No Reason To Panic

NO REASON TO PANIC
Editorial

Yerkir/arm
March 10, 2006

The opinions and interpretations on the Karabagh settlement expressed
by the Armenian leadership and especially in president Robert
Kocharian’s last TV interview raised a wide range of responses both
inside and outside of Armenia.

The reaction of the Azeri leadership and media was no news since
it was in line with the anti-Armenian hysteria prevailing in this
country. Meanwhile, the reactions of some of our politicians and
observers seem to acquire some new coloring.

You get an impression that the Azeri hysteria has mutated and
influenced some of our politicians giving them another opportunity
to express their anti-government sentiments.

This is the only explanation to this situation when people who never
responded to any anti-Armenian statements made by Azerbaijan and
its calls to settle the conflict through another war have suddenly
started panicking because the Armenian president has answered: we
are not scared of a war, we don’t want a war but we can counter the
enemy both on the diplomatic and on the military fronts.

Eight years ago an attempt was made to confuse our society telling it
that the ‘party of war’ had come to power in Armenia. Then an attempt
was made to convince the society that the same ‘party of war’ was
‘selling’ Karabagh.

Now they are yelling that there is going to be another war.

These people cannot and do not want to understand that by not being
scared of militaristic statements we can prevent the war easier. They
fail to understand that the other side will be having problems with
its war propaganda when it sees that it cannot scare us, that we are
ready to remind them about the events of the recent past.

These people seem to not understand that by such panic they become
a tool in the information war against their own nation. At times of
eminent threats people tend to go to extremes: some start panicking,
others act as ‘blind patriots’. Things happen.

But the strangest thing is to see that some people try to be more
Catholic than the Pope, more democratic than Soros, more dashnak
than the ARF, and more Karabaghian than Robert Kocharian, they want
to look more constructive than anyone else. As a result, they reveal
their true face which in this case is that of a panic-monger.

Residents of New Hachin Complain

A1+

| 14:52:22 | 14-10-2005 | Politics |

RESIDENTS OF NEW HACHIN COMPLAIN

The elections are over in Nor Hachin, but the post-elections passions are
not. This time it refers to the elections of the aldermen. 5 days have
already passed after them, but the electoral areas do not tell anything
about the results.

The headquarters of the candidates apply to the electoral areas to get
information about the results of the elections, but they are sent to the
Local Electoral Committees. The head of the LEC is member of the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation, and the violations recorded have been all in the
interests of the candidate Yura Lazarian who is also member of the above
mentioned party.

11 of the 29 candidates were to be elected. 50 ballots have been added to
the 134 acquired by Yura Lazarian, and he has been `elected’ alderman.
`That is why they do not give us the results, as five more days, and we will
not be able to appeal the results of the elections’, the residents of the
town said and informed that they are going to organize an act of complaint
opposite the LEC building.

ANCA on AXA Settlement of Armenian Genocide Era Insurance Claims

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE
October 12, 2005
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

ANCA STATEMENT ON AXA SETTLEMENT OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ERA INSURANCE
CLAIMS

NOTE TO THE EDITOR: Following is the Armenian National Committee of
America (ANCA) statement on the AXA Class Action Lawsuit
settlement dealing with Armenian Genocide era insurance claims.

___________________________________________________________________

The Armenian National Committee of America today welcomed the
settlement of a class action lawsuit against AXA Insurance company,
allowing descendents of Armenian Genocide era insurance policy
holders to seek the assets denied to them for far too long. The
historic case is the second of its kind, following the New York
Life Insurance class action case settled in February, 2004. In
both cases, the heirs of genocide-era claim holders were
represented by Yeghiayan and Associates, Geragos and Geragos, and
Kabateck Brown Kellner.

To place this settlement in its proper context, it is important to
note that, while the heirs and grandchildren of Genocide-era policy
holders will now receive some small portion of those funds, we
should remember that those monies were not available when these
orphans of the Genocide needed them the most. Instead, they were
collecting interest in AXA coffers and remained there for some 90
years until this corrective action was taken.

