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

  • Gul ‘Vigorously Committed’ to Turkey-Armenia Protocols

    Gul ‘Vigorously Committed’ to Turkey-Armenia Protocols

    BERN, Switzerland—On Nov. 25, Turkish President Abdullah Gul addressed the Swiss parliament, saying that his country is committed to the protocols, reported Zaman.

    “We maintain our firm vigorous commitment to the protocols, which aim to normalize Turkish-Armenian relationship,” said Gul. “We will continue our efforts so that a sustainable and comprehensive peace dominates the Caucasus,” he added.

    Gul expressed hope that Armenia’s President Serge Sarkisian “continues with the same courage so that the process can be crowned with success.”

    The Turkish President sidestepped the fact that Turkey itself  is stalling the so-called “normalization process” with Armenia by not ratifying the protocols.

    Armenian Weekly

  • Schiff: I Plan To Reintroduce “Armenian Genocide” Resolution In The New Congress

    Schiff: I Plan To Reintroduce “Armenian Genocide” Resolution In The New Congress

    241110 schiffCongressman Adam Schiff (D – California) told in an interview with Armenia based PanArmenian.Net that he plans to introduce resolution recognizing Armenian allegaitons regarding 1915 incidents in Ottoman Empire in the new Congress.

    Commenting on the probability of adoption of a “genocide” resolution by the new Congress, Schiff said, “Building a broad coalition of support is critically important as we look for opportunities to bring the Resolution to the floor for a vote. Although the desire for adoption of the ‘Genocide’ Resolution is stronger on the Democratic side than on the Republican side, there will still be strong, bipartisan support for the resolution, regardless of which party is in the majority. We are seeking to gain votes every day, and my hope is to move the resolution forward as soon as we are confident that we have the votes we need to adopt the resolution. If the Resolution doesn’t come to the Floor during this session, I plan to reintroduce the resolution in the new Congress.”

    Stating that he is very disappointed in April when Obama did not use the term “genocide” to describe 1915 incidents, Schiff said  that he will continue urging the President. “Although Turkey won’t be pleased with U.S. recognition, we need to speak frankly with each other as allies. I will not rest until we have overcome Turkey’s threats and propaganda,” Schiff said.

    Accusing Turkey of threating nations and groups that recognize Armenian allegations, Schiff claimed that “there is near unanimity among historians” that 1915 incidents constitute a genocide.

    Introducing the memories of Armenian-American individuals about the displacement of Armenians in 1915 into Congressional records within the “Armenian Genocide Congressional Record Project”, pro-Armenian Congressman Adam Schiff also organized a program in the Congress to “educate” Congressmen on Armenian thesis. “Yes, it is my hope that including in the Congressional Record the stories of individuals who survived the genocide we can help educate the Administration and Congress, and make the genocide a part of the historic record of our government,” Schiff told PanArmenian.Net.

    Historyoftruth.com

  • George Friedman: Keep Armenia Isolated

    George Friedman: Keep Armenia Isolated

    231110 friedmanHead of the US analytical center STRATFOR George Friedman made quite curious statements in his interview with Turkish ATV and Sabah newspaper.

    Sabah newspaper reports that general director and founder of STRATFOR George Friedman has come to a conclusion that the normalization of the Armenian-Turkish rapprochement can be effective only in case Russian troops are withdrawn from Armenia, otherwise this process will be of no importance.

    “Turkey should speak to Armenia not of Nagorno Karabakh. It should discuss reducing Russia’s role in this country. The presence of Russian troops in Armenia does not meet Turkey’s interests. In such conditions, the opening of borders with Armenia is of no use for Turkey, on the contrary, it may spoil its relations with Azerbaijan. So keep Armenia isolated in this case”, Friedman said.

    Meanwhile, Friedman compared the current power of Turkey with the US power in 1930-1940’s.

    “Turkey has strength but no structures, which could direct this strength. This is what Turkey should ponder over”, he said.

