Category: Ergun Kırlıkovalı

  • I Smell a Rat in Ararat

    I Smell a Rat in Ararat

    I thank Enis Pinar for providing the heads up below.  I wrote the following short response to POV. 

    I suggest that everyone in this group write a paragraph or two in response.  Together, let’s show a strong  reaction to defamation.

    Ergun KIRLIKOVALI

    pbs point of view

    From: Ergun
    Sent: Tuesday, October 24, 2023 1:14 PM
    To: feedback@pov.org
    Subject: I Smell a Rat in Ararat

    I Smell a Rat in Ararat

    It’s a disgrace that America’s most revered public TV succumbed to the relentless pressure of the deceitful Armenian lobby and aired a crude propaganda piece titled “Aurora’s Sunrise” cultivating pure hatred against Turks.  The animated movie was sprinkled with a generous dose of exaggerations, distortions, and  fabrications.

    The film relates the story of Arshaluys “Aurora” Madriganian, a female survivor of the so-called Armenian “genocide” —a long-discredited political claim—who after being depicted as the victim of multiple rapes and other brutalities at the hands of the Ottoman Turks escapes to America.  She becomes the real-life star in a 1919 movie titled “Auction of Souls” produced by the Near East Relief organization, which allegedly raised $116 million dollars to help President Woodrow Wilson’s unsuccessful effort to establish an Armenian homeland in Western Türkiye after WW1.

    What’s wrong with this picture?  Well… uh….everything.

    Do you get even a whiff of any of the following facts concerning time periods before, during, and after World War One? 

    • Most Ottoman-Armenians took up arms against their own government.
    • Most Ottoman-Armenians committed supreme treason by joining the invading enemy armies.
    • Most Ottoman-Armenians betrayed at the worst possible time in the life of the Ottoman Empire: when the most powerful allied fleet attacked it from the West (remember Gallipoli?) and the equally formidable Tsarist Russian armies, from the East (remember Van rebellion by traitor Armenians?)
    • Most Ottoman-Armenians established terrorist organizations going back to 1870s, 1880s and 1890s (such as the Union of Salvation,  The Black Cross Society, The Protectors of the Fatherland, Armenakan, The Hunchakian Revolutionary Party, The Armenian Revolutionary Federation, and in the 20th Century, Genesis, the Armenian Secret Army of Armenian Genocide, The Justice Commandos of the Armenian Genocide and many others.)  These were no different than Hamas today killing old and young, women, children, and even the babies, triggering a tit-for-tat terrible war.  Turks only defended their home against these blood-thirsty Armenian terrorists who chose to serve foreign invaders instead of their own government and homeland. 
    • Do you get any indication of Armenian agitation, intimidation, and terror (in that order), treason, territorial demands, and the Turkish suffering at the hands of Armenian terrorists, since 1862?  Yes, for a whopping 161 years and counting? 
    • No, I do not get any whiff of the above, but I do smell the rat in Ararat in that Armenian-financed propaganda film. 

    And about the unfortunate and baseless slanders defaming Ataturk, I will only remind the reader a couple of simple things that anyone can easily appreciate: 

    “In 1981, the centennial of Atatürk’s birth, his memory was honored by the United Nations and UNESCO, which declared it The Atatürk Year in the World and adopted the Resolution on the Atatürk Centennial, describing him as “the leader of the first struggle given against colonialism and imperialism” and a “remarkable.”

    And here, you can hear the sound recording of President John F. Kennedy’s remarks on the 25th anniversary of the death of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, a brilliant military leader, reformist, visionary, and first President of the modern Republic of Turkey. In his speech, President Kennedy compliments Atatürk’s leadership, describes the United States’ historical relationship with Turkey, and characterizes the Turkey’s independence as an example of national self-reliance.

    If you wish to know more about this subject, please click on this link:  www.MythsandRealities.com .

    Ergun KIRLIKOVALI
    Researcher & Writer
    A concerned Turkish American
    Son of Turkish Survivors of Armenian Brutalities during 1912-1922
    (My home address and cell phone were entered here)

  • In Memoriam: Ziyaeddin Ahmet Akçasu

    In Memoriam: Ziyaeddin Ahmet Akçasu

    IN MEMORIAM: Another magnificent Turk who contributed greatly to Nuclear & Macromolecular Science: Prof. Dr. Ziya Akcasu… We lost him last year. Please read the modest eulogy below to appreciate his incredible value to science, as we practice it today. His nephew, Dr. Ersed Akcasu, also a great scientist and even a greater entrepreneur who recently attended our Holiday Party celebrating volunteerism and philanthropy, lives and works in San Diego.

    Dear Dr. Akcasu, thank you posthumously for your contributions to Polymer Science which I practice today. We love you and you will be profoundly missed..    Ergun Kirlikovali.

