By Sarah Rainsford
BBC News, Istanbul
[Picture: Men stand besides the skulls and corpses of Armenian victims
of the Turkish deportation circa 1915]
An internet petition has been launched in Turkey, apologising for the
"great catastrophe of 1915" when hundreds of thousands of Ottoman
Armenians died.
Armenians and many international historians describe as "genocide" the
massacres and deaths during a forced deportation from eastern Turkey.
Turkey firmly denies that, saying those killed were just victims of war.
The petition – the first of its kind – was initiated by prominent
Turkish academics and newspaper columnists.
They say they want to challenge the official denial and provoke
discussion in Turkish society about what happened.
The petition is entitled "I apologise", and a short statement at the
top rejects what it calls the ignorance and denial in Turkey of what
the Ottoman Armenians suffered in 1915.
It then apologises for the pain that was caused.
It is a bold and original step in a country where writer Hrant Dink
was killed just last year for openly saying that the events of 1915
were genocide.
Sparking discussion
Nationalist politicians have condemned the move as an insult to the
Turkish nation, and the organisers have received abusive emails.
Turkey admits that many Armenians were killed but it denies any
genocide, saying the deaths happened during widespread fighting in
World War I.
The petition does not call on the state to apologise for what happened
and it deliberately avoids the highly controversial definition of
genocide.
But the Turkish academic who dreamed up the idea says he hopes it will
spark a proper discussion of what happened and promote empathy for
what the Armenians suffered.
Cengiz Aktar called it the responsibility of all Turks to think and
talk openly about how, and why, the Armenian people disappeared from a
land they inhabited for 4,000 years.
The petition’s authors say they have received many encouraging comments.
In the first few hours after the petition was launched, more than
1,000 people had signed their names beneath it.