‘Armenians for Obama’ Updated
Just noticed that Armenians for Obama website has been updated with information in English and western Armenian.
‘Armenians for Obama’ UpdatedJust noticed that Armenians for Obama website has been updated with information in English and western Armenian. Turkish Blogger Tells It As It IsA Turkish student from Seattle, who hopes that her “blog will help crack myths, break stereotpyes, particularly regarding what it means to be Turkish,” has posted her paper on the Armenian Genocide and the question of restitutions acknowledging that her challenge of Turkey’s official stance on the history of Ottoman Armenians “will incur more cyber space enemies than friends.” In the opening of the paper, the blogger suggests that the Ottoman history may be very far, but it is also close.
After presenting Armenian and Turkish views on the history of Ottoman Armenians in 1915, the Turkish student does something few open-minded Turks would dare – to raise the question of power relationship between Turkish and Armenian nationalism referencing the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF):
The blogger says that just a year ago she might have had different attitude toward the history of the Ottoman Armenians. But there are things, she says, that can’t be ignored.
But it is not only the Armenian story, the student says, that has been denied in Turkey. Often the west itself has demonized Turks as a people.
One can tell that this student is not just resisting nationalism but (male) chauvinism too. And here is why:
She isn’t afraid to call things by their names, is she? And she won’t say, unlike some others, “I recognize [the Armenian Genocide], therefore you [Armenians] shut up [on restitutions]:”
Is justice justified when it brings injustice to someone else? After discussing the geopolitical unlikeness of land reparations to Armenia in the near future, she says:
Last semester I touched on the same topic in my early political thought class: “[…] But how can one achieve justice and what does it represent? Following the logic in Aquinas’ work, justice is the opposite of injustice. While justice is so vague that it would be difficult to fight for, injustice could be easily spotted. So in a sense working for justice can be done through minimizing and eliminating injustice. That has, I must confess, become part of my political philosophy after reading the works of these great thinkers. […] Although almost none would argue, with the exception of ultra-nationalist Turks who think the genocide never happened, that genocide recognition by Turkey would be justice, others disagree on whether Armenians even should talk about returning western Armenia, especially at a time when emigration is a national problem in the Republic of Armenia and that few from the Armenian Diaspora have repatriated to the tiny country. This is a topic that is not unique to Armenians but is actually a worldwide problem. Even the most recent population shifts in the world have resulted in the ethnic cleansing of indigenous or local inhabitants. Of course most of these have not been a result of genocide like in the Armenian case, but many people in the world have lost their land. What makes it even more complex is when multiple and quite different groups make claims to the same land – and separately taken they often sound quite legitimate. The Kurds, for instance, claim what Armenians consider western The prophecy of the New York Times article has come to become a reality. Questions like these are very different to answer, and perhaps neither of our early great thinkers would try to find an answer to that. This is one of the examples when “justice” cannot be defined to its full extent and become a universalized one, yet most of our thinkers would argue that there are many injustices within the problem that can be minimized. Ancient Armenian churches and other monuments, if they have not been already exploded or converted to mosques or to secular buildings, are in ruins in the A plaque on the Colorado State Capitol grounds helps to find an answer. In the 1990s, one of the state senators was reading the plaque on the Civil War Statue, placed on at the Capiol in 1909, when he noticed that the list of military engagements that Colorado cavalry participated in listed “Sand Creek: November 29, 1864.” The Sand Creek Massacre of about 200 peaceful Arapaho and When the issue came to the floor many questions were raised. The statue was history itself, so was the racist plaque on it. How could a historical injustice be righted without committing another injustice, aka vandalizing an artifact at the State Capitol? The compromise was to place a separate plaque at the front base of the statue that would tell the real story of the Sand Creek Massacre and leave the original plaque in situ. The Sand Creek Massacre plaque at the Capitol is a perfect example of how Justice is a very broad notion and has been the driving topic, in my view, of political thought development. Although some thinkers didn’t make direct observations of justice in the overall society, the bottom line of what they advocated was based in the belief of a certain form of justice. When Plato was saying that democracy is potential tyranny he was asking whether – what we today call – utilitarianism is justice. When, in the summer of 2005, I was studying at the International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies in Justice is not a definite value or project that can be fought for in one and only way, but there is always room for minimizing injustice. At the Genocide Institute where I met my Rwandan friend, I also learned a famous quote that in order for evil to win is for good people to do nothing. I think Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas and Machiavelli all taught me engagement. That is engagement in limiting injustice. ” Justice for the Turkish blogger definitely starts with facing the past. She finishes her essay by saying:
