didn't quit did manage to halve the number of cigarettes they smoke as well. If we could just manage to vaccinate every single smoker in Armenia, restaurants would be only 40% as smoky! :-)

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Saturday, November 03, 2007

A long open letter to Turks

A long open letter to Turks
from Raffi Kojian

I'm writing this letter after reading Mustafa Akyol’s open letter to Armenians. I think his was a well written, thoughtful letter that helped many Armenians to understand an open minded Turks position and thoughts. This letter, I hope, will help you understand us. I hope that I can show you what your government has been doing to you as well, and the consequences.

Background

First, let me say, I have followed Turkish-Armenian relations very closely, followed developments as they occurred, and often read many articles from the Turkish press. I have also traveled to the homeland of my grandparents in Marash and Kayseri – so far from Ethiopia where I was born, so far from California where I grew up, and so far even from Yerevan, where I live. So these are not thoughts from out of the dark, but the generalizations I may make are simply my observations, and should be considered no more than that.

We have not been allowed to have a normal dialogue, primarily because your government has done so much to prevent it - from the closing of our land borders, to the criminalization of the mention of the Armenian Genocide, even by Turks abroad. Many of you think that Armenians in the Diaspora are raised to hate Turks – most of us are not. We are simply taught our history, and most have never actually met a Turk in person. If you tell a child such a horrible truth, and that child never has a chance to meet a Turk in person, then a Turk is not real, not a person, and the emotions/feelings a child will harbor are a natural consequence which is hard to overcome. The reason most Armenians have never met a Turk of course, is the genocide itself.

The Genocide

As for the truth, there is no doubt of what happened, and your government knows this well. Many of you already know the truth of what happened, and many more of you suspect that your government – as is often the case with governments – is lying to you. You want to believe them of course, because the truth in this case is not pleasant at all, and then you worry about the consequences of admitting it was a genocide even more than whether you are being lied to.

Why do I say your government knows the truth? When Heath Lowry was penning letters for the Turkish Ambassador to America, he often referred to the Armenian Genocide without quotes or doubt – something he would never have dared do if he had thought that it could cause offense for his employer. It is clear from the exchange – which was accidentally mailed to Holocaust scholar Robert Jay Lifton – that Heath Lowry, Ambassador Nuzhet Kandemir, and by extension Kandemirs bosses in Ankara all believe the genocide happened. Their only concern then is how best to repress recognition of it. This exchange, which is well documented analyzed in Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Vol. 9, Number 1, Spring 1995, pages 1-22 can be found online and is well worth your time to read. Perhaps though you should consider with even greater weight the simple fact that the Turkish government, which has spent tens of millions of dollars repressing genocide recognition worldwide, which has allowed relations with countries like Switzerland, France and Canada to temporarily suffer over the genocide issue, and who keep proposing to study the subject further with Armenia, have never managed to pay for a single solid book to be written which any scholar can point to as a proof that a genocide did not happen. Not even a preliminary paper on the topic.

Now for the irrefutable truth itself. Yes, it was genocide no matter how you slice it. When the US Congress debates whether to recognize it, you should note that debate centers around whether it will offend Turkey and harm military ties, not once does a Congressman say they are against recognizing it because it did not happen. The world has not been censoring the topic like Turkey has, and 92 years after the events, a very solid, indisputable chain of events is documented which neatly falls under the definition of genocide. Many Turks parrot their government’s arguments that it was not genocide. Let me address two of them:

-“But Armenians were a sixth column, they were fighting for the Russians, they killed some Turks, etc.” - Folks, this is not an excuse to commit genocide, and it does not excuse genocide. If Armenians had not been so oppressed, most of them would not have preferred Russian rule, but that is all irrelevant to whether the acts against the Armenians were genocide or not. -“But the Armenians were just being relocated, and some died, perhaps there were some excesses, but it was not genocide.” - If this were the case, then they would have been allowed to actually move. Forget the fact that the government did not make a single effort to house or feed the Armenians along the deportation routes straight into the desert, they were not even allowed to take their own belongings and money to feed themselves. They were across the board attacked by their own Turkish soldier escorts, raped, murdered, attacked (again with Turkish soldiers watching) by Kurds, kidnapped, etc. Most who made it to the desert were killed there. There was not exception to this pattern, and this could not have happened without central government orders and direction. The intent cannot be any clearer. The fact that these unarmed people went without any resistance, like sheep to their deaths is further proof that there could have been no serious claim that it was done to eliminate a threat. -“But look! There are still Armenians in Istanbul!” This tiny remainder, who is so downtrodden and oppressed to this day, is neither something to be proud of, nor proof that there wasn't a genocide in Anatolia.

