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May 25th
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MEDS YEGHERN: NEITHER ARMENIANS NOR TURKS HAPPY OVER OBAMA'S STATEMENT

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Neither the Armenians nor the Turks thought the statement appropriately reflected how to describe the complicated events of 1915. However, the statement actually attempts to find a middle path between Obama's election promises and the realities on the ground. What is troubling from the Turkish perspective is the persistence in interpreting the events of 1915 solely from one perspective, namely the Armenian one. There is an abundance of evidence about the hundreds of thousands of Muslim losses during the time span in question. However, this is not what this piece intends to accentuate. Instead, I want to look into the possibility of whether the term "Meds Yeghern" could offer a new opening for a common narrative between Turks and Armenians.

Obama's statement is interesting from a variety of perspectives, and I believe it is worth examining whether the term "Meds Yeghern" has the potential to become a mutually acceptable term for both sides to commemorate the events in question. As is now commonly known, "Meds Yeghern" denotes "Great Calamity/Great Disaster" in the Armenian language. Although I am not in a position to fully comprehend the context in which this term is being used in Armenian, I am willing to venture into the following.

I believe the events of World War I constituted a Great Calamity for Turks, Kurds, Armenians, Anatolian Greeks and probably other peoples of the Ottoman Empire. Indeed, it was a great trauma for the Turks, who saw their great empire collapse in front of their own eyes and who saw a multitude of peoples rebel against the state and side with the invading enemies of the time. It was a Great Calamity to the Armenians who had to be relocated during harsh war conditions and subsequently suffered immensely. It was a disaster for them as they left behind their homes and memories, similar to the millions of Turks who were chased out of the Balkans, the Caucasus and the Middle East. It was a Great Calamity for the Turks and the Kurds fighting on the eastern front against the invading Russian armies, who were intent on grabbing the eastern part of the remaining territories of the Ottoman realm. It was a true disaster for all involved as the war time conditions of eastern Anatolia were brutal and certainly far from being hospitable to any of the struggling sides. Famine, disease and misery were the order of the day.

Yet, as President Abdullah G

 

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