Ludér Tavit Sahagian
Following 101 years of dithering and nearly two
decades of intense German civil society advocacy and petitioning,
Germany’s lower house, the Bundestag, finally joined the national
parliaments of nearly thirty countries on June 2, 2016 by acknowledging
the veracity of the (ongoing) Armenian Genocide and regretting the
German Kaiser Reich’s complicit role in the Genocide.
Over a hundred German-Armenian community members
and other truth-and-justice seekers had gathered to welcome the landmark
decision of German lawmakers both outdoors under the late spring sun
and inside the parliamentary chamber. Turkey impulsively recalled its
ambassador to Germany in protest and has threatened Germany with an
“action plan” against it.
The symbolic resolution entitled “Remembrance and Commemoration of the Genocide of Armenians and Other Christian Minorities in the Years 1915 and 1916” passed overwhelmingly, with one dissenting vote and one abstention via an open ballot in a nearly half-attended quorum.
The unified text, agreed upon by the parliamentary
factions of the Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union,
Social Democratic Party and Green Party, is built on a series of
premises, followed by policy prescriptions for the federal government
and a justification statement.
It is a significant upgrade over the Bundestag’s
June 2005 resolution entitled “Remembrance and Commemoration of the
Expulsions and Massacres of Armenians in 1915.”
The Bundestag vote was preceded by consecutive
passionate speeches by German parliamentarians urging their colleagues
not to be cowed by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s admonitions
of harm to Berlin-Ankara relations and to vote in favor of the motion.
Expensive “Say the Truth” advertisements with Forget-Me-Not flowers
representing the Armenian Genocide’s Centennial were placed in top
national newspapers in the days leading up the vote. Several
conscientious letters were also sent in by leading German grassroots
activists, academicians and church heads in conditional support for the
pending resolution.
Additionally, two widely-promoted, but
poorly-attended counter-protests organized by local and regional Turks
were held in front of Brandenburg Gate, Berlin’s central and
most-visited location, waving Turkish and Azeri flags and spreading
genocide denial over the microphone. Their main mottos were “Parliaments
Are Not Courts of Law,” “The Bundestag is Not a Tribunal” and “The
Bundestag is Not Competent [to Deal with Such Matters].” Per police
estimates, no more than 1,500 out of approximately 3-3.5 million German
Turks, with “special guests” including fervent denier Dogu Perincek, who
had flown in from Turkey for a day, attended each of the
controversially-permitted actions.
Immediately following the vote, the “Recognition
Now” civil society initiative held an hour-long commemorative vigil in
front of Brandenburg Gate with representatives of all communities which
have suffered genocide in the former Ottoman space, who alongside their
worldwide compatriots expressed appreciation for the resolution’s
passing. Ruling Turkish politicians and some right-wing Turkish
newspapers issued slanderous words and threats of prosecution, loss of
Turkish citizenship and direct physical harm to the eleven principled
German MPs of Turkic extraction who had voted for the human rights
measure following years of silence, hesitation or opposition to doing
so. This unfortunate targeted vilification could have been partially
avoided had the measure been prudently promoted mainly by ethnic German
MPs representing all four parties in the Bundestag, instead of by
German-Turkic MPs like Cem Özdemir of the Green Party and Sevim Dagdelen
of the Left Party, in the period leading up to the vote.
The 2016 resolution, to be explored in detail in
the following sections, has special meaning for all of humanity,
considering Germany’s owning up to its past genocidal crimes and the
fact that the Armenian Genocide was carried out right before the eyes of
German military officers and officials, who as key allies of the
Ottoman Empire directly assisted the Turks in the planning, execution
and cover-up of this great crime against humanity.
Humanism Up Close
The Bundestag “pays tribute to the victims of
expulsion and massacres, which were committed against the Armenians and
other Christian minorities of the Ottoman Empire…deplores the actions of
the former Young Turk government, which led to an almost complete
annihilation of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.” Armenians’ “fate
exemplifies the history of mass extermination, ethnic cleansing,
expulsions and even genocides, which characterized the 20th century in
such a terrible way” – taken verbatim from German President Joachim
Gauck’s April 23, 2015 speech at an Armenian Genocide Centennial event
in Berlin and the Bundestag debate the day after.