    Ziyaeddin Ahmet Akcasu

    BUYUK BIR TURK BILIM ADAMINI GECEN SENE KAYBETTIK: PROF DR ZİYA AKÇASU… Nukleer ve Polimer alanlarinda buluslariyla ve ogretileriyle bugun bizlere yol gosteren, sayisiz buluslara imza atan, adina bilimsel kongreler duzenlenen bu muhtesem bilim adamini en derin sevgi ve saygiyla aniyoruz…

  • ERGUN KIRLIKOVALI: Rebuttal to ZAMAN article by Cengiz Aktar:”DEEP DINKISTS” ARE DISTORTING HISTORY

    ERGUN KIRLIKOVALI: Rebuttal to ZAMAN article by Cengiz Aktar:”DEEP DINKISTS” ARE DISTORTING HISTORY

    images

    Rebuttal to ZAMAN article by Cengiz Aktar:

    “DEEP DINKISTS” ARE DISTORTING HISTORY

    TO MAKE GENOCIDE CHARGES STICK

    Jewish holocaust is a court-proven fact; Armenian Genocide, a discredited political

    claim. Holocaust is supported by a competent tribunal, Nuremberg; where is the

    Armenians’ Nuremberg?

    To call 1915 a genocide would be to equate much-discredited Armenian narrative

    to factual Jewish experience. It would be an insult to the silent memory of six

    million Jews who were killed just for being Jews. Whereas Armenians resorted to

    terrorism (1862-1922, Nalbandian) revolts (1877-1920, McCarthy) and treason

    (1914-1922, Pope) and caused 515,000 Turks and other Muslims to meet their

    tragic ends at the hands of Armenian revolutionaries. Jews did not commit any of

    those heinous acts in 1930s or 1940s. So how can any fair person treat the two

    events similarly? The UN, the US, the UK, Australia, Israel, Sweden and many

    other countries reject the use of the term genocide to describe the Turkish-

    The landmark decision of the highest court in Europe, the European Court of

    Human Rights (ECHR) dated Dec 17, 2013 on Perincek vs Switzerland also

    supports this position. Convicting Switzerland for violating Turks’ rights to free

    speech and expression, ECHR verdict was based on solid facts and reasoning.

    ECHR correctly stated that “[t]he existence of a ‘genocide’, which was a precisely

    defined legal concept, was not easy to prove… (ECHR) doubted that there could

    be a general consensus… given that historical research was, by definition, open to

    discussion and a matter of debate, without necessarily giving rise to final

    conclusions or to the assertion of objective and absolute truths”.

    Thus, the ECHR created a legal precedent of inadmissibility of any comparison

    between the court-proven Jewish Holocaust and the discredited Armenian political

    claims, as the latter lacks what the former clearly has: concrete historical facts,

    clear legal basis, and existence of the “acts had been found by an international

    court to be clearly established”.

    If one needs further proof of the fallacy of the Armenian Genocide, one can simply

    look at this photo at http://www.ethocide.com/ which refutes the entire Armenian

    narrative. Do these people in the photo look like “poor, starving, unarmed, helpless

    Armenians? Taken in 1906—nine years before 1915–it depicts cadets in full

    uniform at an Armenian Military Academy in Bulgaria, arrogantly brandishing

    their Russian-made MOSIN rifles. The Armenian Revolutionary Federation used

    these weapons since 1893 in Eastern Anatolia and the Caucasus, and the Balkans,

    murdering Muslim, mostly Turkish, civilians—including my grandparents and

    exterminating the Turkish population of the village of KIRLIKOVA (hence my last

    name.) My father, as a one-year-old baby, was the sole survivor under conditions

    Let the historical facts speak for themselves:

    1914 “…Armenian nationalist movement had blossomed since the turn of the

    (20th) century, armed and encouraged by the Russian, and several minor coups

    were repressed by the YOUNG TURK government before 1914. Denied the right to

    a national congress in October 1914, moderate Armenian politicians fled to

    BULGARIA, but extreme nationalists crossed the border to form a rebel division

    with Russian equipment. It invaded in December an slaughtered an estimated

    120,000 non-Armenians while the TURKISH ARMY was preoccupied with

    mobilization and the CAUCASIAN FRONT OFFENSIVE TOWARD

    Source: The Macmillan Dictionary of The First World War, Stephen Pope &

    Elizabeth-Anne Wheal, Macmillan Reference Books, London, 1997, ISBN 0 333

    68909 7 (and 2003, ISBN 0 85052 979-4,) page 34.

