Sahak Posted December 20, 2008 Report Share Posted December 20, 2008 The Armenian apology campaign launched by a group of scientists, writers, artists, journalists and representatives of nongovernmental organizations was discussed at the meeting of Foreign Relations Commission of Turkish parliament on December 17. Parliamentarians from opposition parties Republican People's Party (CHP) and National Movement Party (MHP) offered to make a statement condemning those supporting the campaign, the Azeri Press Agency said quoting some Turkish media reports. Member of MHP, parliamentarian Canan Aritman called the organizers of the campaign betrayers. "False scientists signing it should apologize to Turkey," she said. Aritman also criticized President Abdullah Gul's attitude about the campaign. Saying that Abdullah Gul was encouraged by his visit to Armenia, Aritman dropped a hint that the president's mother was Armenian. "We see that the president supports this campaign. Abdullah Gul should be the president of the whole Turkish nation, not of his ethnic origin. Investigate the ethnic origin of the president's mother, and you will see," she said. Some claim that Abdullah Gul's mother was born to an Armenian-origin family from Kayseri and father was an Arab moved to Kayseri. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sahak Posted December 20, 2008 Author Report Share Posted December 20, 2008 If true I am a little shocked. The ultra nationalist are attacking him for not denouncing the Apology campaign.Could be deep down he knows the truth? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DominO123 Posted December 20, 2008 Report Share Posted December 20, 2008 If true I am a little shocked. The ultra nationalist are attacking him for not denouncing the Apology campaign.Could be deep down he knows the truth? some things have changed in the geopolitical situation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arpa Posted December 20, 2008 Report Share Posted December 20, 2008 (edited) If true I am a little shocked. The ultra nationalist are attacking him for not denouncing the Apology campaign.Could be deep down he knows the truth? Hang on to your suspenders. http://www.aceuniforms.com/osCommerce/cata..._suspenders.gif GUL: ARMENIAN APOLOGY CAMPAIGN SIGN OF TURKISH PEOPLE'S RECONCILIATION WITH THEIR HISTORY PanARMENIAN.Net 19.12.2008 15:06 GMT+04:00 /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Turkish army slammed Friday the online public apology to Armenians. "This move will have harmful consequences," Brigadier General Metin Gurak said. Meanwhile, the presidential press center has said that President Abdullah Gul eyes recent discussions in the Turkish public opinion and academic circles over the 1915 events as a sign of existence of a democratic discussion atmosphere in Turkey …. Some may never forgive gul for his visit to Yerevan. Is there a deeper rift in Ankara than we know? Note that gul has not said much about the matter, while erkagan has. In furkey calling one an “ermeni” is the ultimate insult, and that one’s mother is ermeni is tantamount to saying “son of a whore”. Remember that they also said that (bedros) hamid’s mother was an Armenian, simply because he was so ugly and deformed as only an “ermeni” could be. Not to forget tat they also claimed that Ochalan (Abdullah nicknamed Abo/Apo), the Kurd was also an “ermeni”. How can we forget that clown Halachoglu ,who was sacked, when claimed that the majority of eastern Anatolians (ancestral Armenian Lands) were of “ermeni” origin? Of course we know, he did not mean it as a compliment but an INSULT. But apparently it backfired and burned his “eshek”. Also note that ergakan with his blond reddish hair looks more like the Serbo-Bosnian Milosevic , while gul with his dark hair and round face looks more like Serj cum moustache. Edited December 20, 2008 by Arpa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MyTerrain Posted December 21, 2008 Report Share Posted December 21, 2008 Gul is not Armenian he's a mongol turd, just look at his narrow eyes and ugly cheekbones. Who the hell spread these rumors? They are trying to lower us to their dog race level I hate that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ashot Posted December 21, 2008 Report Share Posted December 21, 2008 MyTerrain - read it carefully, they are not saying he is Armenian, they are stating his mother had an Armenian origin. there is a difference! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arpa Posted December 21, 2008 Report Share Posted December 21, 2008 It is time to stop hyperventilating and aim the hammer at the nail. Hit them where it hurts most. Is furkey coming apart at the seams, losing its feathers, reminiscent of the story of the “Emperor has no Clothes”? http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y18/LimaFoxtrot/ksmn336l.jpg I should consider amending my screen name to Margar. Look what I wrote above a day before the following from Ankara. Some may never forgive gul for his visit to Yerevan. Is there a deeper rift in Ankara than we know? Note that gul has not said much about the matter, while erkagan has. One other quote that makes me laugh, the most hilarious comedic line of the all history is when the likes of ergakan say in re to the campaign to affirm the Genocide or stories like he current one- “this jeopardize and harm our ‘friendly talks with Armenia’” . HUH! “friendly talks”? Let me nominate ergakan for the comedic clown of the year award! Turkey's president steps into row By Delphine Strauss in Ankara FT December 18 2008 23:37 Turkey's president Abdullah Gul intervened on Thursday to defuse an explosive debate over a campaign by Turkish writers apologising for the massacres of ethnic Armenians in the last years of the Ottoman empire. More than 13,000 people have added their names to the website www.ozurdiliyoruz (`we apologise') launched on Monday by a group of intellectuals, in a sign of changing attitudes to one of the most sensitive episodes in Turkey's past. The campaign has angered nationalists. Prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan fiercely criticised the initiative on Wednesday, saying: `It will not have any benefit other than stirring up trouble, disturbing our peace and undoing the steps which have been taken.' But the events of 1915 ` the delicate term used by Turkish diplomats ` remain a subject of bitter contention between Armenians, who say they suffered genocide, and Turkey, which contends thousands of Turks also died during the final years of the Ottoman empire and denies systematic planning. But Mr Gul distanced himself from that criticism on Thursday, saying in a statement that while he had worked to promote Turkey's official position abroad, the public debate showed Turks now felt `more self-confident and at peace with their history'. The difference in tone between the president and prime minister may fuel speculation that relations are cooling between the two men, long-standing political allies before Mr Gul's election as president in July 2007. Mr Gul won international praise in September when he signalled rapprochement with Armenia by attending a football match between the national sides in Yerevan ` the first visit by a Turkish head of state. Cengiz Aktar, one of the organisers of the online apology, said denial of the bloodshed of 1915 was `a founding myth of modern Turkey'. The text of the apology does not use the word genocide, referring instead to `the Great Catastrophe', but its implication that modern Turks bear responsibility for the actions of the Ottoman regime has provoked furious protest. Opposition politicians branded the campaign `treason' and `degeneracy'; retired diplomats, remembering colleagues killed by Armenian activists in the 1970s, issued their own declaration; and rival websites such as www.ozurdilemiyoruz.com/ (`we don't apologise') have sprung up. Sinan Ulgen, head of the EDAM think-tank, said the debate could hinder talks, since Armenians would take a tougher line if they thought public opinion in Turkey had shifted, but the nationalist outcry would in fact leave less room for concessions. `We need to give as free rein to the negotiations as we can. . . unhindered by this sort of public debate which will backfire,' he said. But the campaign reflects frustration among liberals that little has changed since the murder in 2007 of Hrant Dink, the Armenian journalist, which at the time sparked an outpouring of sympathy and hopes of reconciliation. On Tuesday, the European Court of Human Rights ruled against Turkey in two cases dating back to the 1950s and 60s, ordering it to return properties seized from two Armenian foundations or pay compensation totalling ?¬875,000 (£830,000). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arpa Posted December 21, 2008 Report Share Posted December 21, 2008 It is time to stop hyperventilating and aim the hammer at the nail. Hit them where it hurts most. Is furkey coming apart at the seams, losing its feathers, reminiscent of the story of the “Emperor has no Clothes”? http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y18/LimaFoxtrot/ksmn336l.jpg I should consider amending my screen name to Margar. Look what I wrote above a day before the following from Ankara. Some may never forgive gul for his visit to Yerevan. Is there a deeper rift in Ankara than we know? Note that gul has not said much about the matter, while erkagan has. One other quote that makes me laugh, the most hilarious comedic line of the all history is when the likes of ergakan say in re to the campaign to affirm the Genocide or stories like he current one- “this jeopardize and harm our ‘friendly talks with Armenia’” . HUH! “friendly talks”? Let me nominate ergakan for the comedic clown of the year award! Turkey's president steps into row By Delphine Strauss in Ankara FT December 