The European affiliates of the ANCA played an important role in
educating the European citizenry in general and the Armenian
community in particular regarding the AXA case, through a media
outreach and a far-reaching email campaign. As part of this
effort, the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy
(EAFJD) initiated a petition campaign to AXA France Supervisory
Board Chairman Claude Bebear, urging the firm to accept a fair
settlement that would extend a measure of dignity and recognition
to the victims wrongfully denied their property for the past nine
decades.

The Armenian American community expects a fair, effective, and
orderly claims process be put in place that fully accounts for each
policyholder and appropriately disburses funds to European Armenian
charities and organizations with a long-standing record of fighting
for the rights of the descendants of Armenian Genocide victims.

While the AXA case is significant in that it recognizes the
legitimacy of the insurance claims of Armenian Genocide victims, it
is by no means related to any claims for the deaths, thefts, bodily
harm, and real and personal property confiscations undertaken by
the government of Ottoman Turkey and the Republic of Turkey between
1915 and 1923, the liability and responsibilities for which
continue to be held by the modern day government of Turkey. Nor
does the damages calculation assigned in this case relate in any
way to those claims, which continue to remain outstanding.

The ANCA remains committed to ensuring that, in time, the Armenian
people will receive the restitution they are owed from all those
who unjustly profited, either directly or indirectly, from the
Armenian Genocide.

www.anca.org

Russian Transport Minister To Arrive In Armenia October 12

RUSSIAN TRANSPORT MINISTER TO ARRIVE IN ARMENIA OCTOBER 12

Pan Armenian
11.10.2005 20:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russian Minister of Transport Igor Levitin will
arrive in Armenia on a working visit October 12, reported the Press
Service of the Russian Ministry of Transport. Wednesday Levitin
will take part in a meeting between Russian and Armenian businessmen,
while the seventh session of Inter-Governmental Commission for Economic
Cooperation between Russia and Armenia will be held in Yerevan October
13. Igor Levitin and Armenian Defense Minister Serge Sargsyan are the
Commission Co-Chairs. During the Commission meeting the parties will
discuss the legal framework for cooperation, prospects of development
of trade and economic, financial and property relations, cooperation
in fuel and energy complex, transport and communications, humanitarian
sector. A Protocol will be signed upon completion of the session.

Diamanda Galas

The Age , Australia
Oct 10 2005

Diamanda Galas

By John Slavin
October 10, 2005

Hamer Hall, October 7

PHILOSOPHER Theodor Adorno once wrote: “After Auschwitz, poetry is no
longer possible.” It is a contentious statement for a number of
reasons. Poetry is the paramedic of culture: without poetry, what
will cleanse language through which history, politics and media is
polluted?

The other contention is that there were other genocides before the
Holocaust. Greek-American artist Diamanda Galas confronts these
issues head-on. Hers is a poetic chronicle and angry protest of man’s
inhumanity to man pushed up hard against the glass of memory.

The horrors that her extraordinary, over-the-top performance
commemorates are the Armenian genocide of 1915 and the Anatolian
catastrophe of 1923 in which an estimated half a million Greeks lost
their lives and another 1½ million were displaced. “The Defixiones”
of her title are the lead beads left on graves in the Middle East to
warn against the desecration of graves. Her hour-and-a-half sustained
chant for the dead based on poems by the Greeks Ritsos and Seferis
and eyewitnesses to the murders in Armenia and the writings of the
novelist Dido Soteriou, among others, are the chain of a rosary told
for the victims upon which she hangs her performance.

It is one of the weirdest and most intense theatre events I have
seen. Dressed in the dark robes of an Orthodox nun, Galas wails,
rails and rants her anguish. The voice range is four octaves. It
could crack glass at 20 metres, but the strain she imposes on it is
enormous.

As with the KARAS Dance Company’s Green, there is a reliance on
hypnotic repetition and the presentation of oblique, introspective
art. This disjunction between text and performance is the central
problem.

Although a minute printout of the poems is provided, the audience
seated in the dark can’t possibly understand the details of a recital
delivered in a smattering of Greek, Armenian and Turkish.