    1news.az

  • An Armenian Manifesto Circa 1923: Dashnagtzoutiun Has Nothing to Do Anymore

    An Armenian Manifesto Circa 1923: Dashnagtzoutiun Has Nothing to Do Anymore

    Arnold Reisman
    Reisman and Associates

    November 20, 2010

    Abstract:
    hovhannesIn 1923 Hovhannēs Katchaznouni the first Prime Minister of the Armenian state delivered a report to an Armenian Congress in Bucharest. Referred to as his Manifesto, it was written in Armenian and self-published in the same year. The Manifesto represents a historical document of great significance to a highly charged and contested debate. For many decades its existence was unknown to most scholars. Except for one abridged version, the other versions are inaccessible because they have been willfully removed from the world’s libraries by political partisans and the latest commercially produced edition has yet to make an appearance on library shelves.

    Two currently available editions are reviewed in this paper on a per-paragraph basis and shown to be consistent on many matters pertaining to Armenian-Turkish issues. Yet they do differ substantially on other significant points. Irrespective of the edition; scholars, opinion makers, policy makers, and concerned people at large should find the information contained of great value since it comes from a most knowledgeable and credible source.

    Keywords: Armenia, Turkey, Armenian Manifesto, Katchaznouni, Dashnagtzoutiun, Dashnag, Armenian History

    JEL Classifications: B30,B31,P30, N40

    Working Paper Series

    Download full document at : https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1712564

  • Writer Margosyan: Increased contact between Turks, Armenians will produce solutions

    Writer Margosyan: Increased contact between Turks, Armenians will produce solutions

    Turks and Armenians will solve their problems themselves, writer Mıgırdiç Margosyan said, pointing to the stalled top-down diplomatic process between Turkey and Armenia.

    margosyan

    “A solution to the problems will come from the public of both sides and not from top officials. As long as people continue to engage in dialogue, solutions will be produced,” he told Today’s Zaman for Monday Talk.

    More Turks and Armenians are involved in a range of civil society initiatives and discuss the development of joint projects, as the top-down diplomatic process between Turkey and Armenia continues to stall. The protocols signed on Oct. 10 of last year in Zurich between the two countries in order to normalize relations and open the border have yet to be ratified, the result of mutual accusations. The border between the two has been closed since 1993, when Turkey sided with Azerbaijan following the Armenian armed forces’ occupation of 20 percent of Azerbaijan in 1992 — including the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    ‘A solution to the problems will come from the public of both sides and not from top officials. As long as people continue to engage in dialogue, solutions will be produced. … As long as there is dialogue and people from both sides sit down to share the same food on the table, we will have solutions’

    Margosyan, who has been part of civil society initiatives, answered our questions on a range of issues, including Turkey-Armenia relations, the Ergenekon investigation, being from Diyarbakır and the long-standing Kurdish problem.

    In your book, you wrote that you father used to ask you, “Tell me Margos, where are you from?” Were you ever really able to answer this question?

    My father asked me that question when I was around 2 years old. I was not mature enough to tell him the answer, but my father used to say, “Tell me you are from Heredan [a village along the Tigris River near Diyarbakır in southeastern Turkey].” And he used to give me candy or other goodies if I was able to say it. At some point I was able to say that I am from Heredan and my father was very happy to hear that. When I think about why he attached so much importance to saying it, that was probably because of his longing for the village as he was forced to leave it in 1915. And, as a legacy of my father, I asked my children to tell me that they are from Heredan. To answer your question, today I feel like I don’t have to belong anywhere, be it Heredan, Diyarbakır, İstanbul or any other place. I see myself as a citizen of the world.

    ‘Diyarbakır’s Sourp Giragos Church is the largest church in the Middle East’

    You recently paid a visit to Diyarbakır to mark the completion of the repair of a church. What was the significance of that visit?

