Category: Armenian Question

“The great Turk is governing in peace twenty nations from different religions. Turks have taught to Christians how to be moderate in peace and gentle in victory.”Voltaire’s Philosophical Dictionary

  • Kanada Turk D. Fedrasyonu: FCTA Presents a Lecture by Professor Türkkaya Ataöv_ April 07_University of Toronto

    Kanada Turk D. Fedrasyonu: FCTA Presents a Lecture by Professor Türkkaya Ataöv_ April 07_University of Toronto

     

     

    FCTA Presents a Lecture by Professor Türkkaya Ataöv

    The Armenian Revolt: 
    Boghus Nubar vs. Hovannes Katchaznouni

    The Shattered Fantasy of a Greater Armenia 

     

    armenian revolt

    Armenian Revolutionary Federation rebels, 1915

    When: Saturday, April 07, 2012, 1:30pm

    Where: University of Toronto

    Address: Music Room, 7 Hart House Circle  Toronto, ON M5S 3H3

    Rebel Leader Nubar at the Paris Peace Conference, 1919:

     “Armenians deserve eastern Turkey because hundreds of
    thousands fought against the Ottoman Empire.”

    Armenian Prime Minister Katchaznouni in Yerevan, 1923:

     The Great Catastrophe (Meds Yeghern) is the fault of Armenian nationalists
    who took up arms against, rather than talk with the Turks
    .”

     Professor Türkkaya Ataöv compares and contrasts the aggressive approach of Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) leader Boghus Nubar with the conservative approach of the first Prime Minister of Armenia, Hovannes Katchaznouni, the depth, expanse and complexity of the Armenian Revolt (1885-1919), that left over one million Ottoman Muslims and Jews dead or displaced, and how the ARF’s dream of creating an ethnically and religiously homogenous Armenian Orthodox state failed.

     

    “Supported by Turkish Students at various Universities and Colleges in Canada” 

     

    Biographical Sketch of Prof. Türkkaya Ataöv:

    Türkkaya Ataöv is Professor Emeritus in International Relations at Ankara University, Turkey. He did his graduate work in the United States, where he received two M.A.s (NYU & Syracuse Univ.) and a Ph.D. (1959, Syracuse U., NY). He taught at Ankara Univ. for more than for decades and lectured in several American, British, Russian, German, Dutch, Indian, Chinese, Middle Eastern, African and Australian universities.

     

    He is the author of close to 140 books (most of which have been in foreign languages and printed in Europe or in the Americas), a few hundred academic treatises, and a few thousand newspaper articles. His writings have been translated into 20 languages and appeared in 17 European, 13 Asian, 5 African, and 3 American states and Australia.  He was elected to central executive positions of UN-related international organizations, dealing with racial discrimination, human rights, terrorism, nuclear war, and exchange of prisoners of war.

     

    Professor Ataöv published 80 books or booklets on the Armenian issue, was invited (as “witness of authority”) by the Paris court to the two (1984 & 1985) trials of Armenian terrorists, participated in the UN (1985) Geneva meetings of the Human Rights Commission on the Genocide Convention, and partook in several meetings of the European Parliament that dealt with the Armenian issue.

     

    Professor Ataöv received 17 academic awards or medals in recognition of his published works and activities. They include two (Italian and Federal Yugoslavian) presidential medals, two UN-affiliated awards, and several honorary doctorates and academic citations.

  • If US recognizes Genocide, Turkey will have to apologize to Armenians – Turkish historian

    If US recognizes Genocide, Turkey will have to apologize to Armenians – Turkish historian

    If the US, Israel, and England recognize the Armenian Genocide, Turkey will have to make an apology to the Armenians, renowned Turkish historian Taner Akcam stated in an interview with the Taraf daily of Turkey.

    97082He also noted that the US presidential elections will be held at the end of this year, and, prior to the elections, there will not be any change in incumbent President Barack Obama’s stance in this regard. “Just like in the previous times, Turkey will exert pressure on the US. But I assume that in 2015 Obama will use the word ‘genocide.’

    A lot will change if the US recognizes the [Armenian] Genocide. At present, the US, England, and Israel are allowing Turkey to maneuver in the international platform. But if this troika recognizes the Genocide, Turkey, with its denialist posture, will appear in the status of an isolated regime.

    Turkey is not required to say the word ‘genocide,’ but it is obligated to apologize and accept that a crime against humanity took place in 1915,” Taner Akcam said.

    via If US recognizes Genocide, Turkey will have to apologize to Armenians – Turkish historian | Armenia News – NEWS.am.

  • Khloe Kardashian on Armenia-Turkey relations

    Khloe Kardashian on Armenia-Turkey relations

    96804Relations between Armenia and Turkey became one of the topics of Khloe & Lamar show aired on E! channel.

    Khloe Kardashian and her husband, basketball player Lamar Odom, decided whether he should accept an offer to play in Turkey.

    Khloe expressed concern that it will upset her Armenian fans. Her brother Robert also said it will be uncomfortable and weird for their family, while Kim Kardashian recalled debates over her appearing on the cover of a Turkish magazine.

