This weekend is the 95th anniversary of the 1915 Armenian genocide. Lucine Kasbarian writes on media coverage of recent Turkish tantrums.
****
Recent articles in the
mainstream media would have us believe that governments around the
world somehow question the factuality of the 1915 Armenian, Assyrian
and Greek genocides committed by Turkey. These articles would also have
us believe that the Turkish government’s latest temper tantrums over
these genocides are justified. Turkey, of course, just recalled its
ambassadors to protest the passage of resolutions by the U.S. House of
Representatives’ Foreign Affairs Committee and the Swedish Parliament
that acknowledged Turkish culpability for these genocides.
Despite what today’s mainstream media are declaring, the evidence
proving the 1915 genocides is overwhelming. And formal resolutions
affirming these unpunished crimes against humanity made appearances
around the world long before 2010. Regardless of what pro-Turkish
apologists would have us believe, the issue has never been about
whether the Turkish regime carried out genocide. Rather, it has always
been about when Turkey would be punished and deliver reparations and
restitution to the rightful, indigenous inhabitants.
Powerful media elites would have us believe that the mainstream media
universe has been devoid of criticism for Turkey’s unpunished crimes
because such voices are either non-existent, marginal, irrelevant,
fabricated or some combination thereof.
What the media elites fail to tell us is that when these critical
voices -- from victim ethnic groups or elsewhere -- come forward to
submit letters, opinion pieces, or quotes, they are usually denied
access.
Media elites also neglect to tell us that opinions that do not reflect
the official narrative spun by Turkey -- not to mention Israel and the
U.S. -- largely go unpublished. Authoritative voices that would
discredit mainstream media’s official narrative of the genocide issue
are removed from the elite’s “golden rolodex” -- the name given to
describe the small group of establishment-approved “experts” who are
most frequently quoted in news stories or asked to appear on television.
The absence of dissent in the mainstream media and in the halls of
power does not mean that the victims of the genocides and their
descendants are insignificant, apathetic or deceitful. No, we are
alive, awake and infuriated.
The media are also telling us that we should sympathize with Turkey
because it feels “humiliated” by accusations of genocide. Turkey uses
this word to describe its anger that its national honor has somehow
been injured by such accusations. Do Turkish, Israeli and American
officials know what “humiliation” means to the survivors and
descendants of the Armenian, Assyrian and Greek genocides who
experienced debasement and degradation during the genocidal ordeals and
are forced to endure denials and demeaning treatment right up to the
present day?
And how did humiliation of the victims occur? By order of the Young
Turk regime, unarmed civilian subjects -- Armenian, Assyrian and Greek
men, women and children -- were raped in broad daylight, in front of
their families and neighbors. The tortures and violations were beyond
one’s wildest imagination. Innocents were skinned and burned alive.
Their tongues and fingernails were torn out. Horseshoes were nailed to
their feet. They were stripped naked and sent on death marches into the
desert. Women’s breasts were cut off and their pregnant bellies
bayoneted. Fetuses were thrown up into the air and impaled on swords
and bayonets for sport. Men were tied to tree limbs that were bent
towards one another. When the tree’s limbs were released, the men’s
bodies were torn in half. Women were tied to horses and dragged to
their deaths.
Those Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks who were not exterminated,
enslaved in harems, or kidnapped and forcibly converted to Islam were
driven from their indigenous lands. Those who survived the death
marches spent the rest of their lives in exile, uprooted from their
culture and civilization, grieving for their slaughtered families and
yearning for their ancestral homeland.
Media elites are giving voice to embroidered Turkish “humiliation” and
not to the real humiliation of the victims, survivors and heirs who
live with constant anguish in the face of torture, dispossession,
contempt and indifference. Media elites are defending Turkey when it is
the martyrs and their heirs who deserve mercy and compassion.
In spite of Turkey’s efforts to humiliate the victims at the time of
the genocides -- and to prolong this humiliation up to the present day
with cultural theft, trivialization and scape-goating -- the dignity of
the victims and their descendants has, remarkably, remained intact.
Turkey’s genocidal crimes have gone unpunished. While continually
profiting from the homes, farms, lands, properties, institutions and
possessions confiscated in 1915, Turkey even accuses the victims and
survivors of the crimes that it itself committed. And media elites
portray ongoing survivor grievances as nuisances that impede “progress.”
It is the genocide deniers -- the rulers and lobbies of the U.S.,
Turkey, Israel, and Azerbaijan -- who are the ones impeding progress.
Their denial, duplicity and audacity do not mean that the genocides’
victims and their heirs have been defeated. Denying the truth does not
invalidate it. Fictional Turkish “reconciliation” initiatives foisted
upon Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks will never take the place of
genuine atonement and restitution, which are necessary for true
progress to be made.
To these deniers and obstructionists we say: “Your tactics are
transparent. The perpetrators, beneficiaries and enablers of the
ongoing genocide against the Armenian, Assyrian and Greek peoples will
be brought to justice. You can hide from the truth, but you can't hide
the truth. We will persist, and the truth will prevail.”
|