    The Sourp Giragos Church is the largest church in the entire Middle East. It’s an architectural marvel spreading over 1,400 square meters. There was apparently a need to have such a large church before 1915 even though there are no Armenians left in Diyarbakır now. According to inscriptions found on the church’s walls, the first church was built in 1515-1518. When I was growing up in Diyarbakır, it was used as a state warehouse for canvas and fabrics. In the election period of the late 1940s, the Democrat Party (DP) promised the Armenians left in the “Gâvur Mahallesi” (non-Muslim district) that the church would be given back to them if they voted for the DP. Indeed, most voters in the district voted for the DP at the time and the party gave the church back to the Armenian community. As there are a lot of craftsmen among the Armenians, everybody did what he or she could and made repairs to the church, which had been used until the 1970s. But the events in Cyprus bothered the Armenian community in Diyarbakır and they started to leave the city permanently. They usually emigrated to other countries. The church was not taken care of for years. Some 15 years ago, when I was in the city for a meeting, I suggested having it repaired, but many bureaucratic hurdles stood in the way.

    What happened then?

    The roof of the church caved in. It had been left to deteriorate and decay until 2009, when a few Armenians born in Diyarbakır but living in İstanbul formed a foundation board under the auspices of the Armenian Patriarchate in İstanbul with the goal of reconstructing the church. Two years ago, bureaucratic obstacles were overcome and restoration started with contributions from the Diyarbakır Municipality as well. In my last visit to the city, the most important phase of the restoration had been completed and the church’s roof restored. There is much more restoration to be done, however.

    This church is not going to be restored as a museum, like the Church of the Holy Cross on Akdamar Island, right?

    If the Armenian Patriarchate in İstanbul and the Board of the Sourp Giragos Church had not claimed ownership of the church, it would probably have been restored by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism as a museum, like the church on Akdamar and, therefore, would not generally be open to worship for Armenians. There is indeed one other church, not far from the Sourp Giragos Church, restored under the control of the ministry as a museum.

    But you are probably always from Heredan…

    Yes, of course, I am from Heredan as I am from that place and grew up being a part of that region. Indeed, I am emotionally from Heredan.

    This, your connection to the land that you grew up in, is felt in many of your writings. Have you visited the place since you came to İstanbul at the age of 15?

    I’ve always lived Heredan in my dreams because it has always been in the stories of my elders. I’ve also dreamt of visiting the village some day. And I did about 40 years ago. It was a difficult journey because there were no proper roads. It was a simple Anatolian village on the outskirts of a mountain. I stayed there for one night. Indeed, it was the year that Sputnik was launched.

    Have you ever been there again?

    I have not but I’d like to. But it is a village that is empty because of the Kurdish problem. It is sad to see it in that empty situation.

    The long-standing Kurdish issue has still not been solved. It has widely been discussed these days, especially the issue of allowing education in Kurdish. What is your opinion on this issue?

    The mother tongue issue is really important to me. I feel it in my bones. In one of my books, “Biletimiz İstanbul’a Kesildi” (Our Ticket Was For İstanbul), I explained why I came to İstanbul from Diyarbakır. Why did I come to İstanbul? Because there was no Armenian school there, so we did not have a chance to learn Armenian in Diyarbakır. My parents sent me to the church in Diyarbakır to learn some Armenian from the priest but I was never able to learn it properly. I learned my mother tongue in İstanbul, where I had many difficulties. My Diyarbakır accent was funny to the Armenian youth of İstanbul. They would call us “Kurds.” We have to realize that nobody has a chance to determine his or her own ethnic identity. No matter where you are born, your mother’s language is your mother tongue. Having a ban on this language is something that I’ve never understood. If somebody can think and dream in one language, this language should never be banned. It’s not human to have such a ban.

    What language do you dream in?

    It depends. If I speak with certain people in Armenian in my daily life, I speak with them in Armenian in my dreams, and vice versa if I speak Turkish with the people in my daily life.

    You are a true bilingual then.

    That’s right.

    ‘I saw all the vandalism and chaos of Sept. 6-7’

    What do you remember of the Sept. 6-7 events?

    I was in my last year of high school when the Sept. 6-7 events took place. I was in boarding school and we were threatened with being burnt down. We never knew what was going to happen. We were worried. We felt like we had to raise a Turkish flag, and we did. As we were going through this experience, the policemen down the street did not act to stop that chaos even though it was impossible for them to not have heard about what was going on. I saw all the vandalism and chaos when I went down the street the next day.