The Bundestag “regrets the inglorious role of the
German Empire, which, as a principal ally of the Ottoman Empire, did not
try to stop these crimes against humanity, despite explicit information
regarding the organized expulsion and extermination of Armenians,
including also from German diplomats and missionaries…The German Empire
bears complicity in the events.”
Per the Bundestag, “honored” are not only victims
“of the unimaginably cruel crimes,” but also all of those good Germans
and Turks who defied respective government orders and “devoted
themselves to the rescue” of genocide survivors.
This “commemoration of the German Bundestag is
also an expression of particular respect for the probably oldest
Christian nation on earth.”
The Bundestag calls for “an honest appraisal” and
“constructive analysis” of history and emphasizes the importance of
“fac[ing] the dark chapters” of one’s own past and for “the Turkish side
to openly deal with the former expulsions and massacres.” “The
commemoration of the Armenian victims of the massacres and displacement”
should be seen as a means “to stay alert and to prevent that hatred and
destruction threatening people and nations over and over again” and “a
contribution to integration and peaceful coexistence.” “Germany sees
itself in a particular responsibility in this regard” and remains
committed “to contribut[ing] to a broad public discussion” on this issue
as well as “supporting scientific, civic and cultural activities in
Turkey and Armenia…within budgetary capacity.”
The resolution urges the continuation and
intensification of “the recently started preservation of the Armenian
cultural heritage” in occupied Western Armenia and Cilicia, in today’s
eastern and southwestern part of Turkey, as well as “support, within
budgetary possibilities, [for] German initiatives and projects in
science, civil society and culture which deal with the analysis of the
events of 1915/1916.”
The text’s concluding justification section
delineates the “greatest and most serious catastrophe in the several
thousand-year old history of the Armenian people,” stating that
“numerous independent historians, parliaments and international
organizations consider the expulsion and extermination of the Armenians
as genocide,” whose commemoration, along with their religion and
language, constitute a fundamental part of Armenian identity. It adds
that “the former government of the German Empire was informed about the
persecution and murder of the Armenians, but remained inactive… refrained
from putting effective pressure on their Ottoman ally,” ignoring the
pleas of German Protestant missionary Dr. Johannes Lepsius, among other
prominent German public and private figures, through his quickly-banned
and -confiscated “Report on the Situation of the Armenian People in
Turkey.” It posits: “Contrary to the facts, Turkey denies to this day
that the expulsion, persecution and murder of Armenians was based on
systematic planning or that the mass extermination during the
resettlement measures and the massacres committed were intended by the
Ottoman government…A reconciliation between the two nations is only
imaginable if the events that occurred 100 years ago are fundamentally
clarified and the facts are no longer denied.”
The Bundestag resolution concludes with a
reference to the wartime archives of the German Foreign Office. Based on
the reports of German ambassadors and consuls in the Ottoman Empire,
they “document the systematic execution of massacres and expulsions” and
“constitute the most important government record of the events of that
time.”
Atypical German Imprecision
Despite its constructive elements, the Bundestag
resolution is rife with errors and deficiencies, some of which are
dangerous to the advancement of the Armenian Cause and attainment of
restorative justice.
First, the resolution’s title implies that the
genocide victims were not majorities in their occupied homelands, but
minority subjects of an empire whose human rights were greatly violated
in acts of genocide that now should only be remembered and commemorated.
Shades of its 2005 resolution, the Bundestag hides
mostly behind the statements and quotations of third-parties, shrouded
in evasive, superfluous and denial-friendly speech, instead of issuing
its own statement on the genocidal crimes using direct, precise and
first-person formulations that are not subject to arbitrary
interpretation. A single sentence such as “the Bundestag publicly
recognizes the Armenian Genocide,” as is found in the succinct French
Law of January 2001, does not exist in the resolution. There are only
two explicit references to the Armenian Genocide – one each in the title
and the text. The remainder of the text deals only indirectly with the
Genocide.