The effect is that of the Delphic Oracle at the mouth of her cave,
who warned of disasters yet to come in a psychobabble that none could
untangle.

This is the contradiction of protest art. Galas, like the Beat poets
of the ’50s and ’60s, with whom she has much in common, takes the
anger and internalises it so that the body and the voice become an
instrument of emotional reaction. The moral anguish is undoubtedly
genuine, but the difficulty is one of communicating a position that
can be shared and acted upon. Portraying the horrors of World War I
proved less effective at the time than the ironic cartoons of Grosz
or Dada artists mocking all assumptions about rationality in
civilisation.

Diving into Galas’ performance is like entering someone else’s
nightmare. It is intense, incomprehensible and finally tedious. It
did, however, arouse an enthusiastic response from an audience of
ululating Goths who might have identified with Galas’ romantic
despair.

Diamanda Galas performs today at 8pm at Hamer Hall

photo: Over the top: Diamanda Galas, on Friday night, dressed in the
robes of an Orthodox nun, during her hour-and-a-half sustained chant
for the dead. Diving into Galas’ performance is like entering someone
else’s nightmare.
Photo: Wayne Taylor

http://www.theage.com.au/news/reviews/diamanda-galas/2005/10/10/1128796416479.html

Relations with Turkish Cyprus to become a headache for Azerbaijan

Regnum, Russia
Oct 8 2005

Relations with Turkish Cyprus to become a headache for Azerbaijan
Read it in Russian

As Benita Ferrero-Waldner, European Commissioner for Foreign Affairs,
said, creating relations with Northern Cyprus will lead to
prolongation of Azerbaijani connection to `Neighborhood Policy’ of
the European Union. `EU recognizes only the independence of Republic
of Cyprus. And this country express protests against creation of
flight routes between Azerbaijan and North Cyprus, as well as other
relations between Baku and Lefkosha’, said Benita Ferrero-Waldner, as
`Svoboda’ radio station reports.

In her speech in Committee for Foreign Affairs in the European
Parliament in Brussels, Benita Ferrero-Waldner said she had informed
Azerbaijan, that if the country would not change its position, EU
would ally only with Armenia and Georgia. `We hope that Azerbaijan
will settle this problem, but it will take several weeks’, she said.

In his turn, head of MFA Information Department of Azerbaijan Tair
Tagizade said, that he had received no official information about
European cooperation under program `Neighborhood Policy.’

`Azerbaijan is ready to take steps towards the assigned plan. But
plane flights are a commercial initiative, it has nothing to do with
foreign policy of the state,’ said Tair Tagizade.

Young people from three dioceses gather for fellowship, discussions

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

October 6, 2005
___________________

ACYOA HOSTS PAN NORTH AMERICAN RETREAT AT ARARAT CENTER

Even in today’s fast-paced, iPod-Xbox-TiVo culture, the ancient rhythms
of the Armenian Church still have a place and value. “Baptism: Finding
Modern Meaning in Ancient Rites” was the theme of the first Pan North
American Youth Retreat organized by the Armenian Church Youth
Organization of America (ACYOA) on September 23 to 25, 2005.

“This retreat was a very enriching experience that went deep into the
rituals and meaning of baptism and how it is a true blessing,” said
Angelraven Tevan, 20, a parishioner at the St. James Church of
Watertown, MA. “Learning how to appreciate the importance of baptism is
so important.”

The weekend brought together 50 young people from the Eastern, Western,
and Canadian dioceses for lecture presentations, worship, small group
Bible study, creative self-expression, and interactive sessions. The
weekend activities ended appropriately enough with the Divine Liturgy,
celebrated by Fr. Bedros Kadehjian.

“For me, the retreat was the epitome of all that encompasses both the
spiritual and social aspects of the ACYO,” said Gregory Kalayjian, 31, a
participant from the Canadian Diocese. “The only negative comment I
have is that this spiritual journey had to come to an end.”

The ACYOA Central Council hosted the weekend at the Eastern Diocese’s
Ararat Center in upstate New York after leaders met last year at the
request of the three North American primates — Archbishop Khajag
Barsamian, Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, and Bishop Bagrat Galstanyan.
The three Diocesan leaders wanted young people to get together in order
to discuss common concerns and challenges related to youth involvement
in the church. Each primate made a financial pledge to make this unique
retreat affordable to the participants.