In addition to this, let me add, that if there was any truth to the claim that Armenians were a threat, and the intent was not extermination, then explain why, after all the men of approximate ages 15 to 60 had already been wiped out, the women, children and elderly were still deported. Could there have been any threat left?

Larry Derfner wrote in the Jerusalem Post on October 31, 2007 the following in response to the infamous philosophy of “This is a matter for historians to decide,”:

“The historians, however, decided a long time ago. More than 125 Holocaust scholars - including Elie Wiesel, the late Raul Hilberg, Deborah Lipstadt, Daniel Goldhagen and Yehuda Bauer - have signed ads in The New York Times demanding acknowledgment that the Ottoman Turks committed genocide against the Armenians.

“Wiesel testified in Congress on behalf of such a resolution. The International Association of Genocide Scholars - which is studded with Jewish names - holds the same view as a matter of course.

“SOMEWHERE around three reputable historians disagree. They are led by Bernard Lewis, who may be the world's foremost scholar of Islam, but who, among world scholars, is certainly the foremost enthusiast of Turkey.

“There are probably fewer historians who doubt the Armenian genocide than there are scientists who doubt evolution. Maybe we should reserve judgment on evolution, too.”

Need more convincing? The Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Commission – which had a majority Turkish members – primarily associated with the Turkish government and primarily people who had publicly said it was not a genocide, decided to have a neutral third party study the issue, and issue a report. They regretted the decision and tried to prevent the report, and ended up disbanding the group, but the report by the International Center for Transitional Justice was completed regardless, and is also online. The summary of the conclusion is: “The crucial issue of genocidal intent is contested, and this legal memorandum is not intended to definitively resolve particular factual disputes. Nonetheless, we believe that the most reasonable conclusion to draw from the various accounts referred to above of the Events is that, notwithstanding the efforts of large numbers of "righteous Turks" who intervened on behalf of the Armenians, at least some of the perpetrators of the Events knew that the consequence of their actions would be the destruction, in whole or in part, of the Armenians of eastern Anatolia, as such, or acted purposively towards this goal, and, therefore, possessed the requisite genocidal intent. Because the other three elements identified above have been definitively established, the Events, viewed collectively, can thus be said to include all of the elements of the crime of genocide as defined in the Convention, and legal scholars as well as historians, politicians, journalists and other people would be justified in continuing to so describe them.”

On June 13, 2005 the International Association of Genocide Scholars wrote a letter to PM Erdogan stating there was no need for his call to study the issue further with Armenia, there was plenty of study already and it was clearly genocide. They included 6 points which I will include below – but the letter is well worth reading:

The Armenian Genocide is corroborated by the international scholarly, legal, and human rights community:

1) Polish jurist Raphael Lemkin, when he coined the term genocide in 1944, cited the Turkish extermination of the Armenians and the Nazi extermination of the Jews as defining examples of what he meant by genocide.
2) The killings of the Armenians is genocide as defined by the 1948 United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
3) In 1997 the International Association of Genocide Scholars, an organization of the world’s foremost experts on genocide, unanimously passed a formal resolution affirming the Armenian Genocide.
4) 126 leading scholars of the Holocaust including Elie Wiesel and Yehuda Bauer placed a statement in the New York Times in June 2000 declaring the “incontestable fact of the Armenian Genocide” and urging western democracies to acknowledge it.
5) The Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide (Jerusalem), and the Institute for the Study of Genocide (NYC) have affirmed the historical fact of the Armenian Genocide.
6) Leading texts in the international law of genocide such as William A. Schabas’s Genocide in International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2000) cite the Armenian Genocide as a precursor to the Holocaust and as a precedent for the law on crimes against humanity.

The mountain of evidence is so great, I could go on and on. Once you start to delve into it, then you can imagine how an Armenian is skeptical that any educated person could have even briefly looked into the matter and claim it was not a genocide. If you believe that half of what the New York Times wrote at the time is true, or half of what Ambassador Morgenthau recounted is true, and you don't believe it was a genocide, it is only because you don't want to believe it. What other way can I see it?