    Years after those events, there have been revelations that there were horrendous plans by some dark forces within the state targeting the non-Muslims in Turkey. Were you surprised to hear about the alleged Cage Plan?

    As time goes on, humanity develops and we tend to think that some things that happened in the past cannot happen today because people can no longer be discriminated against just because they belong to another religion or race. And when history repeats itself, we are surprised. In 1942 a wealth tax was introduced and came as a surprise to non-Muslims. After that they probably would not have imagined that the Sept. 6-7 events could happen, but they did happen. We should never say it can never happen again. Who could have imagined that Hrant Dink would be murdered? We hope justice will be served.

    Mıgırdiç Margosyan

    He was born on Dec. 23, 1938 in Diyarbakır’s Hançepek district, or “Gâvur Mahallesi” (literally non-Muslim district, but the name has negative connotations), as the locals call it. After completing primary school in Diyarbakır, he graduated from Bezciyan Middle School and Getronagan High School. He then attended İstanbul University, and received a diploma from the department of philosophy.

    In 1966-1972 he worked as a teacher in Armenian schools in İstanbul. He produced a number of literary works, with his first short story book, “Mer Ayt Goğmerı” (Our Places), having been published in 1984 in Armenian. He received the Eliz Kavukçuyan Literature Award for authors writing in Armenian in Paris, France.

    He followed this with his books in Turkish, including: “Gâvur Mahallesi” (Non-Muslim District) in 1992, “Söyle Margos Nerelisen?” (Tell me Margos, Where Are You From?) in 1995 and “Biletimiz İstanbul’a Kesildi” (Our Ticket Was For İstanbul) in 1998. He wrote another book in Armenian in 1999, “Dikrisi Aperen” (From the Shores of Tigris). His latest book, “Kürdan” (Toothpick), comprises his essays. “Tespih Taneleri” (Prayer Beads), first published in 2006, was recently reprinted in its sixth edition. He continues to write a column in the Evrensel daily.

    Do you believe there will be justice in the end? Do you think the Ergenekon investigation is helping that process?

    A mentality change has probably occurred with the Ergenekon investigation. People started to understand who is really harmful to this society and to this country. There used to be a crooked mentality. Now there is an investigation into that. That investigation itself, the Ergenekon investigation, is even helping the process of understanding that crooked mentality. We hope justice will be served. In the Dink case, there has been no resolution in four years despite all the evidence. There is apparently resistance to solving the case. The forces that desire a solution of the case appear to not yet have enough power to overcome that resistance.

    ‘If you look at history, you see that old borders are gone’

    Do you think Turkey and Armenia will be able to resolve their problems? Do you think the border will be opened?

    Honestly, I am against borders. What border? Whose border? Who determines borders? If you look at history, you see that old borders are gone. That means that the current borders that we know of will disappear in time. Some borders are already disappearing. Look at the states in the European Union. It is very unusual to think that the Turkey-Armenia border will remain closed. We had many problems with Greece until very recently, but now we are close friends. There is a lot of symbolism attached to Mount Ağrı (Mount Ararat), but when I look at it, I see something else. On the Turkish side of Mount Ağrı I saw Turkish villagers burning dried cow dung for heating. And on the Armenian side of the mountain I saw Armenian villagers do the same. They share the same faith through burning dried cow dung. They shouldn’t have shared that kind of faith. They should not have shared only grief and hopelessness. I hope the border will be opened. I hope all borders will be opened.

    We talk about physical borders, but there are also closed minds which seem to be opening slowly. Do you agree?

    The problems are mostly political. People who are fixated on those problems do not offer any solutions to the problems of the villagers who have to burn dried cow dung to stay warm. Those problems only help divide people along ideological lines. But as people have contact, they start to know each other and they tend to not pass judgment along ideological or political lines. Fortunately, there is increased contact between the Turkish and Armenian peoples. They have started this process of dialogue and they continue to have it. A solution to the problems will come from the public of both sides and not from top officials. As long as people continue to engage in dialogue, solutions will be produced. We were recently part of a civil society initiative, Ani Dialogue. We’ve seen what civil society can do. As long as there is dialogue and people from both sides sit down to share the same food at a table, we will have solutions.