“While we may have some geographical differences, hearing the same
viewpoints and priorities directly from our brothers and sisters from
the West Coast and Canada only further motivated us, as the Central
Council, to continue in our common mission,” said Maria Derderian, ACYOA
Central Council Chair. “It was an exciting gathering and could have
only taken place with the support — both moral and financial — of our
respective primates. We are very grateful for their leadership.”

Next year’s retreat will be hosted by the ACYO of the Western Diocese at
their campgrounds in California. A joint Habitat for Humanity trip to
Armenia is also being explored by organizers.

“There are many similarities and differences between our three regions,
and we need to bridge the gap to take advantage of what we all have to
offer,” said Johnny El Chemmas, a member of the ACYOA Central Council of
the Eastern Diocese. “We have much to learn and gain from each other,”

Leading presentations and discussions at this year’s inaugural gathering
were clergy and Diocesan staff including: Fr. Stepanos Doudoukjian,
pastor of the St. Peter Church of Watervliet, NY, and director of
vocations and youth for St. Nersess Seminary; Fr. Aren Jebejian, pastor
of the St. Gregory Church of Chicago, IL; Fr. Bedros Kadehjian, interim
mission parish coordinator for the Diocese; Nancy Basmajian, ACYOA
executive secretary; Jason Demerjian, college ministry facilitator for
the Eastern Diocese; Jennifer Morris, the Eastern Diocese’s youth
outreach coordinator; and Daron Bolat, an intern with the Eastern
Diocese’s Department of Youth and Education. This was the first such
program involving youth from all three North American cioceses since
1989 when the Western Diocese hosted a joint retreat with the Eastern
Diocese in Las Vegas.

“The ACYO members feel at home in the Armenian Church. Many are driven
by a passionate concern and care to reach out to other young people who
are lost sheep, while many feel a strong desire to serve the church,”
Fr. Doudoukjian said. “I encouraged all those young men and women to
think and pray about a life in the church, either as a priest, deacon,
lay leader, or youth leader, and to consider attending St. Nersess to
study as a seminarian. My prayer is that these same young people will
be our priests and leaders to advance the faithful of our Armenian
Church well into the 21st century.”

For many of the participants, the theological discussions were just a
part of the weekend, which was highlighted by getting to know other
young Armenians from across the continent who share the same commitment
to the Armenian faith.

“It was so wonderful to get connected with our Western and Canadian
counterparts, and to know that we are all together working towards the
same goal to: bring Armenian youth into a stronger relationship with
Christ for a better future for our Armenian Church,” said Talar Topjian,
an ACYOA member form the St. Mary Church of Washington, DC.

— 10/6/05

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News
and Events section of the Eastern Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): At the first Pan North American Youth Retreat, 50
young people from the Eastern, Western, and Canadian Dioceses gathered
at the Eastern Diocese’s Ararat Center.

PHOTO CAPTION (2): Young participants in the Pan North American Youth
Retreat discuss the Armenian faith and its connection to modern life at
the Eastern Diocese’s Ararat Center.

PHOTO CAPTION (3): Participants in the Pan North American Youth
Retreat, which ran from September 23 to 25, 2005, took part in a series
of workshops, discussions, and services. Here they are renouncing
Satan, which is done at the beginning of a Baptismal service.

PHOTO CAPTION (4): From left, Fr. Stepanos Doudoukjian, Fr. Aren
Jebejian, and Fr. Bedros Kadehjian anoint the foreheads of participants
during a discussion on baptism during the Pan North American Youth
Retreat, organized by the ACYOA, which ran from September 23 to 25,
2005, at the Eastern Diocese’s Ararat Center.

www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org.