What to do today

Now, moving on from the genocide itself, where are we? Well as you know, the genocide has become big news in Turkey. Of course it is usually still in quotes, and preceded by “Armenian say”, but overall there is a new dialog within Turkey. This is a great development, but the cost has not been small. Armenians in Turkey, and Turks who have come to accept the genocide both usually try to tell Armenians on the outside to keep quiet, not to push too hard, to allow more time. But that can’t happen, it’s not realistic nor I think productive. Realistically, you cannot ask a victim to shut up in order to allow the perpetrator of a crime to come to terms with it himself. It is not normal, human, nor fair. Yes, I know the genocide was a crime that was not committed by any Turk alive today, but the crime of denying it is a daily fact of live in Turkey and by many Turks abroad, and Armenians have waited almost a century for a simple apology, recognition and reparations. Should we be asked to wait some more? As for the request to not press now, not to push, because there is now a dialogue in Turkey, to this I say the dialogue would have never come if we had not pushed so hard for worldwide recognition, and continued pushes will only stimulate further discussion.

As Turkey continues to try to debate the genocide, the country and people appear detached from reality, and rather than coming to terms with something that happened so long ago, it continues to haunt them in a way that Germans today are liberated from. Apologizing and giving reparations is, in the long term, in Turkey's interest. I know it seems convenient for me to say this to you, but really, when a foreigner meets a Turk in the west, the one thing they usually know about Turkey is that it is continuing to lie about the genocide, and has not apologized. Turkey has abnormal relations with Armenia still due to the genocide. Turks who take their government policy a step further, end up murdering peacemakers like Hrant Dink, thinking they are doing their country a great service, and clearly a number of Turks - including the police who arrested them agree with this approach. The only way to get past all of this, to remove the psychological burden, is to come clean.

Conclusion

Having learned much about Turks, again and again it is our similarities that stand out so strongly, not our differences – a fact noted time and again by Armenians and Turks who spend some time together – but the simple mention of the genocide, something no Armenian can brush under a rug for any reason usually creates a wall with most Turks, or even worse, a dismissive comment. That has to change. Like Jews and Germans, we need to be able to have made peace and justice with our past, so we can sit next to each other as neighbors have to, talk about every subject without – even the genocide – and eat our great cuisines, listen to our magical music, and finally live at peace with each other.

After all this I've said however, trying to explain our point of view, in the end perhaps the best way for you to understand us is to imagine what it's like to be in our shoes. Knowing that all of our people were murdered and deported from their homes, and those that survived have had to face a massive international campaign to hide the truth. For most of that time we had no country of our own to even raise the issue internationally. Ask yourselves, like one Turk did, Would you wish to be an Armenian in 1915?


For the original letter, with all the links, visit: http://www.armeniapedia.org/index.php?title=A_long_open_letter_to_Turks

Friday, November 02, 2007

This how it's done.

Rattling the Cage: Jews of power, Jews of truth

Larry Derfner, THE JERUSALEM POST

Oct. 31, 2007

How long are Israel and its lobby in Washington going to go on living this ridiculous, transparent lie? How long are they going to hock the world about the Holocaust while acting as Turkey's number two accomplice, number one being the White House, in denying the Armenian genocide? Again, Congress has demonstrated it won't recognize that the Ottoman Empire, Turkey's predecessor, deliberately wiped out about 1.5 million Armenians in 1915-17. Again, the president of the United States has scared Congress off with a big assist from the Anti-Defamation League and other American Jewish "defense" organizations. (Historically, the American Jewish Committee has led the Israel lobby's effort to shut Congress up about the genocide and the Ottoman Empire's culpability.)

This time, the main reason given was American troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. Without Turkey's good will and cooperation, it was argued, the US would not be able to get weapons and equipment to its soldiers in battle. This is obviously a serious concern - but the White House, Israel and the Israel lobby have been hushing up the Armenian genocide for decades, when there were no American troops in Iraq or Afghanistan. This is not the real reason.

The real reason is that in war and peace, Turkey is a critical strategic ally and economic partner of the US and Israel, and the US and Israel do not want to risk upsetting this ally, so, with help in Congress from the ADL, AJC and the like, they enforce the lie that there was no Armenian genocide. Or if there was a genocide, it is not clear who was responsible. Or if it is clear that the Ottoman Empire was responsible, it is not clear that Turkey should inherit the guilt.

"This is a matter for historians to decide," goes the Israeli and American Jewish establishment line.

The historians, however, decided a long time ago. More than 125 Holocaust scholars - including Elie Wiesel, the late Raul Hilberg, Deborah Lipstadt, Daniel Goldhagen and Yehuda Bauer - have signed ads in The New York Times demanding acknowledgment that the Ottoman Turks committed genocide against the Armenians.

Wiesel testified in Congress on behalf of such a resolution. The International Association of Genocide Scholars - which is studded with Jewish names - holds the same view as a matter of course.

