
A bill making it a crime to deny the
Mustafa Dogan, a
Most Armenians term as genocide a series of tragic events during a war between Russia and the Ottoman Empire that played out in East Anatolia. France has been determined to push Turkey to acknowledge that the Armenian allegations are true. Turkey, in turn, has proposed that a committee of historians, not politicians, should decide what transpired in 1915.
The French Parliament recognized the
Dogan's history teacher asked a question about the events of 1915 and the “Armenian genocide” in a written exam. Having previously argued with the teacher over the issue, the Turkish student became angry and wrote, “Even if it did happen, they deserved it.”
Speaking to Today's Zaman, Dogan said his teacher threatened to give him a zero on the exam if he denied the genocide. “This was an important exam and necessary to finish secondary school,” Dogan said. Following the exam, the school principal phoned Dogan's father and requested an immediate meeting, claiming that his son had violated French law. In turn, father Mehmet Dogan said he had not seen any law stipulating punishing those who deny the Armenian genocide. “I now see where your son learns such things,” the principal allegedly told the father.
Following the quarrel, the school's disciplinary committee suspended Mustafa Dogan for two days and gave him an assignment in which he was to recognize the validity of the genocide within two days. The homework was to be titled “Armenian Genocide Committed by the Ottoman Empire: a Crime against Humanity,” and Dogan was asked to research the historical context of the events, write a detailed list of how many people were killed and how it was organized, meet with genocide survivors, state that he recognizes the genocide and focus on militant Turks who committed the genocide.
While researching the events, Dogan was to not look at Turkish Web sites or consult Wikipedia. Dogan was to prepare the assignment and present it in front of his class. However, the Turkish student refused to do the assignment. “We gave you a chance to correct your mistake, now recognize the genocide!” the history teacher reportedly told him. While Dogan claimed that the bill in question had not yet been adopted, the teacher reportedly did not listen.
All these events point to a troubling trend in French schools with respect to the punishment for
The European Union adopted a law on war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide denial in January stating that only after a verdict has been issued by an international court can such cases proceed to trial.
Mehmet Dogan accuses the school principal of racism. Noting that the teacher is putting pressure on his
Officials from COJEP, a Strasbourg-based civil society organization established by Turks, and Mehmet Dogan will meet with school authorities on Friday to discuss Mustafa Dogan's case.
Today's Zaman was able to contact the principal of the Jacques Marquette secondary school, Francis Vignola. When asked for his opinion on the case, Vignola said he supported the sanctions placed on Mustafa Dogan.
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