    1917 “…For fourteen days, I followed the Euphrates; it is completely out of the

    question that I during this time would not have seen at least some of the Armenian

    corpses, that according to Mrs. Stjernstedt’s statements, should have drifted along

    the river en masse at that time. A travel companion of mine, Dr. Schacht, was also

    travelling along the river. He also had nothing to tell when we later met in

    Baghdad… …In summary, I think that Mrs. Stjernstedt, somewhat uncritically, has

    accepted the hair-raising stories from more or less biased sources, which formed

    the basis for her lecture…”

    Source: H.J. Pravitz, A Swedish officer, Nya Dagligt Allehanda, 23 April, 1917

    issue (A Swedish Newspaper published from 1859 to 1944)

    1923 “…In some towns containing ten Armenian houses and thirty Turkish houses,

    it was reported that 40,000 people were killed, about 10,000 women were taken to

    the harem, and thousands of children left destitute; and the city university

    destroyed, and the bishop killed. It is a well- known fact that even in the last war

    the native Christians, despite the Turkish cautions, armed themselves and fought

    on the side of the Allies. In these conflicts, they were not idle, but they were well

    supplied with artillery, machine guns and inflicted heavy losses on their

    Source: Lamsa, George M., a missionary well known for his research on

    Christianity, The Secret of the Near East, The Ideal Press, Philadelphia 1923, p 133

    1928 “…Few Americans who mourn, and justly, the miseries of the Armenians, are

    aware that till the rise of nationalistic ambitions, beginning with the ‘seventies, the

    Armenians were the favored portion of the population of Turkey, or that in the

    Great War, they traitorously turned Turkish cities over to the Russian invader; that

    they boasted of having raised an Army of one hundred and fifty thousand men to

    fight a civil war, and that they burned at least a hundred Turkish villages and

    exterminated their population…”

    Source: John Dewey, The New Republic, 12 November 1928

    1976 “… The deafening drumbeat of the propaganda, and the sheer lack of

    sophistication in argument which comes from preaching decade after decade to a

    convinced and emotionally committed audience, are the major handicaps of

    Armenian historiography of the (Armenian) diaspora today…”

    Source: Dr. Gwynne Dyer, a London-based independent journalist, 1976

    1988 “…In all the countries, under all the regimes, the staff of the armies in the

    field evacuate towards the back, the populations which live in the zone of fights

    and can bother the movement of the troops, especially if these populations are

    hostile. Public opinion does not find anything to criticize to these measures,

    obviously painful, but necessary. During winter of 1939-1940, the radical –

    socialist French government evacuated and transported in the Southwest of

    France, notably in the Dordogne, the entire population of the Alsatian villages

    situated in the valley of the Rhine, to the east of the Maginot line. This German-

    speaking population, and even sometimes germanophil, bothered the French army.

    It stayed in the South, far from the evacuated homes and sometimes destroyed until

    1945….And nobody, in France, cried out for inhumanity…”

    Source: Georges de Maleville, lawyer and a specialist on the Armenian question,

    La Tragédie Arménienne de 1915, (The Armenian tragedy of 1915), Editions F.

    Sorlot-F. Lanore, Paris, 1988, p 61-63

    2005 “…From 1911 to 1923, the Ottoman Empire and the people of Turkey

    participated in five long, hard, and destructive wars. These were the Tripolitanian

    War / Trablusgarb Harbi / Türk Italyan Harbı (1911-1912), the two Balkan Wars

    (1912-1913), World War I (1914-1918), and the Turkish War of National

    Liberation (1918-1923). To most Turkish people who lived through that era, these

    wars were really only one, the Seferberlik, or period of mobilization, which went

    on continuously throughout these years.

    During these wars, the entire infrastructure of life in the Ottoman Empire

    was destroyed. Fields were left barren and uncultivated; roads and railroad lines

    were destroyed and their equipment wrecked; harbors and quays were blown up by

    repeated bombing, and many of the people living nearby were killed; Istanbul and

    the other great cities of the empire were partially destroyed by bombing,

    bombarding and great fires. The entire nation, thus, was for all practical purposes

    destroyed. One of the greatest miracles of Atatürk’s leadership during and after

    the Turkish War of National Liberation was the manner in which he was able to

    raise the Turkish people from this wreckage and lead them to revive and

    reconstruct what became the Turkish Republic.

    In the midst of all this destruction, no fewer than 30 percent, one third, of all

    the people who lived in the Ottoman Empire at the start of the war died. In the war

    zones, Macedonia and Thrace, western Anatolia, northeastern Turkey and

    southeastern Turkey, that percentage was as high as sixty or even seventy percent,

    much higher than any other country that was involved in these wars. No-one was

    counting, so it is very difficult to give actual figures, but perhaps no fewer than

    four million people died in the lands of the Ottoman Empire during these wars, and

    these were people of all races and religions, all ethnic origins, they were Muslims,

    Jews and Christians, they were Turks and Armenians, Arabs and Greeks, and

    Source: From “The Ottoman Holocaust”; a lecture delivered by Stanford J.