18 2008 23:37 Turkey's president Abdullah Gul intervened on Thursday to defuse an explosive debate over a campaign by Turkish writers apologising for the massacres of ethnic Armenians in the last years of the Ottoman empire. More than 13,000 people have added their names to the website www.ozurdiliyoruz (`we apologise') launched on Monday by a group of intellectuals, in a sign of changing attitudes to one of the most sensitive episodes in Turkey's past. The campaign has angered nationalists. Prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan fiercely criticised the initiative on Wednesday, saying: `It will not have any benefit other than stirring up trouble, disturbing our peace and undoing the steps which have been taken.' But the events of 1915 ` the delicate term used by Turkish diplomats ` remain a subject of bitter contention between Armenians, who say they suffered genocide, and Turkey, which contends thousands of Turks also died during the final years of the Ottoman empire and denies systematic planning. But Mr Gul distanced himself from that criticism on Thursday, saying in a statement that while he had worked to promote Turkey's official position abroad, the public debate showed Turks now felt `more self-confident and at peace with their history'. The difference in tone between the president and prime minister may fuel speculation that relations are cooling between the two men, long-standing political allies before Mr Gul's election as president in July 2007. Mr Gul won international praise in September when he signalled rapprochement with Armenia by attending a football match between the national sides in Yerevan ` the first visit by a Turkish head of state. Cengiz Aktar, one of the organisers of the online apology, said denial of the bloodshed of 1915 was `a founding myth of modern Turkey'. The text of the apology does not use the word genocide, referring instead to `the Great Catastrophe', but its implication that modern Turks bear responsibility for the actions of the Ottoman regime has provoked furious protest. Opposition politicians branded the campaign `treason' and `degeneracy'; retired diplomats, remembering colleagues killed by Armenian activists in the 1970s, issued their own declaration; and rival websites such as www.ozurdilemiyoruz.com/ (`we don't apologise') have sprung up. Sinan Ulgen, head of the EDAM think-tank, said the debate could hinder talks, since Armenians would take a tougher line if they thought public opinion in Turkey had shifted, but the nationalist outcry would in fact leave less room for concessions. `We need to give as free rein to the negotiations as we can. . . unhindered by this sort of public debate which will backfire,' he said. But the campaign reflects frustration among liberals that little has changed since the murder in 2007 of Hrant Dink, the Armenian journalist, which at the time sparked an outpouring of sympathy and hopes of reconciliation. On Tuesday, the European Court of Human Rights ruled against Turkey in two cases dating back to the 1950s and 60s, ordering it to return properties seized from two Armenian foundations or pay compensation totalling ?¬875,000 (£830,000). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arpa Posted December 22, 2008 Report Share Posted December 22, 2008 Remember that in furkey being called an "ermeni" is an insult, not a compliment. ---- The crap has hit the fan., turkey feathers flying all over the place. http://www.clipartandcrafts.com/papercraft...thers-craft.gif Here is what they are saying; Btw, whatever happened to that other turkey aka paul goble? Is he rubbing feathers with that chick in baku? ABDULLAH GUL TO FILE A CHARGE AGAINST AN OPPOSITIONIST WHO CALLED HIS MOTHER ARMENIAN ArmInfo 2008-12-22 12:09:00 ArmInfo. President of Turkey Abdullah Gul will file a charge against the member of the Republican People's party Janan Aritman who called his mother an Armenian, Bakililar.AZ reported. My relatives are purebred Turks, A. Gul said. The offender of the president's family will answer in the court. To recall, earlier, J. Aritman dropped a hint that the president's mother was Armenian. "We see that the president supports this campaign. Abdullah Gul should be the president of the whole Turkish nation, not of his ethnic origin. Investigate the ethnic origin of the president's mother, and you will see," he said. And another GUL DECLARES HIS FAMILY IS MUSLIM AND TURKISH armradio.am 22.12.2008 13:43 President Abdullah Gul released a statement yesterday about his family's ethnic origins in response to a Republican People's Party (CHP) deputy's attempt to link the president's attitude toward a recently launched apology campaign for the Armenian killings at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire in 1915 to his ethnic roots, Today's Zaman reported. As CHP deputy Canan Arıtman who claimed that President Gul's mother is of Armenian origin, continued to attack the