The resolution also presents a victims’ hierarchy,
placing Jews on top, followed by Armenians, Arameans/Assyrians and
Chaldeans, and omitted Greeks at lower levels. These genocides are
equally “unique,” as cited in the resolution concerning the Jewish
Holocaust, in the totality of the cataclysmic loss and pain they have
inflicted on each victim group.
Furthermore, the main genocides in the former
Ottoman space occurred not just during 1915-1916, the dates specified in
the resolution, but lasted up until the founding of the Turkish
republic in 1923 and continue to the present-day.
The resolution regrets the actions of only the
German Kaiser Reich (1871-1918) and not the political assistance and
support that four German successor states have provided Turkey to this
day. It also renders German complicity strictly in the manner of knowing
and staying neutral, offering not one clause that implies apology,
responsibility and steps toward reparations by the German state to the
Armenian people for its chief accomplice role in this genocide,
including benefits gained from Armenian slave labor during the
construction of the Berlin-Baghdad Railway.
It also lauds that the Bundestag with all party
heads had occupied itself with this genocide on April 24, 2015, while
refraining to explain why the resolution was not passed on that
important centennial date.
Displaying commitment to “the special historical
responsibility of Germany,” the resolution stresses the need for “new
impulses” to “overcoming old divisions” and “seeking paths of
reconciliation and understanding” between Armenia and a Turkey that
continues the crime of genocide, enjoys all the fruits of genocide,
suppresses within its current borders victims and recognizers of
genocide, occupies the bulk of indigenous Armenian lands annexed by
genocide, and assists ally Azerbaijan to finish along Armenia’s and
Artsakh’s eastern borders the act of genocide.
In open support for reviving the defeatist
Armenia-Turkey Protocols of 2009, the Bundestag backs “the long overdue
improvement of Turkish-Armenian relations,” “the memory and the
normalization of inter-state relations,” “the resumption of diplomatic
relations and the opening of the shared border,” “the commemoration and
reappraisal of the expulsions and massacres of the Armenians of 1915,”
“a commission for the scientific study of the historic events,” the
“rapprochement, reconciliation and a forgiveness of historical guilt
between Turks and Armenians” and “the stabilization of the Caucasus
region.” The words “commemoration” and “reconciliation” are explicitly
used nine and ten times respectively throughout the text.
The resolution’s calls for wider inclusion of the
genocide “issue” in German school and out-of-school curricula, teaching
materials and research initiatives dealing with the history of ethnic
conflicts of the 20th century can only be welcomed if it is introduced
mandatorily and part of examinations, as German public schools’
self-driven learning structure quite often emphasizes only voluntary
reading and instruction. A pilot program has already been run in the
federal state of Brandenburg.
The resolution frees modern Turkey of guilt for
the ongoing crime of genocide. The text adds that “a distinction has to
be made between the guilt of the perpetrators and the responsibility of
those alive today.” There is nothing on eliminating or overcoming the
consequences of this great crime, specifically on land return,
reparations and concrete liability of Turkey. It is no wonder that
official Ankara’s fervent reactions immediately following the vote have
speedily softened.
Rejecting, upon the recommendation of the German
Foreign Office, the Left Party’s petition for unconditional admittance
of co-responsibility in the Genocide was another major mistake.
The resolution’s justification section repeats
“expulsions” and “massacres” several times, downplaying the fact that
these were all systematically-planned death marches of an unprecedented
genocide.
An international law council or expert must also
determine if use of the term “Völkermord” (literally “the murder of
peoples” and historically a synonym for “war” and “mass murder”) carries
the exact juridical meaning and implications as the term “genocide”
(“Genozid” in German) per the 1948 UN Genocide Convention.