    Shaw (1930-2006, Professor of Modern Ottoman History, Bilkent University,

    Ankara, Turkey; Professor of Turkish History, University of California, Los

    Angeles,) to the First International Symposium on Armenian Claims and The

    Reality of Azerbaijan, sponsored by the Atatürk Research Center, 5 May 2005,

    Ankara, Turkey, 1990

    What we need is honest research, reasoned debate, and civilized dialogue, not

    name-calling, deceptions, and partisan monologues that lead to more polarization.

    Ergun KIRLIKOVALI

     Son of Turkish survivors from both paternal and maternal sides of

    atrocities committed by Armenian cadets and Balkan Ottoman-

    Christians (www.ethocide.com )

     His father was the sole survivor, as a one-year-old baby, of the

    massacres of October 1912

    tellers/ and was cared for by the Bebek Orphanage in Istanbul

    WAL_History_Forging_Turkish_Identity )

     His mother was one of the few survivors of her family subjected to

    massacres in 1912, Skopje, who migrated to Anatolia and grew up in

     The untold story of pain and suffering of his parents and masses of

    other faceless, nameless Turkish victims of Ottoman-Christian

    militias, especially of Armenians in the East and Greeks in the West,

    during 1911-1923 is the single most powerful driving force behind his

    modest efforts “to tell the other side of the story.”

    Key words:  Armenian, genocide, cengiz Aktar, Ergun Kirlikovali,

    Hrant dink, Tereset, Ethocide, mosin, Kirlikova, Sarishaban, Drama,

    Kavala, Doksat, Doxat, dinkist, deep dinkist, derin dinkciler, ECHR,

    perincek, Turkey, Anatolia, first world war

  • ARMENIAN MYTHS : THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS TO PRESS COVERAGE …WHEN ONLY ONE SIDE OF A CONFLICT IS HEARD

    ARMENIAN MYTHS : THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS TO PRESS COVERAGE …WHEN ONLY ONE SIDE OF A CONFLICT IS HEARD

     

    Ergun KIRLIKOVALI

    Foreign Policy Forum (FPF) created by Association of Turkish Industrialists and Businessmen (TUSIAD) and Bogazici University (BU) held a conference on the Turkish-Armenian conflict at 16:00-18:00 on November 11, 2014 in the TUSIAD building. Its objective was to dissect the events of 1915 which are perceived and interpreted variously by different groups in Turkey, Armenia and other parts of the world on the eve of its hundredth year. The promotion stated that it specifically wished to discuss historical memories, political discourses, and policies of the states and the conference was titled: “To discuss the 1915 Tragedy in its hundredth year: Meaning, Memory, and Politics.” Up to now, everything is hunky-dory… Nos problemos…
    The problem arises when one reads who are invited: An Armenian historian (Bentley University teaching staff Asbed Kotchikian,) another Armenian historian (Paris Sciences Po University teaching staff Michel Marian,) and a third Armenian ( Director of Analytical Center for Global and Regional Cooperation in Erivan.) “OK,” you say to yourself “these are all Armenians and they are certainly a party to this conflict.” Then your eyes scroll down to see how many are invited to represent the responsible opposing views. And therein lies the problem: there is none!
    You check the list over and over; you look front and back, nope! Nothing! Zip! Nada!