president in an interview published in the Milliyet daily yesterday, saying that she would like to throw a shoe at the president when she sees him in the same way an Iraqi journalist last week hurled a shoe at visiting US President George W. Bush. Gul released a statement denying claims that his family has Armenian roots. In his statement yesterday, Gul announced that his mother's side, the Satoglu family from Kayseri, and his father's side, the Gul family also from Kayseri, are Muslim and Turkish, according to centuries of written genealogy records. "I respect the ethnic background, different beliefs and family ties of all my citizens and see this as a reality and also the wealth of our country with its imperial history. I also would like to emphasize that all my citizens are equal to one another regardless of any differences. No one has any superiority whatsoever over another one. Everybody has the equal and same rights under the guarantee of our Constitution," the statement read. "I am proud of our country, which has reached this level of understanding." When Gul was asked for his opinion on the campaign, he said the state's stance is to improve relations with its neighbors. "We believe dialogue to be the solution for problems we have with our neighbors. Perpetuating problems is not useful to anyone," he said. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arpa Posted January 23, 2009 Report Share Posted January 23, 2009 (edited) Remember that in furkey being called an "ermeni" is an insult, not a compliment. ---- The crap has hit the fan., turkey feathers flying all over the place.Even though the folloeing item may better fit undet the topic of "Comedistan", nevertheless.. They are still searching to see what a "furk" is. Is it a "son of an "'ermeni'whore"?Also note that what ergagan below refers to "riz,rize, laz" is what we know as Hamshen. MANIFESTAIONS OF IDENTITY IN TURKEY Ruben Melkonyan "Noravank" Foundation 22 January 2009 In Turkish reality the issue of ethnic origin is rather delicate and it often finds reflection in politics, directly touches on state officials and politicians, causing different speculations. In Turkish "national" state belonging to other ethnos is regarded as an insult, something equal to "alien". It is also a widespread method of "accusations" perceptible by vast masses. Very often state officials of high rank and politicians have to go into the problem of ethnic identity and relating "accusations". You can notice some blurr and contradictions in their statements and comments. Among high-ranking Turkish officials the name of Turkish prime-minister Recep Erdogan is often mentioned in the context of ethnic identity and it is pointed out that he is not "pure-blooded" Turk. In the course of the discussion on his name on 6th December, 1997 in Sghert Erdogan tried to answer these accusations with his inherent ingenuousness: "They say I'm rizian or laz. I say that I am not laz. I asked about it my father, and he asked his grandfather who was mullah and he answered this way: "Tomorrow we'll die. God will ask: "Who's your god, who's your prophet, what's your religion? He will not ask about your nationality or kin. And then you answer: "Thank God I'm Muslim" and pass by. But if we follow the ideas he expressed later, we'll see that he contradicts himself. Thus on 21st May, 2004 in Romania he declared that: "There are no more ideologies in the world. Both ethnic and religious ideologies are perishable". This was followed by another statement which contradicted to the foregoing and which was made on 11th August, 2004 in Georgia: "I am also Georgian; our family is Georgian family which moved from Batum to Rize". And on 12th April, 2005 in Norway Erdogan said: "I'm Rizian, my wife is from Aghert, she is Arab and not Turk". Such a mess in his thoughts let Turkish media suppose that Erdogan is in the identity crisis now. Different observations and facts let us attend, that among Turkish Armenians who had adopted Islam and their successors there is a strata of those who, having Armenian origin not only reject it, but also try to prove to their milieu their "pure-blooded Turkish" or Muslim descent and become convinced anti-Armenian. There is definitely some psychological point too. They psychologically regard the part of Armenians who could abide to their roots as their main enemies. The hostile attitude towards Armenians in Turkish society is also an important condition of anti-Armenian manifestations among those who had Armenian origins. They psychological ly don't want to belong to the hostile nation, that's why they choose the road of assimilation with the dominant nation. Turning to this matter, the ethnographer Harutyun Marutyan expresses the following idea: "Publications, direct and indirect pressure of political and economic character may cause people to try to get rid of pinned labels, change their milieu, break off with their relatives and