    “I do not want to offend anyone in my culture. I’ve been having a lot of thoughts about Turkey. Because I’m Armenian,” she said.

    via Khloe Kardashian on Armenia-Turkey relations | Armenia News – NEWS.am.

  • From Ararat to Europe

    From Ararat to Europe

    This historical documentary tells how the Armenians have been forerunners in spreading Christianity throughout Europe.

    ararat 210For centuries the Armenians have been the forerunners in spreading Christianity in the world and have been sanctified by different European nations. It is remarkable that, thanks to Leonardo da Vinci’s travels to Armenia, European church construction adopted Armenian architectural traits.
    This film aims to reveal how that Armenian mark of influence spread from Ararat to Europe.

    Producer: Arsen Hakobyan and Sargis Petrosyan
    Director: Artak Avdalayan
    Languages: Armenian, Russian, English
    Subtitles: Armenian, Russian, English
    Duration: 52 min.

  • Nicolas Sarkozy orders new Armenian genocide law

    Nicolas Sarkozy orders new Armenian genocide law

    President Nicolas Sarkozy has ordered his government to draft a new law punishing denial of the Armenian genocide after France’s top court struck it down as unconstitutional.

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    France election 2012: Nicolas Sarkozy’s EU fiscal pact referendum copout

    Mr Sarkozy was accused of pandering to an estimated 400,000 voters of Armenian origin ahead of an April-May presidential election Photo: REUTERS

    9:49PM GMT 28 Feb 2012

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their forebears were killed in a 1915-16 genocide by Turkey’s former Ottoman Empire. Turkey says 500,000 died and ascribes the toll to fighting and starvation during World War I.

    France had already recognised the killings as a genocide, but the new law sought to go further by punishing anyone who denies this with up to a year in jail and a fine of 45,000 euros (£38,000).

    However, the Constitutional Council labelled the law an “unconstitutional attack on freedom of expression” and it said it wished “not to enter into the realm of responsibility that belongs to historians”.

    Turkey quickly welcomed the ruling on the law which Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has denounced as “tantamount to discrimination and racism”.

    Bulent Arinc, Turkey’s deputy prime minister, said on Twitter the ruling “has averted a potentially serious crisis in Turkish-French ties”.

    The decision “does not indulge political concerns,” Arinc said after Mr Sarkozy was accused of pandering to an estimated 400,000 voters of Armenian origin ahead of an April-May presidential election.

    The top court “gave a lesson in law to the French politicians who signed the bill, which was an example of absurdity,” said Arinc.

    Turkey’s EU Affairs Minister Egemen Bagis said France had averted a “historical mistake”, and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu called the decision “an important step that will legally avert future exploitations”.

    However, Mr Sarkozy’s office quickly put out a statement saying the president “has ordered the government to prepare a new draft, taking into account the Constitutional Council’s decision.”

    Mr Sarkozy noted “the great disappointment and profound sadness of all those who welcomed with hope and gratitude the adoption of this law aimed at providing protection against revisionism.”

    After winning passage in the National Assembly and Senate, the law was put on hold in January after groups of senators and MPs opposed to the legislation demanded that its constitutionality be examined.

    The groups gathered more than the minimum 60 signatures required to ask the council to test the law’s constitutionality.

    At least two ministers, Foreign Minister Alain Juppe and Agriculture Minister Bruno Le Maire, had spoken out against the bill.

    Ankara has already halted political and military co-operation with France and had threatened to cut off economic and cultural ties.

    Trade between the two states was worth 12 billion euros ($15.5 billion) in 2010, and several hundred French businesses operate in Turkey.

    Valerie Boyer, the MP from Mr Sarkozy’s party who proposed the bill, said she was “sad but determined” following the council’s ruling, noting that under French law it was a punishable crime to deny the Holocaust.

    “Today under French law there are two types of victims and two types of descendants of victims … Some are protected from revisionist acts and some are not, and I think this is a serious double standard,” Boyer said.

    Source: AFP

    via Nicolas Sarkozy orders new Armenian genocide law – Telegraph.

  • Turkey ‘Ready To Share Armenian Pain’

    Turkey ‘Ready To Share Armenian Pain’

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    Turkey — Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu addresses the media in Ankara, 20Jan2012

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    29.02.2012

    Turkey is ready to share the pain of Armenians ahead of the 100th anniversary of the 1915 Armenian massacres in the Ottoman Empire, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu reportedly said late on Tuesday.

    “We want to share the pain of those who are ready to share it with us,” Davutoglu was quoted as saying by Anatolia news agency in an interview with state-run television TRT Haber.

    “It is necessary to keep channels open in order to share history,” he said in remarks cited by the AFP news agency.

    Davutoglu did not say if Ankara could eventually acknowledge that some 1.5 million Ottoman Armenians were massacred during World War I in the first genocide of the 20th century.

    Successive Turkish governments have for decades insisted that Armenians died in much smaller numbers and as a result of civil strife, rather than a premeditated government policy. Some Turkish leaders, notably Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, have said that it was Armenians who massacred Turks.

    Erdogan has repeatedly stated that Ankara will never recognize the genocide. His government has at the same time been advancing the idea of setting up a Turkish-Armenian commission of historians that would examine the highly sensitive subject.

    via Turkey ‘Ready To Share Armenian Pain’.