    But if only Armenians are invited to a “conference,” how can the unsuspecting audiences be given the benefit of rebuttals? Who will know if the facts are omitted due to anti-Turkish bias, figures are misrepresented to tow the official Armenian party-line, and/or interpretations are stacked against Turks and other Muslims?
    If only one side of a conflict is heard, can one call this conference an intellectual inquiry? Or even a conference?
    Where does it say conferences shall be held among like-minded individuals?
    Can one arrive at the absolute truth by hearing the Armenians only? Can justice be served if half the story is deliberately excluded?
    Now, if TUSIAD did this alone, I could perhaps understand it. I would convince myself that the kind businessmen wanted a quick resolution of a nagging issue, so that they can attend to what they do best: conduct business. But here lies the second problem: one of the organizers is a professor! In fact, he is teaching, sadly, at my alma-mater, namely Bogazici University. Does not this professor know that universities are vibrant places precisely because controversial issues can be freely explored in scholarly and civil manner? How can one “explore” a controversy, if all the discussants agree? Is not that conference reduced to a chorus? Or even a monologue? How can a “professor” allow such a violation of scholarly values? Is that what he learned when he studied for his PhD degree? Where did he get is degrees?
    A Turkish-American group wrote to the organizers and kindly proposed the names of four historians from the United States who they thought would level the field and present a fuller picture to the unsuspecting audiences. Fair and square, right? Apparently, it is perfectly all right for some organizers to invite a group of partisans and still call it a “conference.” Try doing that at an American campus… Would not the American media immediately pounce on the organizer, questioning his/her credentials and degrees if not his/her values and even character?
    Turkish-American proposal was rejected. Reason? Fasten your seat belts for this one. The organizers wanted to find out what the Armenians wanted from Turkey and what feelings and thoughts motivated them. Duh!
    They said they never organize conferences where a single idea dominates. Really? So what different ideas are there among the three Armenians invited? Can you hear a single word about the Turkish victims of Armenian revolutionaries out of them? How about Armenian terrorism? Armenian revolts? Bank raids, assassinations, and bombings? Treason? Territorial demands? Killing of Turks and other Muslims under uniforms of the invaders (Russian, French, British, and Greek?)
    You might think “Well, let them do it. What could go wrong?” Answer: A lot!
    Which brings us to the main theme of this essay. Just look at the ill-informed perceptions presented by the Hurriyet Daily News (HDN) columnist below. Her readers will be misinformed and mislead. How many of those readers, you think, will bother to sit down and read “Death & Exile” by Justin McCarthy or “The Armenians…” by Esat Uras? They will just take those misconceptions at face value. This is how the Armenian lobby wins… and we help them win!
    BARÇIN YİNANÇ, in her column “Turkey, Armenia, 2015 and beyond” (HDN, Nov 13, 2014) says this:
    “… (w)e need to continue talking about the issue, which has two dimensions: Turkish–Armenian relations on the one hand, and on the other hand the Armenian genocide issue,” ignoring the Azerbaijan dimension. She should also used the qualifier “alleged” before genocide, because there is no court verdict saying it “is” genocide.
    Then she adds this part which is really painful for me: “There has been a transition from total denial to the acknowledgment that something terrible and tragic happened.” Turkey never denied that there was a vast and complex human suffering that engulfed all the people of the era and area. Form where does she get this idea of “total denial”? Here is an excerpt from the letter to the New York Times by the Turkish Ambassador to the United States, Dr. Sukru Elekdag, as early as May 23, 1985: “… No one has ever denied the overall tragedy that, 70 years ago, brought death and suffering to all the people of the Ottoman Empire’s eastern Anatolian region, and that Armenians perished as a part of this…”
    Massacre of the truth continues with her sweeping generalizations when she opines “… Yet Turkey, be it at the government or at the society level, is still far from accepting the word genocide…” And why should Turkey or any other country recognize genocide? Are you not aware of the 1948 U.N. Convention of Prevention and Punishment of Genocide requirements that for a genocide label to stand, a “competent tribunal” has to go through “due process” to prove “intent to destroy?” Was this ever done in the Armenian case? No. So how can you claim genocide when there is no genocide verdict? To call the 1915 events genocide, would be telling a lie to the public that there is a court verdict, when there is absolutely not. This position was supported by the December 17, 2013 verdict by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) on Perincek vs Switzerland. So, the law says that there is no genocide verdict, but you expect Turkey to accept it anyway?
    Here is how successful Armenian propaganda has been on this columnist: “While there is a worldwide acceptance of the 1915 events as genocide…” Really? Worldwide, huh? Did you know that the United Nations, the United Sates, the United Kingdom, Sweden and Australia do not accept the label of genocide? In fact, no nation in Africa or Asia accept it. Only about 20 countries accept the Armenian propaganda and political pressure to call it genocide. That’s 20 out of 205 countries. Do the math! What do you come up with? Less than 20%, right? That is “worldwide” in your book?
    Besides, genocide is not decided by parliaments, politicians, or media. It is not decided by columnists, activists, and propagandists. It is not decided by historians, clergy, businessmen, athletes or actors. There is one and only one venue for a genocide verdict: “competent tribunal” as set forth by the UN, which is the International Court of Justice in the Haag. So, do you realize how ignorant your comment is now expecting Turkey “… at the government or at the society level…” to accept the word genocide? It boils down to one’s respect for law. We are talking about law here, not history anymore. While we are at it, maybe you should be introduced to the concept of laws having no jurisdiction retroactively. In other words, a 1948 UN law cannot dictate characterization on 1915. One cannot judge the past with current values and laws, as that would undermine the entire justice system.
    Here is another jewel : “… Armenians are disappointed that this has not triggered legal action…” If you knew the facts that 1923 Lausanne agreement dealt with the Armenian issue and the 1934 & 1937 agreements with the United Sates dealt with Armenian-American issues, then you would know that those chapters are closed by international law. Another fact is that if Armenian knew they could win a court battle against Turkey, do you think they would wait a second to sue Turkey? Why do you think Armenian archives are still closed today?
    Ah, the denial laws. My favorite. She quotes the Armenian frustration “… that has led them to concentrate on enacting laws to criminalize deniers…” History cannot and should not be legislated. Doing so would destroy the freedom of speech, as well as free press and academia. Is that what the Armenians want? Well, I got news for you: they will never ever get it. If you do not believe me, go ahead and read what the French scholars said about draconian denial laws in Appel De Blois: “… History must not be a slave to contemporary politics nor can it be written on the command of competing memories…” I certainly put my signature on that public statement.
    “Taboos about reparation and restitution can also be broken in Turkey…” Taboos? Is that what you think reparations and restitutions are? Have you heard about the four step Armenian plans that have been published for almost a hundred years now? 1) Acceptance 2) Apology 3)Reparations 4) Land ? Do you know Armenians think step 1 is satisfied , thanks to ill-informed liberals and columnists in Turkey, and step 2 is achieved by PM Erdogan’s 23 April 2014 speech of condolence, and that it is time for reparations now? That is not “taboo,” that is the “plan.”
    And for Ünal Çeviköz’s claim that opening borders with Armenia will somehow serve Turkish interests better, I am reminded of Greece promising Turkey to behave if Turkey allowed Greece back into NATO in 1981. Thirty plus years later, we all know how it turned out, don’t we? I find Çeviköz’s argument weak, ill-informed, off-base, and unrealistic. Anyone who fails to appreciate the scope and depth of Azerbaijan’s pain and suffering at the hands of Armenians and Azerbaijan’s sensitivity about suggestions of giving the store away to Armenians in spite of ongoing Armenian aggression and occupation in Karabakh, should not be a diplomat in the first place.
    Summary: There are two sides to every story and you cannot resolve differences by hearing only one side.
    Ergun KIRLIKOVALI
    Son of Turkish Survivors from both Paternal and Maternal Sides
    9741 Irvine Center Drive,
    Irvine, CA 92618, USA
    Phone: 949-878-1186