  • Taner Akçam, amid contradictions and charges of betrayal, loses credibility

    Taner Akçam, amid contradictions and charges of betrayal, loses credibility

    By Ferruh Demirmen, Ph.D.

    Taner Akçam, Associate Professor of History at Clark University (Worcester, MA) and the “prince charming” of the Armenian lobby, got himself trapped in contradictions on interpreting the results of Turkey’s recent (September 12) referendum on Constitutional changes. He inadvertently brought to surface some unsavory aspects of his past. Akçam’s younger brother, Cahit Akçam, used the occasion to mock the elder brother and charged him with betrayal.

    taner akcam
    taner akcam

    Taner Akçam is an occasional contributor to Turkey’s Taraf, an off-base newspaper that is a staunch supporter of Turkey’s AKP (AK Party, Justice and Development Party). Rumored to be funded by the USA-based Gülen movement, and according to some also by the CIA, it is staffed largely by ex-liberal socialists that are now far to the right. Cahit Akçam is a columnist at Turkey’s left-leaning Birgün newspaper. The AKP is Turkey’s Islamic-rooted ruling party.

    What got Taner Akçam into trouble was an op-ed he wrote in Taraf titled “Seeking Milosevic” that attacked Birgün. He took issue with Birgün’s headline news that the referendum had confirmed the 60% right-wing and 40% left-wing split in the country, and that the nationalist conservative votes had consolidated at the AKP. In what was a victory for the AKP, the referendum passed by a margin of 58%.

    By drawing an analogy between Birgün and Slobodan Milosevic of ex-Yugoslavia, Akçam implicitly accused the newspaper of supporting nationalistic, racist and genocidal sentiments.

    Neighborhood concept

    Taner Akçam couldn’t accept Birgün’s view that the 40% of the referendum voters, that had voted “no,” were really left-wing. Noting that mass-killer Slobodan Milosevic, while called a communist and a socialist, had done horrible things, he argued that likewise in Turkey those who voted “no” couldn’t be called true socialists. The naysayers were the main opposition party CHP (Republican People’s Party) and the military-bureaucracy faction. The latter had organized and defended military coups in Turkey, he argued.

    According to Akçam, labeling these groups “socialists,” as Birgün did, stemmed from a hatred of the AKP. Akçam called the 40% the “bourgeois group.” He maintained that this hatred is best explained through the “neighborhood” metaphor.

    In Akçam’s view, Turkey is founded on “our” and “other” neighborhoods. The first neighborhood is one of “city people” that includes bureaucrats, the military, and the like. The CHP and the Ottoman-era İttihat ve Terakki Partisi (Committee of Union and Progress, CUP) are included in this group.

    The “other” neighborhood comprises artisans and peasants that have strong religious identities. This neighborhood is now expanding and encroaching on the “city people” neighborhood.

    Akçam sees himself in the “city people” neighborhood, which he calls “ours.”

    Contradiction and myopia

    But by doing so, Akçam fell into a gasping contradiction, because this is also the group that he labeled “bourgeoisie.” How could someone, with a well-known Marxist background, and calling himself a socialist, be part of the bourgeois group? (Separate from his self-confessed connection to the terrorist PKK organization during 1981-84, Akçam escaped from Turkish prison in 1977 after having been convicted of left-wing terrorist activities aimed at, among others, NATO military and American personnel).

    Surprisingly enough, Akçam supports the “other” neighborhood – the conservative, Islamic group solidly backed by Taraf. This is because he thinks this group has strong democratic credentials.

    It doesn’t take a professor’s prescience to know that such an argument is plain vacuous.

    With the AKP in control – political lords of the 60% group – Turkey today is far removed from democracy – the illegal wiretappings, indefinite detentions and imprisonment of the opponents (including 47 journalists) of the government, an atmosphere of fear permeating the country, mandatory religious education, widespread penetration of Gülenist elements in the state apparatus, in particular the police, appalling inequality between men and women, systematic efforts (re: the referendum) to bring the judiciary under the control of the government, parliamentary immunity, etc. None of these inequities seems to bother the professor.