Dynamic Armenian and Greek diplomacy during the
resolution’s drafting may have ensured the adoption of a more valuable
resolution.
Errors and deficiencies aside, the Bundestag
resolution is an unforgettable testament to the German people’s cardinal
respect for human rights and justice.
“Never Again” or “Yes Again”?
“Armenia-Resolution,” “Armenian-Resolution” and
“Armenians-Resolution” (and very rarely “Armenian-Genocide-Resolution”)
are the main headlines dominating the German-speaking media and press
landscape since the resolution’s June 2nd adoption – a
minimization or soft form of denial. These have been juxtaposed by
generally-favorable editorials, opinions and letters by several
enlightened German writers and readers, especially in Berliner Morgenpost, Bild, Der Tagesspiegel, Die Tageszeitung, Die Welt, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Junge Welt, Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Neues Deutschland and Süddeutsche Zeitung – all of which include one or two descriptive sentences on the Armenian Genocide. Stuttgarter Zeitung of Germany’s manufacturing hub and prominent weeklies Der Spiegel, Die Zeit, Focus and Stern,
some of whose latest printed editions include not a single word on the
subject or cite the “G-word” strictly in quotation marks, are among the
exceptions. Owing to increasing Turkish threats against German
parliamentarians of Turkic extraction, never in recent decades has the
Armenian Genocide received such continuing coverage in Germany than this
month.
Armenia’s country profile on the German Foreign
Office’s website still denies the veracity of the Armenian Genocide,
using defamatory terms like the “accusation of genocide against 1.5
million Armenians raised by Armenia” and the “massacres and deportations
of 1915/1916.” German Ambassador to Armenia Matthias Kiesler’s dodging
of the crucial “G-word” and talk of this world not being “black and
white,” when Armenians are incontestably unacknowledged and unrequited
victims of genocide, during a June 7, 2016 interview on Yerevan-based
CivilNet TV, is another clear case of government denial. Additionally,
unconfirmed reports state that Germany is finalizing a deal with Turkey
to upgrade housing and aircraft facilities for German forces at Turkey’s
Incirlik airbase – on lands forcefully seized from Armenian Genocide
victims – to support airstrikes against ISIS targets. With some 280
German troops already at the base, this implies Germany’s continued
complicity in the Armenian Genocide.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel was
controversially absent alongside the vice-chancellor, foreign minister
and other senior officials on the day of the vote that she indirectly
backed – also meant to reaffirm Germany’s international commitment to
“Never Again.” Immediately following the vote, in an attempt to quell
Turkish ebullition, she stoically presented the fact of the Armenian
Genocide as “a difference of opinion on an individual matter” with
Turkey, while showering words of praise on the strategic and
multi-vectoral character of German-Turkish relations. There is no known
evidence of her ever having used the “G-word” publicly in reference to
the Armenian Genocide in her entire political career. At a recent press
conference with visiting Azerbaijani President Aliyev, she reiterated
her support to the formation of a commission of historians between
Armenia and Turkey, which would imply starting anew all attained
research and conclusions on the Genocide. Had she dared to act in a same
manner regarding the Jewish Holocaust perpetrated by Germany’s
predecessor state, she would certainly have been pressured to resign.
Political and legal action against acts of
genocide in the timeliest, most unambiguous and justice-oriented manner
is always essential. Otherwise, the message to the entire world is “Yes
Again” to similar crimes against humanity.
Resolution’s Significance
The adopted Bundestag resolution, neither a law
nor a binding legal statement signed and sealed by the country’s
Bundesrat and President, is a legislative piece serving mostly German
national interests and predicated on political gamesmanship ahead of
summer recess. Since senior government officials responsible for foreign
policy, trade and defense deliberately skipped the vote, the positive
threads of this vote will not translate into government policy. The
Green and Left Parties appear to be the main winners of this resolution
process in the eyes of the German electorate.