     

  • A Joint letter sent to the management of Hyatt Hotels Corporation by the Turkic-American Organizations

    A Joint letter sent to the management of Hyatt Hotels Corporation by the Turkic-American Organizations

    On September 20, 2012, Assembly of Turkish-American Associations (ATAA), Azerbaijani-American Council (AAC), the Federation of Turkish-American Associations (FTAA) and the Azerbaijan Society of America (ASA) issued a joint letter regarding the involvement of Hyatt CEO, Mark S. Hoplamazian, in ethnic propaganda campaigns.

    TurkeyAzebaijan1

    September 20, 2012

    Attention:         Thomas J. Pritzker

                            Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors
    Hyatt Hotels Corporation
    71 South Wacker Dr, 12th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606

    Re:                   A joint letter of concern by the Turkic-American community organizations

    Dear Mr. Pritzker,

    On behalf of the Assembly of Turkish-American Associations (ATAA), Azerbaijani-American Council (AAC), the Federation of Turkish-American Associations (FTAA) and the Azerbaijan Society of America (ASA), together representing over half million Americans of  Turkic descent, we express our concern over the involvement of Hyatt CEO, Mark S. Hoplamazian, in ethnic propaganda campaigns. On September 22, 2012, Mr. Hoplamazian will address the 40th anniversary gala of the Armenian Assembly of America (AAA), an Armenian-American lobbying group, as a Hyatt executive. According to the AAA website, Mr. Hoplamazian also serves on the Advisory Board of “Facing History and Ourselves”, a non-profit group that “teaches about the Armenian genocide”.
    As you may know, the allegations of “Armenian genocide” are a subject of political and historical controversy. The World War I-era inter-communal atrocities in the Ottoman Empire were never tried in any tribunal and no intent to exterminate Armenians was ever established. No sentences or court verdicts were issued to interpret these events in terms of the 1948 United Nations Convention on Prevention and Punishment of Genocide. The International Court of Justice – the sole authority to determine applicability of the ‘genocide’ term to any crime – has never opened any case or drawn any conclusion on these allegations. The U.S. Government does not recognize the “Armenian genocide”. While many expert historians dispute the figure of 1.5 million Armenians allegedly perished between 1914 and 1920, during the same period armed Armenian groups massacred an estimated 518,000 ethnic Turks and other Muslims. Consequently, the attempts to flatly accuse Turkey of a grave crime are disrespectful towards the memory of those victims.

    Hyatt Hotels Corporation currently runs a total of four successful hotels in Istanbul, Turkey and Baku, Azerbaijan. Thus, Mr. Hoplamazian’s engagement with ethnic special interest groups that spread antagonisms against Turkey and Azerbaijan may be in violation of the Conflict of Interest clause of Hyatt’s Code of Business Conduct and Ethics. We appeal for a clarification from the Board of Directors regarding Mr. Hoplamazian’s involvement with AAA and the “Facing History and Ourselves”.

    Sincerely,

     

    Ergun Kirlikovali
    President, ATAA
    1526 18th Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Ali Cinar
    President, FTAA
    821 UN Plaza
    New York, NY 10017
    Javid Huseynov, Ph.D.
    General Director, AAC
    PO Box 50370
    Irvine, CA 92619
    Tomris Azeri
    President, ASA
    103 Elwood Ave
    Newark, NJ 07014
  • Message from Ergun Kirlikovali , President ATAA

    Message from Ergun Kirlikovali , President ATAA

    Ergun Kirlikovali is one of the founders and long standing member of Turkish Forum – Dunya Turkleri Birligi Advisory Board.