    In Turkey today the press is under siege, and by Prime Minister’s own admission, “Those that are impartial [to the AKP] should be eliminated.” There are more detainees in prison than those convicted. Many detained under the so-called “Ergenekon case” don’t even know the exact charges against them.

    No scruples, and no loyalty

    Akçam’s contradictions and distortions also caught the attention of his younger brother Cahit Akçam. Responding to the elder Akçam in Birgün, Cahit Akçam couldn’t hide his scorn. In a blistering, two-part rebuttal titled “Really, you are the child of which neighborhood?” he chastised his brother, and mockingly called on him to come to his senses. His article started with a quotation (and an admonition) from Anton Chekhov: “Others’ sins do not make you a saint.”

    Cahit Akçam called the elder Akçam’s “our” vs. “other” neighborhood analysis, with “Marxist-smelling” questions, “light” and meaningless because it was not founded on class distinction. Neither neighborhood as described by Taner embraced the working class. Asking the rhetorical question as to how Taner could overlook the working class, the younger Akçam thought that his brother, in what appeared to be sheer hypocrisy, didn’t really care for the working class.

    Continued the younger brother sarcastically: “Luckily, Taner at least didn’t ignore the bourgeois class in ‘our’ neighborhood.” He chaffed at his brother for not mentioning the bourgeois class in the “other” neighborhood, i.e., the Islamist businessmen that the Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan had braggingly called “The Anatolian Tigers.”

    Wondering how his brother could not know that the bourgeois class cannot exist without a working class, Cahit mocked his brother: “He is a big professor. True, not a sociology professor, but a history professor nonetheless. He has licked and swallowed a thousand times more than we have. He knows that, to be so ignorant, one does not have to be a professor. For Taner, the working class has little value.”

    The elder Akçam was tersely reminded of the struggles of Turkey’s working class since 1900.

    Cahit continued his criticism by making reference to a Turkish metaphor – referring to lentil meal – that this is all that the Taner could muster as an argument. Referring to Taner’s claim that all the “infamous” events in Turkey’s history emanated from “our” class, he bristled at Taner’s suggestion that the socialists, through the CHP, were like relatives to the military- bureaucracy.

    He mockingly called attention to the fact that the socialists had suffered immensely from the 1980 fascistic military coup.

    Recalling how the elder Akçam had defended the causes of right-wing, fascist elements in Turkey’s recent history, how he had failed to come to the defense of socialists who had been falsely accused of coup attempts, his denialist past, and how he had let down even his own family, the younger Akçam weighed in angrily: “How can Taner accuse his old friends, and even his own brother, as potential perpetrators of genocide?”

    Barely concealing his disdain, Cahit asked of his brother: “As you place the blame on your own neighborhood, can there be a more harrowing psychological ruin [for you]?  … Where is your heart, and your conscience?”

    The ultimate indignity came when the younger Akçam concluded that only someone who was politically and ideologically blind, and someone who had lost his scruples and his sense of loyalty, could do what his brother had done.

    In the background of such emotional outburst was the fact that, while Taner Akçam jumped the prison in 1977 into the safety of Germany and escaped the tribulations of the 1980 military coup, in the coup’s aftermath his brother was put on trial for unauthorized activities, faced death by hanging, and was imprisoned for 8 years. Obviously, a lecture on fascism and the struggles of socialists was the last thing the younger Akçam wanted to hear from a sibling he considered unscruppled and untrustworthy.

    A revisionist professor

    There was more to Akçam’s false accusations. He twisted history and put finger on “our neighborhood’ as the perpetrator of the May 27 (1960), March 12 (1971) and – obliquely – September 12 (1980) military interventions in Turkey. Evidently to hide his own past, and the embarrassment therewith, in his accounting he glossed over the 1980 military coup and the events (including his role) that preceded it.