Developing Business Can’s Survive Without Developing Technologies

DEVELOPING BUSINESS CAN’T SURVIVE WITHOUT DEVELOPING TECHNOLOGIES
By Tamar Minasian

AZG Armenian Daily #178
05/10/2005

According to the experts, only 30% of the US residents are sure that
the information they trusted to the electronic world is safe, while
70% of the consumers realize that the information of the electronic
carriers may be used against them. Tigran Bezjian, head of “Boomerang
Software” company said at “Informational Technologies in Everyday
Business” conference. He said that no one can do without online
services in today developing world, otherwise they will have to quit
business at all.

The discussion was organized within the framework of “DigiTech 2005”
exhibition by Incubator Foundation of Entrepreneurships and the
Union of IT Entrepreneurships. The Armenian and foreign specialists
represented a number of issues of electronic management, security of
informational technologies in business and banking system. The Western
specialists represented the current situation in the US Tigran Bezchian
said the informational technologies always have some drawbacks that the
hackers can use. “We close one door, while the hackers open another,”
he added.

In Armenia electronic trade and management are not largely used and
the criminal cases in the sphere are quite rare. “This issue is a
new one in the world. There are many opportunities for development
in Armenia,” Bagrat Yengibarian said in the interview to Azg. He said
that the clients refuse to use the electronic versions of the deals,
as they don’t want to apply a new approach in their business. While,
the developments testify to the fact that that the security issues
will increase, when the system enlarges.

The initiators of the conference believe that the conference helped
the Armenian specialists to get familiarized with the development
and new achievements of the sphere.

Armenia’s Budget Expenses To Total $1bln In 2006

ARMENIA’S BUDGET EXPENSES TO TOTAL $1BLN IN 2006

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Oct 4 2005

YEREVAN, October 4. /ARKA/. The budget expenses are to total $1bln
in Armenia in 2006, Speaker of the RA Parliament Artur Baghdasaryan
told reporters. According to him, the current economic growth in
Armenia allows additional funds to be directed to the social sector.
Specifically, legislative amendments will allow the Government to
pay AMD 35,000 birth grants and AMD 70,000 allowances to low-income
families. “We will continue this selective policy and increase yearly
allocations,” he said. In 2006, Armenia’s budget revenues are to
total AMD 380bln, and budget expenses AMD 450bln. 7.5% GDP growth,
and 3% inflation are expected next year. ($1 – AMD 443.07) P.T. -0-

Analysis: Turkey on Europe’s doorstep, but still so far from joining

The Independent, UK
Oct 1 2005

Analysis: Turkey – on Europe’s doorstep, but still so far from
joining the club
By Peter Popham
Published: 01 October 2005
Joining the European Union is the great Turkish dream.

However distant the goal, however bitter many Turks may feel about
the disdain in which their country has been held since it first
applied 40 years ago, that dream has endured.

Membership could transform the economy of this still impoverished
nation. The process of qualifying for membership has already changed
much in the country and will change more before it’s over.

Even if the diplomatic waters can be smoothed for negotiations to
begin on Monday, it will be at least 10 years before the 70
million-strong, predominantly Muslim nation becomes one of us: a
fully-fledged member of the EU.

Like the accession of any new member, the arrival of Turkey on
Europe’s doorstep is all about economics, trade, social reform,
democracy, criminal justice, media freedom – everything that
constitutes a modern state.

Many of these factors are already in Turkey’s favour: it is in many
ways far better prepared for membership than the former Warsaw Pact
countries. It was on our side of the Iron Curtain for all those
years. It is a key member of Nato.

It has had a customs union with the EU since 1996: trade in goods has
already been liberalised, and more than half of Turkey’s trade is
already with the EU. It has already adopted many EU rules, such as
those regarding intellectual property and competition. There is no
wholesale privatisation that must be undertaken. The democratic
system is looking increasingly stable and mature. The death sentence
has been abolished.

But uniquely in the case of Turkey, membership is not just about the
nuts and bolts of belonging to the EU. It is also a profoundly moral
issue, for both sides. Whether we admire or despise the EU we don’t
often think about it in moral terms. But with Turkey, the moral
questions cannot be dodged.

One week ago, a group of scholars in Istanbul braved the eggs and
rotten tomatoes of protesters to attend an extraordinary conference.
They were there to discuss the murder of 1.5 million Armenians in the
dying years of the Ottoman empire.