    We wish him Good-luck, and we will support his actions  in the coming years and with all membership and with all available means of Turkish Forum.

    We also wish good-luck to ATAA’s sister organization FTAA . FTAA is now led by President Ali Cinar who is supported by wast majority of membership during the last months election. we  recognize the wast amount work with Mr. Ali Cinar has to face. Similarly, Our support will also be with FTAA  if he so desires.

    Dr. Kayaalp Buyukataman, President

    Turkish Forum -Dunya Turkleri Birligi

    ==============================================

    President Message By Ergün Kırlıkovalı

    ergun sDear Members of the Turkish American Community coast-to-coast:

    I hope you and your family have adjusted to the hustle and bustle of the New Year after having a wonderful holiday season.

    The month of January has passed with fury and left me wondering where the whole month went.  When you take a look at what was achieved, you will see why.

    What a start to the New Year!

    ATAA component associations were busy arranging local events and our TABAN and Student Outreach programs were on the road, visiting Colorado, Nevada and Canada. Membership drive and fundraising were in full swing.  ATAA Türk Evi hosted the visiting graduate students from Bahcesehir University (İstanbul, Türkiye),  where distinguished lecturers like Mark Meirowitz, David Saltzman, and Gunay Evinch, have addressed the students, explaining to them how the U.S. Government operates and the U.S. legal system works.

    ATAA leadership paid an official visit to the brand new headquarters of the Turkish Coalition of America only steps from the White House.  Joint programs were discussed.

    ATAA leadership visited the offices of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus to sign the book of condolences for the legendary Turkish Cypriot leader and the founder of TRNC, Rauf Denktash, who passed away on January 13, 2012.

    ATAA leadership also paid a courtesy visit to the Turkish Embassy to show our community’s deep respect and love for our motherland, Türkiye.

    ATAA leadership met with Dr. Elizabeth W. Shelton, executive director of American Friends of Turkey, to coordinate the upcoming events.  AFOT will be bringing to the U.S. Dr. Ufuk Kocabas, the Project Director of the Yenikapi, Istanbul Project (the Byzantine Port of Constantinople). As you know, the Istanbul University group undertaking the excavations has unearthed 36 vessels and cargoes, going back to the Fifth Century. It has been an amazing find. As you may well know, his trip will be the first time any information about this project will be presented to American audiences, and by all indications, the audiences will be packed to see his presentation and hear him lecture.

    Congratulations FTAA President Ali Çınar!

    On behalf of the Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA), I congratulate Mr. Ali Çınar for his election to the presidency of the Federation of Turkish American Associations (FTAA). Established in 1956, FTAA is one of America’s leading national Turkish American organizations in a critical part of the country, New York and New Jersey. Ali Çınar comes to the FTAA Presidency with vast knowledge and experience in public advocacy and community empowerment. A former Vice President of ATAA (2009-11) and as Chief Advisor to the ATAA President since June 2011, Mr. Çınar a much loved, hard-working, creative, and energetic community leader. Mr. Cinar was also the founder of the Istanbul University Mezunlari US (IUMEZUS) and its first president.

    ATAA looks forward to continued excellence in solidarity and cooperation with FTAA. I wish President Ali Çınar and the FTAA Team all the success.

    Elections at ATAA

    The ATAA Board of Directors resolved on January 18, 2012 to start a Nominating Committee to oversee the upcoming elections where one third of the Board will be up for election.

    I am grateful to Lale Iskarpatyoti for accepting to chair the Nominating Committee and members Gunay Evinch (Past President, ATAA), Tunca Iskir (Past President, ATAA), Nurten Ural (Past President, ATAA) and Mehmet Celebi (President Elect, ATAA) for accepting to serve on this very important committee.

    The positions up for election are the following: Treasurer (Esra Ugurlu), Vice President Midcentral (Feridun Bek), Vice President Southwest (Sibel Pakdemirli), Vice President Northwest (Sevgi Baran), West (Maria Cakiraga). Please note that all incumbents can run again for their seats as this is their first term in office and that the race is wide open to all other qualified candidates. I would be delighted, therefore, if you kindly participate in this democratic process by nominating candidates and/or voting.

    We will issue a CIS on this immediately with more election information and specifics. Due to time limitations and in the interest saving paper and labor, a separate paper mass-mailing via USPS will not be done. We will try to reach every member via this monthly e-Newsletter and a separate CIS, as well as press releases, media coverage, and www.ataa.org site. We hope, with your support, to complete the nominating process by February 15, 2012, so that the elections may be completed by March 15, and the approved by the AOD on April 15, 2012. Your cooperation and participation is, again, greatly appreciated.

    Damnation Without Representation:  French Memory Law

    We all know what “taxation without representation” led to in 1776: Expulsion of the British from colonial America.

