Istanbul Commemoration Urges Authorities to Recognize the Armenian Genocide and to Compensate

‘Recognize the Genocide, Beg Forgiveness, Compensate’

ISTANBUL, Turkey (A.W.)—On April 24, Committee Against Racism and Discrimination of the Istanbul Branch of the Human Rights Association, held a commemoration of the 102nd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in front of the Turkish-Islamic Arts Museum, a former prison where Armenian intellectuals were held prior to deportation.

On April 24, The Human Rights Association, Istanbul Branch’s committee against racism and discrimination held a commemoration of the 102nd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in front of the Turkish-Islamic Arts Museum, a former prison where Armenian intellectuals were held prior to deportation. (Photo: Human Rights Association)

Another public commemoration was held in Istanbul—at the Tunel Square, in Istanbul’s Beyoglu district—however, the commemoration held at the former prison was the only one to use the word “genocide” in their slogans, chants, and banners, according to one of the organizers.

“Today, once again, we come together to commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide, to express our shame as the grandchildren of the perpetrators, and to say: ‘stop denial’,” read a part of the statement released by the organizers, which called on Turkish authorities to recognize the Armenian Genocide and to “compensate” for the crime. The organizers also announced that the reject and denounce the honoring and glorification of genocide perpetrators—including Talaat Pasha—by Turkish authorities.

The Human Rights Association, Istanbul Branch’s committee against racism’s statement can be read in its entirety below.

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Genocide Continues with the Glorification of Murderers

Today is April 24th, symbolic starting date of the Armenian Genocide.

Today, once again, we come together to commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide, to express our shame as the grandchildren of the perpetrators, and to say: “stop denial.”

It is our responsibility to remind that the Assyrians had also been subjected to genocide in the same period, and the Greeks of Asia Minor and Pontus from 1914 to 1923—first by the Ottoman state, then by the Kemalist movement.

Today we are also commemorating another murder perpetrated in this country where the denial of genocide is still prevailing. Private Sevag Şahin Balıkçı had been shot to death by a fellow private during his compulsory military service, at the age of 24, six years ago, on April 24, 2011, on the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day. Today, we will be upon his grave at Şişli Armenian Cemetery, with his grieved family.

This year we will make a point on “banalization,” the most enduring ground for the denial of genocide, and one of the most inhuman consequences of it.

The reign of darkness banalizes even the most horrible evil. Criminal acts and situations are normalized in this darkness. People get used to injustices that they normally should revolt, start taking them as granted, as part of their daily lives.

And the fact that the name of Talaat was given to hundreds of schools, streets, roads all around Turkey, and that his grave is located in Abide-i Hürriyet— the Monument of Freedom—in Istanbul is a hair-raising example to that banalization.

We—the grandchildren of not the victims but perpetrators of the genocide—are living peacefully side by side with this hair-raising reality. We say “hair-raising,” because Talaat is the coldblooded planner of the genocide with a mathematical precision, its executioner, supervisor, and the meticulous chronicler of its results.

Today, Talaat and Enver rest in mausoleums in Istanbul. They keep being honored by being given a place in Abide-i Hürriyet—the Monument of Freedom.

We have said again and again: denying the genocide is not only saying “we didn’t do it.” It’s much, much worse. It is inflicting the genocide to the grandchildren of its victims every day, again and again with countless tiny little details of daily life. It is declaring murderers as heroes. It is honoring the genocide perpetrators, first and foremost Talaat. Naming public spaces after his name, giving him a place in a monument of freedom means saying to the grandchildren of genocide victims, “Murderers of your grandfathers, grandmothers are our heroes; they did it well, god bless them; if necessary, we would do it again.”

We, as the Committee Against Racism and Discrimination of the Istanbul Branch of the Human Rights Association, reject and denounce the honoring and consecration of Talaat with a mausoleum in the Monument of Freedom.

We reject to live in a city decorated with the name of Talaat, the coldblooded architect of the genocide, to continue living our lives in this way as if nothing happened, as if everything is going well; we refuse to be part of such normalization and banalization of denialism.

Today we are raising this extreme, yet most banalized example of denialism. We are opening to public debate this honoring of the murderers, which means a challenge to all Armenians across the world and in Turkey, an insult to the memory of the victims. We are inviting everybody to say NO to the denial of genocide, NO to naming streets and schools after the name of Talaat, and NO to having mausoleum in the Monument of Freedom.

This land is a genocide zone. Turkey is the country of genocide denial. Genocide and denialist mentality continues to prevail today in Turkey.

Like every 24 April, we repeat:

Recognize the genocide, beg forgiveness, compensate!

Stop genocidal and denialist policies!

Human Rights Association, Istanbul Branch
Committee Against Racism and Discrimination

6 Comments

  1. My mother’s entire family perished in the genocide, she the only survivor. This time in her life was chronicled in my book, The Road From Home, published and pirated around the world, even in Turkey, by a Kurdish Press. Being an artist I knew I couldn’t tell her story if I had hatred in my heart for the Turks, so I learned forgiveness, and preached this whenever I could, because healing is not possible without forgiveness. I also knew the Turks would not be free until they acknowledge the genocide. I am so grateful that his has happened, as much for the Turkish people as for my mother and all the others. For the Turks themselves I consider this a great moment in history. A new healing will now begin to take place. You may publish my words if you like.

  2. My Father side 47 family members sand to starvation and deportation from Tekirdag only my father return back only, He look every where to find any family member, unfortunately find no one, I say more but forget it, make me seek. To days Turkish young generation must except the past ugly history
    about Armenian Genocide, and do recortnise the past ugly history and must do something,
    Kevork Gulluian Born istambul Uskudar 1931.

  3. stone by stone is the tall wall of denial going to be dismantled… and the final goal for all of us is to commemorate our martyrs’ hogehangist throughout the re-armenized cities of united “western regions” Armenia…we all live for Great Arme’nya (Metz Arme’nya)

  4. Right, like anyone even listens to a group of armos!!! Be thankful you can protest in Turkey, because the same can not occur in Armenia!!!

  5. Unfortunately the ‘Istanbul’-based Community can hardly openly demand the only appropriate compensation: return to Armenia of the territories ceded under the Treaty of Sèvres in conjunction with the establishment of an independent Kurdish state in historically Kurdish areas of Asia Minor.

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