people of the same nation and in fact choose the road of assimilation and estrangement". Different sources impute Armenian or at least "non-pure Turkish" origin to many famous Turkish nationalists, and this, as it was mentioned above, can be used in political speculations. Among such examples we would like to mention the statement which was put into circulation recently saying that one of the most ardent anti-Armenians, the chairman of Workers party Dogu Perinchek has Armenian roots. We should remind you, that he is one of the most active extirpators of international recognition of the Armenian Genocide and he was condemned for the denial of the Genocide in Switzerland. Some Turkish circles made a big stink, and Perinchek was nicknamed as "the conqueror of Lozano". The radical-chairman of Workers party evaluates the Armenian Genocide as "imperialistic lie". Perinchek's son is in the track of his father and he also joined the struggle against the recognition of the Genocide. It is worth noting that at present Dogu Perinchek is detained on "Ergenekon" terrorist organization case which caused a sensation in Turkey. The scandalous disclosure of his roots drew a wide response in Turkish media. Thus, it was mentioned that Dogu is a native of Apchagha village in province of Eghin (Akn, Erznka). It is worth noting that province of Akn is well known for the great number of apostate Armenians and historical sources confirm that up to 1915 this province was inhabited mainly by Christians, generally Armenians and Georgians. But Turkish magazine "Chronicle" came out with more serious facts of Perinchek's origin. There are quotations from archival documents of the Ottoman court in the article which give information on demographic, social, economic, religious, ethnic situation in the region. In accordance with them there were many Armenians in the region at the close of 19th and the beginning of 20th century. Most of them were craftsmen, and they mainly lived in village of Akn. There were also many Armenians in the villages of Kemer-gab, Apchagha, Ilich and e.t.c. The village of Apchagha, the native village of Perinchek's ancestors, was mainly inhabited by Armenians. The village headman, the members of the council of elders were Armenians. Some of their names have even remained in the court records: the son of Hakob Krikor, the son of Artin Kirkor and e.t.c. As it was20mentioned in the foregoing article there was wide spread and at the same time interesting regularity among Armenians of Akn. They all had generic names (it should be mentioned for comparison that the surname law was put into circulation only in 1934, and only after that Turks began to use surnames), but it is interesting that most of them were made up of Turkish names: Mouratoglu, Degirmendjioglu, Chilingirolu, Ayvazoglu, Perinchegoglu and e.t.c. But there was one more interesting detail in the records of the court. In spite of the fact that most of them had Turkish generic names, their surnames were Armenian. Turkish and other surnames were exclusions. In that very court documents there are records saying that the Perinchoglus were Armenians, and there are even court cases where they were involved and there was mentioned that; "Perinchoglu Stepan and Khachatur of Armenian "millet" (nation)". The father of Dogu Perinchek's grandfather Mehmet Sadik was born in 1850 in Apchagha. His son Mehmet Djemal Perinchek also was born in the same village (1887). But as you can see, their surnames are not Armenian and, in fact, the above mentioned peculiarity is infringed. This may be regarded as exclusion but the facts from the court documents throw light on this and many other questions. Thus in the records of Ottoman court it was written clearly that Mehmet Sadik Perinchoglu was "muhetdi", and muhetdi means a person who has converted the faith, it means that he had adopted Islam in the second half of 19th century, but there was nothing said about the reasons of the conversion of faith. This also means that Islam conversion policy with its ascents and declines continued during the whole history of Ottoman state. Dogu Perinchek is the offspring of Islamized Armenian. His Armenian descend made him take the road of self-denial and Turkish chauvinism. However even this circumstance does not save the likes of Perinchek from the danger of accusation of being non-Turkish by Turkish society. This is what Bagrat Esdukyan, the journalist of "Akos" daily, writes about in his article "Who is Armenian?": "What can we say to those who have disavowed their nation? Those who have not only disavowed but even hate their nation. But it occurs that collective memory doesn't let you disavow your nation. It will reveal the true face of the adjurers and show what they have been trying to escape from for their whole life". Edited January 23, 2009 by Arpa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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