The Turkish blogger from Seattle is making history with her own writing, but it is not only her acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide that will likely make her a hate-figure among most nationalist Turks (perhaps, that’s the reason that she has so far hidden her name). The Seattle student also brings up issues of sexuality and women’s resistance and posts a photo or two that some of the readers of my blog wouldn’t appreciate. I think, though, one can’t be a humanist without being a feminist and vice verse. And whoever the Turkish lady from Seattle is, she now has a friend in Denver. Colorado: Clinton Family Friend Votes for ObamaAs Barack Obama has won the Colorado caucuses in an overwhelming majority, the Denver Post carries a story on a long-time Clinton family friend who has voted for Barack Obama:
Turks Hack Porn GiantThe list of websites hacked by Turkish groups has been diverse so far – Armenian news and history, Belgium’s Military website and a Vietnam Memorial Website. But what has been thought to be the work of ultra-nationalist Turkish groups who vehemently deny the Armenian Genocide of WWI, now seems to have progressive or conservative (decide for yourself) tones too. A group that identifies itself as “Turkish cyber terrorists,” as of February 4, 2008, has hacked one of the free porn video giants – RedTube.com that has has attempted to be the “adult version” of YouTube.com. Whether done by Turks or not, it is interesting to see hackers in “progressive action.” Although most people who are against porn do so on moral grounds, such as religion, many progressives and feminists are ardently against pornography by arguing that the latter is another method of objectifying and oppressing women. Snapshots of the Djulfa Destruction’s Suspected SupervisorAfter closely watching the original tape of the December, 2005, destruction of the world’s largest medieval Armenian cemetery by Azerbaijan’s army, I was able to identify one – if not the only – participant of the destruction who wasn’t uniformed. Taped on December 15, 2005, by members of the Armenian Church in Tabriz from Iran’s territory, the video showed a middle-age man – unlike the young soldiers – dress in a black suite and directly supervising the dumping of the Djulfa cross-stones to the River Araxes. The same man was also taped on December 16, 2005, at the same location at this time avoiding directly looking toward the Iranian border. Several soldiers were spotted using binoculars to look toward the Iranian border – they had apparently noticed the film crew that was taping them from across the border. Samantha Power’s Message to Armenian-AmericansHarvard professor and genocide scholar Samantha Power has made a video, posted at ANCA.org and YouTube.com, specifically appealing to Armenian-Americans and asking for their support for Barack Obama in the presidential elections. Power identifies herself as a senior foreign policy advisor to Obama. I wonder whether, if Obama gets elected, Samantha Power will become the Secretary of State. Sen. McCain on Armenian-American IssuesA statement by presidential candidate John McCain, posted by the Armenian National Committee of America, on Armenian-American issues:
Ku Klux Klan after ObamaAlthough presidential canidadate Barack Obama has received the earliest protection by the Secret Service in the history of the United States, many in the States still believe the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) and other hate groups will do their best to harm the Illinois senator. While physical harm is what people are concerned about, KKK sympathisers are using the Internet to spread their position on the black candidate. A post at the website of Klansman David Duke, for example, concludes that “Obama is taking the Black and the Hispanic vote and he has done nothing to get it except being born non-White.” The post also hints to Obama’s “connection” with Islam resonating with circulating urban legends that Obama is a “radical Muslim.” In order to fight the xenophobic charge of being a Muslim, the Obama campaign has even sponsored a Google link that states “Barack Obama is a Christian. Get the facts at his official site.” Although there is nothing wrong about being a proud Christian, it is somewhat saddening to see that a Christian candidate has to repeat over and over again that he is not Muslim. Saddening, because it is shows nothing but the high level of prejudice against Muslim people in the United States. But even being a good Christian doesn’t keep haters from hating Obama. The Associated Content says that many threats against the Obama campaigned in the country go unreported.
The publication also posts a statement by a national Ku Klax Klan leader hinting that Obama’s possible victory may trigger racist whites to “ship” blacks to Africa for the “benefit” of the latter:
Another xenophobic website posts a supporter’s suggestion to become politically more active to “repair the damage” caused by “the post-Obama day:”
Clinton Accused of Ties With Nationalist TurksA reader of this blog, commenting on a previous post, has brought to my attention to a YouTube videothat claims U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has received large contributions from a nationalist Turkish filmmaker. The controversial producer’s recent film series in Turkey, called “The Valley of the Wolves,” has been accused of anti-Semitism and is thought to have triggered nationalist young Turks to murder Christians, including Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink. In the meantime, an Armenian-American lobbying group has endorced Mrs. Clinton for presidency. |