    He dallied further into the past and noted that his “neighborhood” was also responsible for the so-called “Armenian genocide” and the Dersim events (1937).

    But he was quick to disown any blame – a point that also drew ridicule from the younger Akçam. Instead, Taner Akçam conveniently placed the blame on “our administrators.” Socialists like him, while closely affiliated with the administrators, had deep disagreements with them. It was all the fault of the administrators, not the socialists like him, he argued.

    Nice scapegoat, these administrators were! All that exonerated Akçam and made him squeaky clean!

    As to why “we socialists” never faced up to the criminal acts in Turkish history, Akçam argued that animosity toward the “other” neighborhood was far more important than facing up to criminal acts. “Our culture was such that we [preferred to] blame the Armenians for cooperating with the imperialists while we were fighting our war of independence, and the Dersimians represented a backward and feudal system.”

    Then Akçam made his grandstand by calling on “our” neighborhood to face up to its crimes.

    In such argumentation Akçam conveniently dismissed the criminality of the Armenian gangs in the massacre of more than a half-million Moslems, the fatal blow that the Armenian rebellion had inflicted on the fighting ability of the Ottoman armies in wartime, and ignored the fact the Dersim episode was instigated by reactionary feudal lords that had conspired against the young Turkish republic.

    Akçam also chose not to mention the bloody 1993 Madimak episode in the Anatolian city of Sivas. A crowd of fanatic Islamists (from the “other” neighborhood), amid chants of “Allah-ü Ekber,” set fire to a hotel where a group of left-leaning intellectuals had assembled. In the ensuing mayhem 37 artists and writers lost their lives.

    Akçam’s analysis of past events is the hallmark of an academician who follows a one-track, necessarily biased, approach to historical events.

    In his call to confront one’s criminal history, Akçam should turn the tables and first ask the Armenians and “other” neighborhood to confront their criminality. Why, for example, are the Armenian archives in Yerevan and Boston closed while all Turkish ones open? What are the Armenians hiding?

    And when will the likes of the “Madimak crowd” see the light of Enlightenment?

    Summing it up

    The Taraf-Birgün episode raised the specter of a history professor who, by the reckoning of his own brother, was long in false accusations but short in scruples and trustworthiness. The episode also caught the professor in contradictions and brought to light his biased, one-track approach to traumatic events in Turkish history in the past 100 years.

    Will all this make any difference as regards Akçam’s credibility as a scholar for the Armenian money masters who sponsor his academic career – like the Zoryan Institute and the Cafesjian Family Foundation when Akçam was at the University of Minnesota, and now the Arams, the Kaloosdians and the Mugars at Clark University? Considering that the professor’s criminal past has so far made no difference, the answer must be a firm “no.” Obviously, the professor is serving a useful – in fact very useful – purpose for the Armenian lobby.

    It must be a wondrous world when the “golden” Armenian coffers can sustain an academic chair in history when, as in Akçam’s case, the holder of that chair happens to have his degree in sociology.

    In fact, we should not be too surprised if the spinmasters of the Armenian lobby call on their “prince charming” to come to the aid of the Armenian mob charged last month with the largest Medicare fraud in U.S. history. Could the professor argue that the mob job was actually the “dirty work” of the Turks? Never say “no.”

    To rephrase his brother’s question, in which “neighborhood” does Taner Akçam stand when it comes to truth?

    Surely, the professor must be able to answer that question himself without help from his old-time mentor, Professor Vahakn Dadrian.

    A deeper question is, why Akçam-the-professor would write in a newspaper such as Taraf which has a reputation of acting as a rogue agent of the government on unsubstantiated allegations relating to the opposition, and whose executive editor, Ahmet Altan, in his own words, would be willing to sell out his country “for a woman’s breast and the shade of a cherry tree.” …. But that would be a different story.

    [email protected]

    Addendum: The above article was first submitted (as an exception) to “Armenian Genocide Resource Center,” .  Initially, the host welcomed the article and published it as an “exclusive” on its website. Half a day later the post was mysteriously removed from the website. Query as to why it was removed elicited no satisfactory response.