PRESS RELEASE
Armenian National Committee
San Francisco – Bay Area
51 Commonwealth Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94118
Tel: (415) 387-3433
Fax: (415) 751-0617
mail@ancsf.org
Contact: Roxanne Makasdjian (415) 641-0525
HRANT DINK & RAGIP ZARAKOLU VISIT THE BAY AREA
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San Francisco, March 4, 2006 – The Bay Area Armenian National Committee
hosted it’s annual “Hye Tad Evening” at Treasure Island, with special
guests from Turkey Agos Armenian Weekly editor, Hrant Dink and Belge
Publishing House owner, Ragip Zarakolu.
Hrant Dink is the publisher and founding editor of the only bilingual
Turkish-Armenian newspaper, the Agos Weekly, established in 1996.
Dink thanked the Bay Area ANC for invited him to speak. Speaking in
Armenian, he said, “I am delighted to have the opportunity to meet
the Armenian community here,” and that he was happy to have had the
chance to meet and talk with Hye Tad committees all over the world.
Dink grew up in Malatia, attended Armenian school in Istanbul, and
studied Philosophy and Zoology at Istanbul University. Through his
writings, publications, and public statements, Dink has been an
outspoken advocate for the democratization of Turkish society, and
for the need to break the silence about the Armenian Genocide.
Dink recently went on trial facing three years in prison for “insulting
the Turkish state,” because of remarks he made when asked how he felt
in primary school when reciting the Turkish oath, “I am Turkish,
I am honest, I am hardworkingâ~@¦” Dink said that although he was
honest and hardworking, that he was not a Turk, but an Armenian.
Although finally acquitted in that case, he was later convicted of
“insulting the Turkish identity” because of an article he wrote about
the impact of the Armenian Genocide on the Diaspora.
Although his suspended sentence requires that he not repeat the crime,
Dink said, “I will not be silent. As long as I live here, I will go
on telling the truth,” and vowed that he would appeal to Turkey’s
supreme court and to the European Court of Human Rights if necessary.
“If it is a day or six months or six years, it is all unacceptable
to me,” he said. “If I am unable to come up with a positive result,
it will be honorable for me to leave this country.”
Dink now faces new charges for attempting “to influence the judiciary,”
because of his comments about his conviction.
Despite the government pressure being exerted on people who are
speaking out, Dink said, “It was a dream 10 years ago to imagine seeing
the publication of books and articles [on the Armenian Genocide].
There is no doubt that there has been some positive change.”
“People are starting to defend their rights,” said Dink, “and Turkey
is now living dangerous, but if successful – hopefully, great changes.”
“The activities of the Diaspora, the Genocide resolutions passed
by other countries every year, have contributed to the growing
consciousness in Turkey,” said Dink, who also attributed much of the
growing recognition of the Armenian Genocide in Turkey to the Kurdish
struggle for national rights there.
“The government used to say, ‘We don’t have Kurds or a Kurdish problem.
Those people fighting up in the mountains are actually Armenians,'”
said Dink. “And to prove their assertions, they would publish
photographs in newspapers showing the uncircumcised corpses of the
defeated fighters. The Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan was referred to
as ‘The Armenian Bastard.” Dink said that one of the first things his
paper did was to prove a certain priest who appeared in a government
newspaper photo with a Kurdish leader, was not in fact, an Armenian
priest, as was claimed.
“We said we’re going to speak in their language,” Dink said of the
decision to publish Agos in Turkish as well as Armenian, against the
protests of many in the Armenian community. “Since then we began
to speak about our history and to counteract their lies. We said,
‘Now, it’s our turn.'”
Dink said that the process of democratization in Turkey can no longer
be turned back. “There is a movement to talk about the past and a
desire to know what happened to Armenians, ” he said. One of the
unexpected consequences of this movement was that many people in
Turkey are now revealing that their ancestors were Armenian.
“On the other side, the Turkish government has responded with more
propaganda,” said Dink, citing the fact the four years ago, new
textbooks were distributed to all the schools which inserting extreme
historical revisionism, claiming that Armenians massacred the Turks.