Raising this subject has been taboo in Turkey ever since. It is as if
Germany had risen again after the Second World War with no public
admission, ever, of how the Nazis murdered six million Jews, and as
if they had lived and prospered in denial for the best part of a
century. But despite hitches, threats, two cancellations by judges
and all-round hysteria, Turkey last Saturday finally got round to
discussing “the first genocide of the 20th century”.

Orhan Pamuk, the celebrated Turkish novelist, told a Swiss newspaper
earlier this year: “Almost no one dares speak about these things but
me.” To his country’s lasting shame, he is to go on trial in December
for mentioning what Turkey did to the Armenians and the Kurds. But
now at least he is not quite so alone.

The conference was the work of the EU. “This is a fight of ‘can we
discuss this thing, or can we not discuss this thing?'” a member of
the organising committee said at the start of the conference. Well,
the discussion finally went ahead. It was the EU’s – and Turkey’s –
finest hour for some time.

The question posed at last week’s conference was: “Is this country
forged out of the Ottoman empire’s ashes less than a century ago
mature enough to admit the ugly stains in its history and move
forward?”

If it’s not, the EU’s door will undoubtedly be slammed on it. But if
it can find those inner resources, the dream of Ataturk may finally
be realised.

Turkey, whose inhabitants down the centuries were masters of empires
as far-flung as the Mogul empire in India, the Safavids in Iran and
the Mamelukes if Egypt, can become a modern secular state to compare
with any in the West. For Europe the moral dimension is even greater
– intimidatingly large for many. How big is Europe, in its heart and
soul? Is it a cosy, well-heeled, Christian, white man’s club,
devoted, through things like the Common Agricultural Policy, to
keeping happy those who are already fat; keeping the Old Continent
looking picture-postcard perfect, while accepting with ever worse
grace a fraction of the huddled masses battering at the door? If
that’s what Europe is, it is obviously doomed, as all the latest
demographics make clear. It’s on the way out, as obviously and
miserably as was the South Africa of apartheid.

Or does it have the courage and the wit to avoid that fate? Most of
Turkey will never be European the way Vienna, Paris and Prague are
European. But Seville, Palermo and Venice are also European cities;
and in all of them, Christian and Islamic strands are interwoven just
as in Istanbul.

The identities of Europe and Islam are the products of more than a
millennium of bitter conflict. But Britain and France were enemies
for centuries as well: the European project is all about banishing
war and the threat of war.

Never before has a huge Islamic nation asked for Europe’s recognition
the way Turkey has been asking these past decades. Turkey is the
peaceful bridge to Islam of which the West is in desperate need.

Sticking points in Turkey’s progress towards full EU membership

Turkey’s status

Austria wants Turkey to negotiate “privileged partnership” instead of
full EU membership as advocated by the rest of the EU. Turkey has
warned it will not accept “second class” status.

Croatia

The Balkan state has become a bargaining chip in negotiations.
Austria wants talks on Croatian accession to begin immediately, but
issue is linked to co-operation with the war crimes tribunal.

Muslim issue

Austria isolated in opposing entry of a Muslim nation to the
“Christian” EU after France switched position to ally itself with UK
and Germany, which favour embracing Turkey.

Joining the European Union is the great Turkish dream.

However distant the goal, however bitter many Turks may feel about
the disdain in which their country has been held since it first
applied 40 years ago, that dream has endured.

Membership could transform the economy of this still impoverished
nation. The process of qualifying for membership has already changed
much in the country and will change more before it’s over.

Even if the diplomatic waters can be smoothed for negotiations to
begin on Monday, it will be at least 10 years before the 70
million-strong, predominantly Muslim nation becomes one of us: a
fully-fledged member of the EU.

Like the accession of any new member, the arrival of Turkey on
Europe’s doorstep is all about economics, trade, social reform,
democracy, criminal justice, media freedom – everything that
constitutes a modern state.

Many of these factors are already in Turkey’s favour: it is in many
ways far better prepared for membership than the former Warsaw Pact
countries. It was on our side of the Iron Curtain for all those
years. It is a key member of Nato.