SOMEWHERE around three reputable historians disagree. They are led by Bernard Lewis, who may be the world's foremost scholar of Islam, but who, among world scholars, is certainly the foremost enthusiast of Turkey.

There are probably fewer historians who doubt the Armenian genocide than there are scientists who doubt evolution. Maybe we should reserve judgment on evolution, too.

A key Jewish argument for continuing this policy of denial is that breaking it would endanger the 20,000 or so Jews of Turkey, whose leaders have warned against crossing their government on this matter. But if Israel and its lobby in Washington really believe this, then they've as much as sentenced the 25,000 Jews in Iran to death, haven't they? Is anyone in the Israeli government or AIPAC suggesting that they lower the volume on Iran for the sake of Iranian Jewry? So the Turkish Jewish community isn't a real reason for denying the Armenian genocide, it's another excuse.

The one and only genuine moral argument for public Jewish denial of the Armenian genocide is the Jewish people's historical debt to Turkey. For 500 years, up through the time of the Nazis, Turkey gave life-saving refuge to Jews running from persecution, and did so in a welcoming spirit.

This historical truth can't be denied, either. And it presents Jews with a heavy moral dilemma. For Jews to recognize the Armenian genocide is an undeniable act of disloyalty to Turkey, to which we owe an unpayable debt of gratitude.

But I don't think it's terminal disloyalty, I don't think it's unforgivable disloyalty. With time, it's not something that can't be made up for with other acts of Jewish or Israeli gratitude.

Denying the Armenian genocide, on the other hand, is an unforgivable, terminal betrayal not only of the Armenians, but of truth, of decency, of the legacy of the Holocaust, of ourselves as Jews, of ourselves as people.

What's more, the Jewish moral debt to Turkey is at best a secondary motive in Israel's and the Israel lobby's campaign of genocide denial. Their overriding concern is Israeli security and economics.

Which, of course, is a 100% legitimate concern. Security and economics are the primary concern of every nation, and Israel is part of the family of nations. But the thing is this: If Israel and the Israel lobby can pursue practical self-interest alone, they can't insist that the rest of the world act like Righteous Gentiles.

They can't go on intoning that "the world stood silent" during the Holocaust when they - the leaders of the Jewish world - act as front-line enforcers of silence on the Armenian genocide.

It's one or the other: morality or realpolitik. As a nation of the world, Israel, along with its lobby in Washington, have always chosen realpolitik. What they may not know, however, is that by now the world sees through them.

The world doesn't take seriously what an Israeli leader or an American Jewish macher has to say about the Six Million, not when it sees that same Israeli leader and American Jewish macher shushing everyone over the murders of 1.5 million other innocents.

Either you value truth first, or you value power first. Every Jew, every person, makes the choice.

For the original article, and to leave comments, visit the Jerusalem Post.

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Tired of repression...

I thought things in Armenia would get freer, more democratic over the years, but I keep getting proven wrong. You'd think a very strong government and weak opposition would make them feel able to take some open criticism, but that's not the case at all.

The recent firing for the first time in history of an Armenian judge, Pargev Ohanian was because he acquitted a pair of businessmen who had for years been harassed and jailed for complaining that the tax authorities were corrupt, and trying to exact bribes. Of course everybody in Armenia knows this, but also of course, not a single other businessman has come forward to complain with this example.

Recently, Armenia also decided that it would liberalize wire-tapping rules - now, no court authorization is necessary. Lovely. A couple of weeks earlier there was a new law passed that you can no longer simply buy a sim card for your mobile phone without registering your name and address. In other words, they want to be able to track every single person, and every single call. This is supposedly to prevent terrorism, but no doubt it will encourage state terrorism.

And today I read that a "dissident" TV station was raided by tax authorities yesterday. The Gyumri-based GALA TV was one of only two regional broadcasters that agreed to air the speech as a paid advertisement on October 14. 1 week later they were raided. The link and message being sent are meant to be clear.

Let me also say the US is in many ways the same, with the patriot act, reckless wiretapping that phone companies illegally allowed at government request, judges being pressured there, too, Guantanamo, stolen elections (2000 presidential election), etc. Now I don't like to compare Armenia to poor examples, but I just want a little perspective for those who automatically love to think poorly of Armenia.

This all reinforces my belief that government tends towards the evil and repressive, and that the government that governs least, is the one that governs best. As long as the government protects your rights (including your right to a clean environment, competitive market, etc)... then they can butt out of the rest of your life.