Comparing the small number of books on the Genocide now being
published, with the millions of government textbooks denying
the Genocide, Dink said, “My hope is that those 3,000 books will
vanquish the governments’ millions.” He said that the process of
Armenian Genocide is going to take place from within the country,
starting from the general population. He said that outside pressures
for change must find a partner from within the country, or there is
a danger for extreme nationalism. Dink described a new ideological
movement within Turkey which brings together the Turkish and the
Islamic identities to form one unifying identity. But he also pointed
out that the nationalist groups and Islamist groups are competing
with one another in speaking against the United States, and as a
result the attacks against Armenians have increased.
Nevertheless, Dink expressed optimism about Armenian Genocide
recognition. “One day they will recognize that the Armenian Genocide
has to be addressed. But they will try to delay it and water it down
as much as possible.”
Regarding Turkey’s entry into the European Union, Dink said, “Turkey
is like a young man in love with a European young woman. But by the
time a union can actually take place, the man will be old and the
woman will be ugly… But love is the important thing. It keeps men
young, because they try to look better, act younger, take care of
themselves. Joining the European Union is not the important thing,
but being in love is important.” Dink also expressed his hope that
one day Armenia would join the European Union.
Ragip Zarakolu is the owner of Belge Publishing House. Through the
publication of books deemed subversive by the Turkish authorities over
the past three decades, Zarakolu has stood out as a courageous citizen
giving voice to countless victims of injustice whose stories have
been silenced, denied, and banned by successive Turkish regimes. The
first book on the Armenian Genocide which he published in Turkish was
Yves Ternon’s, Le Genocide des Armeniens, under the title, Armenian
Taboo, in 1994. Later came Vahakn Dadrian’s Genocide as a Problem
of National and International Law. When Zarakolu was acquitted of
charges against him for that publication, the door was then open for
a more free discussion of the Armenian Genocide in Turkey.
Among Zarakolu’s other translated publications about Armenian and
non-Armenian human rights issues is Migırdich Armen’s “Heghnar’s
Fountain,” Franz Werfel’s “Forty Days in Musa Dagh,” Avetis
Ahoranian’s, “The Fedayees,” Tessa Hoffman’s Talaat Pasha Trials in
Berlin,” Peter Balakian’s “Black Dog of the Fate,” and the most recent,
the Turkish translations of Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story.
Because of his work, Zarakolu spent three years in prison in the
1970’s. His wife also spent several years in prison.
Zarakolu told about his first exposure to the Armenian Genocide,
when his mother, a witness to the deportations, told him about being
kept in the house, while hearing Armenians being taking away outside.
“My mother said, ‘The Armenians were crying outside, and we were
crying inside,” said Zarakolu. Referring to Turkey’s involvement in
WWI as a “stupid, adventurous war of the Ittihadists,” Zarakolu said
his mother lost both her parents, and that she also was able to save
two Armenian girls from deportation, but that the government later
removed those girls from their home.
Zarakolu also spoke admiringly of Sarkis Cherkezian, an Armenian
Genocide survivor born in a Syrian refugee camp, and who just passed
away at 90 years of age.
“We learned many things about the realities of what happened to the
Armenians, ” he said of his close relationship to Cherkezian. He said
it was because of people like Cherkezian that he is able to write.
Zarakolu discussed the initial years of the Belge publishing
house, during which his work was not only banned but received little
attention. “We had a press conference for our collection of writings of
the first reports on the Armenian Genocide, but there was no coverage
in the press,” said Zarakolu.
Since then he has withstood a constant barrage of criminal charges,
further imprisonment, confiscation and destruction of books,
the bombing of his publishing house, and heavy government fines
and taxes. His publishing house has endured more than 40 criminal
indictments. Zarakolu is currently being tried for publishing George
Jerjian’s History Will Set Us Free, and Dora Sakayan’s An Armenian
Doctor in Turkey: Garabed Hatcherian: My Smyrna Ordeal in 1922.
Economic means permitting, Zarakolu hopes to publish the Turkish
editions of the Blue Book from the United Kingdom, Arnim Wegner’s
Testimonies, Captanian’s Testimonies of 1915 and a Selection of
Zabel Yeseyan’s Works, as well as a Photographic Documentation of
the Armenian Deportation to the Syrian Desert.
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Picture Caption: (Left to Right) Bay Area ANC member Khajag Sarkissian,
Agos Editor Hrant Dink; Belge Publishing owner Ragip Zarakolu; Bay
Area ANC Chairperson Roxanne Makasdjian
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