It has had a customs union with the EU since 1996: trade in goods has
already been liberalised, and more than half of Turkey’s trade is
already with the EU. It has already adopted many EU rules, such as
those regarding intellectual property and competition. There is no
wholesale privatisation that must be undertaken. The democratic
system is looking increasingly stable and mature. The death sentence
has been abolished.

But uniquely in the case of Turkey, membership is not just about the
nuts and bolts of belonging to the EU. It is also a profoundly moral
issue, for both sides. Whether we admire or despise the EU we don’t
often think about it in moral terms. But with Turkey, the moral
questions cannot be dodged.

One week ago, a group of scholars in Istanbul braved the eggs and
rotten tomatoes of protesters to attend an extraordinary conference.
They were there to discuss the murder of 1.5 million Armenians in the
dying years of the Ottoman empire.

Raising this subject has been taboo in Turkey ever since. It is as if
Germany had risen again after the Second World War with no public
admission, ever, of how the Nazis murdered six million Jews, and as
if they had lived and prospered in denial for the best part of a
century. But despite hitches, threats, two cancellations by judges
and all-round hysteria, Turkey last Saturday finally got round to
discussing “the first genocide of the 20th century”.

Orhan Pamuk, the celebrated Turkish novelist, told a Swiss newspaper
earlier this year: “Almost no one dares speak about these things but
me.” To his country’s lasting shame, he is to go on trial in December
for mentioning what Turkey did to the Armenians and the Kurds. But
now at least he is not quite so alone.

The conference was the work of the EU. “This is a fight of ‘can we
discuss this thing, or can we not discuss this thing?'” a member of
the organising committee said at the start of the conference. Well,
the discussion finally went ahead. It was the EU’s – and Turkey’s –
finest hour for some time.
The question posed at last week’s conference was: “Is this country
forged out of the Ottoman empire’s ashes less than a century ago
mature enough to admit the ugly stains in its history and move
forward?”

If it’s not, the EU’s door will undoubtedly be slammed on it. But if
it can find those inner resources, the dream of Ataturk may finally
be realised.

Turkey, whose inhabitants down the centuries were masters of empires
as far-flung as the Mogul empire in India, the Safavids in Iran and
the Mamelukes if Egypt, can become a modern secular state to compare
with any in the West. For Europe the moral dimension is even greater
– intimidatingly large for many. How big is Europe, in its heart and
soul? Is it a cosy, well-heeled, Christian, white man’s club,
devoted, through things like the Common Agricultural Policy, to
keeping happy those who are already fat; keeping the Old Continent
looking picture-postcard perfect, while accepting with ever worse
grace a fraction of the huddled masses battering at the door? If
that’s what Europe is, it is obviously doomed, as all the latest
demographics make clear. It’s on the way out, as obviously and
miserably as was the South Africa of apartheid.

Or does it have the courage and the wit to avoid that fate? Most of
Turkey will never be European the way Vienna, Paris and Prague are
European. But Seville, Palermo and Venice are also European cities;
and in all of them, Christian and Islamic strands are interwoven just
as in Istanbul.

The identities of Europe and Islam are the products of more than a
millennium of bitter conflict. But Britain and France were enemies
for centuries as well: the European project is all about banishing
war and the threat of war.

Never before has a huge Islamic nation asked for Europe’s recognition
the way Turkey has been asking these past decades. Turkey is the
peaceful bridge to Islam of which the West is in desperate need.

Sticking points in Turkey’s progress towards full EU membership

Turkey’s status

Austria wants Turkey to negotiate “privileged partnership” instead of
full EU membership as advocated by the rest of the EU. Turkey has
warned it will not accept “second class” status.

Croatia

The Balkan state has become a bargaining chip in negotiations.
Austria wants talks on Croatian accession to begin immediately, but
issue is linked to co-operation with the war crimes tribunal.

Muslim issue

Austria isolated in opposing entry of a Muslim nation to the
“Christian” EU after France switched position to ally itself with UK
and Germany, which favour embracing Turkey.