The resolution effectively serves as a
straightjacket to restrain increasingly authoritarian and aggressive
Turkish leaders, especially swellhead President Erdogan, whose
hysterical and baleful words of late toward European leaders have
reached new, unacceptable heights. Furthermore, it is a distanced
face-saving move for Chancellor Merkel following several recent
grandstanding trips to Turkey and months of intensive pandering to
Turkish whims to stem the refugee flow into Europe at the expense of
democracy and human rights even within Germany. It is also a yellow card
to Turkish citizens expecting visa-free travel in the Schengen Area and
furtherance in relations between still-genocidal Turkey and the
civilized EU in the near future.
The resolution is, nevertheless, a one-stop moral
victory over a century of German pragmatism and a partial step forward
in the noble quest for restorative justice for the Armenian,
Aramaic/Assyrian, Chaldean and Greek peoples. The parliament of yet
another major country – never mind the EU’s largest Turkey ally and
trade partner, host of the world’s largest Turkish Diasporan community
and itself responsible and apologetic for the Jewish/Roma/Sinti
Holocausts, among others – can be checked off for having indirectly
recognized the genocides against Armenians and other Orthodox
Christians, symbolically regretted its high-level of participation in
the genocides and increased global perception and denunciation of these
great crimes.
Germany is no longer the missing piece on the
global map in terms of parliamentary acknowledgment and remorse for the
Armenian Genocide. It still remains one, however, in terms of the
necessity for univocal state and government recognition and
condemnation, criminalization of the Genocide’s ubiquitous denial,
official permission for the erection of Armenian Genocide Memorials on
central public lands nationwide, the renaming of infrastructure and
removal of graves glorifying genocidaires in Germany, and the provision
of long-overdue German remands to the Armenian people. The same applies
in handling Germany’s genocide of Herero, Nama and other indigenous
peoples in modern-day Namibia during 1904-1908.
Weight of Armenian Genocide
The massive weight of the Armenian Genocide – the
longest-running and most-complete genocide in modern human history – is
indeed shifting, adding fresh momentum to 101 years of sociopolitical
unity, activism and scholarship by principled peoples of all backgrounds
across the globe.
Thanks to the Bundestag’s and several other
parliaments’ measures on the Armenian Genocide over recent years, as
well as Pope Francis’ 2015 watershed reaffirmation, the denial genie is
finally out of the bottle and there is no going back. Countless
front-page press articles as well as prime time television and radio
emissions worldwide are circulating on this pressing issue weeks in a
row, sending a powerful signal to world leaders – including Australian
PM Turnbull, British PM Cameron, Chinese President Xi Jinping, Georgian
President Margvelashvili, Japanese PM Abe, Indian PM Modi, Iranian
President Rouhani, Israeli PM Netanyahu and U.S. President Obama – that
it is high time that they too follow suit in domino-like style. Turkey
and Germany are slowly headed to the docks to adjudicate their
co-responsibility in this great crime against humanity, unless, of
course, they take higher ground to amicably settle their
accountabilities outside of court. And, Armenians are slightly closer to
reclaiming their Mount Ararat and reestablishing vibrant Armenian life
in the golden plains of Western (Wilsonian) Armenia, abutting democratic
and prosperous Armenia and Artsakh.
Righteous Soghomon Tehlirian, deeply disturbed by
the sudden decimation of two-thirds of his ancient nation in just a few
years, was compelled to assassinate chief genocidaire Mehmed Talaat
Pasha on Hardenbergstrasse in Berlin on the morning of March 15, 1921.
It was a post-war, though still-genocidal, period when Germany and the
rest of the world were looking completely the other way and providing
safe haven to major perpetrators of the Armenian Genocide. Tehlirian
testified that he could not sleep then. With a new political paradigm
today emerging based more so on Wilsonian-style human rights and
self-determination principles, strongly embodied by this June 2nd
decision (ironically 95 years to the day of Tehlirian’s trial start and
subsequent acquittal), he and many others revering his specter globally
can sleep now in more complete peace.
"Keghart" (www.keghart.com), June 17, 2016
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