    And now we will see what “damnation without representation” will lead to in 2012: expulsion of the French culture from the Turkish/Turkic world.

    I am, of course, referring to the draconian French memory law that cleared the French Senate on January 23, 2012, which criminalizes the denial of the so-called “Armenian genocide”, allegedly carried out in Ottoman Empire during World War I.  The passage of the measure, adopted a month earlier by a mere 50 out 577 deputies in the lower chamber of the French Parliament, makes a mockery of the notion of “participatory democracy”, not to mention the freedom of speech.

    The WW I era atrocities in Eastern Anatolia were never tried by a “competent tribunal” as the 1948 United Nations Convention on Prevention and Punishment of genocide stipulates. “Intent” to exterminate was never proven, leaving the discredited political claim as just that.  “No court verdict” was issued characterizing these events a genocide. This historical controversy has become fodder to election year politics in France, destroying the freedom of expression along with it.  No law can be used retroactively, 1948 UN convention on genocide included. And yet, these rock solid facts, values, and concepts,  which are foundations of modern life cherished by humanity were respected by only 86 courageous French Senators who tried to stop that shameful memory law with their “No” votes.  The law passed by the “Yes” votes of 127 Senators, despite the rejection of the same law by the Constitution Sub-Committee a few days earlier.  Now it looks like it is heading for the Constitution Committee for a final verdict on whether it is constitutional to criminalize thought.

    Some French parliamentarians, it seems, felt compelled by ethnocentric political agenda in an election year, to play the judge, the jury, the executioner, and while at it, the expert historian. We all know they are none of these.  The harsh memory law, reminiscent of those in the defunct Soviet Empire, places a severe limitation on the French democracy, curbs free speech, undermines dialogue, destroys scholarly research, and discourages scholarly dissent.

    France currently serves as a co-chair country of the OSCE Minsk Group on the resolution of Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Adoption of a law upholding the victims of one ethnicity over another on a historically controversial issue would question the practicality of French role as a mediator on an issue, which both Azerbaijan and Turkey view as directly linked to Turkish-Armenian reconciliation.

    This law might also be considered the epitaph of the Nabucco pipeline and the European energy security, if not also anything French in the culture of the people of the vast geography that stretches from the Balkans to the Caucasus, from the Middle East to North Africa, and from Anatolia to Central Asia.

    Armenians have a cause, not a case

    Armenians took up arms against their own government. They joined the invading enemy armies. They wreaked havoc among the unprotected Muslim villages of Anatolia with their Huncak, Dashnak, Ramgavar, and other bands and thugs. They demanded territory for what can only be described as the first apartheid  of the 20th Century (i.e. the Greater Armenia.)  These and other such aspects are grouped under the “NINE T’s OF THE TURKISH ARMENIAN CONFLICT”.   If one ignores these, one ignores half the story gets no closure.

    The assertion of Armenian genocide is based on a racist and dishonest version of history. Racist because Turkish suffering is deliberately ignored; and dishonest because the 9 T’s are ignored.

    Just look at this 1906 photo of Cadets at an Armenian Military Academy, established in Bulgaria, with all in uniforms and their Russian “Mosin” weapons brandished. This single frame of an old photo destroys the entire Armenian narrative: that Armenians were peaceful; that they were poor, starving, and helpless; that all happened one day in 1915 without provocation; and that Armenians never killed any Turks.  How much evidence does one need to wake up and smell the Armenian deception? Didn’t Armenians die?  Didn’t they suffer?  Yes, of course, but along with many more Muslims, mostly Turks.  Wartime suffering? Yes.  Genocide? No, not by even a long shot.

    Social construction of Memory

    This is a term used by sociologists to describe the process of rebuilding a group memory by social acts, not history’s facts. In order to make the long discredited political claims of Armenian genocide stick, Armenian propaganda, agitation, terror, raids, revolts, treason, territorial conflicts and the Turkish victims resulting from them, are all swept under the rug. Novels, letters, exhibits, parliamentary resolutions, films, rallies, political pressure, in short, anything but facts are employed in “social reconstruction” process. Such dramaturgical approaches and ethno-methodology, unfortunately shape most perceptions, feelings and behaviors. People soon start thinking “All this hype cannot be without justification.” French politicians or American columnists or others are not immune to such symbolic and seemingly humane interactions. Before long, one is consumed by “social construction of reality”, i.e. defining reality through social interactions, not objective realities, just like in the case of the alleged Armenian genocide today. Consider this: until 1990s, most media reports used the qualifier “alleged” before genocide, but now they dropped it. Why? Did new research unearth heretofore unknown information? Did a “competent court” determine Ottoman “intent” to exterminate? No and no. What happend is, the Armenians have since increased the dose of pressure to intimidation and harassment levels. That’s social construction at its worst !

    May love and peace win over hate, bigotry and discrimination one day . . .

    Ergün Kırlıkovalı
    President
    Assembly of Turkish American Associations