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Open Wounds: Armenians, Turks, and a Century of Genocide

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A probing reflection on how silence and complicity in the face of mass violence affects a society for decades.

 

The assassination in Istanbul in 2007 of the author Hrant Dink, a high-profile advocate of Turkish–Armenian reconciliation, reignited the debate in Turkey on the annihilation of the Ottoman Armenians. Many Turks subsequently re-awakened to their Armenian heritage, reflecting on how their grandparents were forcibly Islamised and Turkified, and the suffering they endured to keep their stories secret. There was public debate around Armenian property confiscated by the Turkish state and the extermination of the minorities. At last the silence had been broken.

After the First World War, the new Turkish Republic forcibly erased the memory of the atrocities, and traces of Armenians, from their historic lands—a process to which the international community turned a blind eye. The price for this amnesia was, Cheterian argues, ‘a century of genocide’.

Turkish intellectuals acknowledge the price society must pay collectively to forget such traumatic events, and that Turkey cannot solve its recurrent conflicts with its minorities—like the Kurds today—nor have an open and democratic society without addressing the original sin on which the state was founded: the Armenian Genocide.

Author: Cheterian Vicken
Publisher: HURST PUBLISHERS
Pages: 432
ISBN: 9781787389687
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2023

Vicken Cheterian is a historian and political scientist, and he lectures at the University of Geneva and Webster University Geneva.

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