PBS' perverse genocide debate
Los
Angeles Times
By Aris Janigian
March 9, 2006
I AM A DEVOTED viewer of PBS. From "Masterpiece Theater" to "Sesame
Street," I have always considered it a bastion of creative and
intelligent TV. But two weeks ago, PBS stabbed me and every other
Armenian American in the back when it announced that its upcoming
documentary, "The Armenian Genocide," will be followed on some stations
by a panel discussion featuring two so-called scholars who claim that
the genocide is a myth. Worse, according to genocide historian Peter
Balakian, PBS threatened to pull the documentary if he and another
genocide scholar declined to participate "on the other side" in the
panel discussion, which was taped in January. Although the documentary
is not slated to run until April, programmers across the country are
now deciding whether to air it at all, air it alone or air it with the
taped debate.
"We believe [the genocide] is settled history," said Jacoba Atlas,
senior vice president of programming at PBS, but "it seemed like a good
idea to have a panel and let people have their say."
This is perverse. Either there was a genocide or there wasn't. Would
anyone tolerate David Irving, the notorious Holocaust revisionist,
hashing it out on a panel with Elie Wiesel after a documentary on the
Nazi concentration camps? Should we give janjaweed reps airtime the
next time we run a documentary on their genocide in Darfur?
Why has PBS resorted to double-speak in regard to the Armenian
genocide? The answer is simple: PBS is capitulating to politics. For
years the Turks, America's so-called allies, have issued threats
against any organization or country that challenges their quack reading
of history. When the French recognized the Armenian genocide, the Turks
recalled their ambassador to France, boycotted French products and
canceled military contracts. They have threatened to withdraw strategic
support from our country if we should dare make the same mistake.
Article 301 of the Turkish penal code makes it a crime to "denigrate"
Turkey by, for instance, mentioning the Armenian genocide in public. In
March, the famous Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk did just that and faced
charges. International outcry and a technicality got his case
dismissed, but others are still in peril.
One of PBS' genocide deniers, University of Louisville history
professor Justin McCarthy, was invited by the Turkish Grand Assembly —
reeling from European Union pressure to come clean about its genocidal
past — for a pep talk in March. "I know that the Turks will resist
demands to confess to a crime they did not commit," McCarthy intoned,
"no matter the price of honesty. I have faith in the integrity of the
Turks." These rousing words brought the lawmakers, many of whom had
sanctioned Article 301, to their feet. Does PBS really want to give
such a belligerent falsifier airtime?
"It seemed like a good idea," Atlas said.
Raphael Lemkin wouldn't agree. He coined the word "genocide" in 1944,
and viewed the Armenian case as a seminal example of such an atrocity.
Norman Mailer, Carol Gilligan, John Updike and Cornel West wouldn't
think so either. They signed a petition, along with 150 other scholars
and writers, reaffirming the genocide's historical truth. Directors of
Holocaust research centers around the world — including Wiesel and
Yehuda Bauer in 2000 — also signed a statement declaring the Armenian
genocide an incontestable historical fact. Even the Turks are on the
record as acknowledging the truth. When Turkey was defeated in World
War I, the allied powers created a tribunal that included members of
the new Turkish government. The butchers behind the genocide had fled
by then, but they were found guilty and sentenced to death in absentia.
Certainly the few remaining genocide survivors, now in their 90s,
wouldn't think it "a good idea" to give the deniers a forum. They were
children when hundreds of thousands of Armenians were herded like
cattle through the scorching slaughterhouse of the Anatolian desert
toward one of 25 concentration camps. They watched as their people were
murdered, raped, tortured and left to starve in those camps. Armenian
homes and shops were occupied and looted; ancient churches were turned
into mosques or barns, used for target practice by the Turkish army or
burned to the ground to eliminate any trace of Armenians in those
lands.
By the time the Turks were finished, an estimated 1.5 million people
had perished — more than half the Armenian population in Turkey.
Armenians called it Medz Yeghern: "The Great Cataclysm."
The denial of genocide, as many have rightly observed, is the
continuation of genocide. It should be clear to PBS, to Atlas and to
programmers across the nation that the American public broadcasting
system should not be complicit in a murderous lie.