For immediate release.
Distributed by Dennis R. Papazian
201-505-1591
The Intimidation
Campaign Against Taner Akçam
University of Minnesota sociologist-historian Taner
Akçam, an international authority on the 1915 Armenian Genocide, is the target
of an ongoing intimidation campaign to portray him as a convicted terrorist and
a traitor to his native Turkey.
A noted writer and lecturer on Turkish nationalism, the Armenian Genocide, and
Armenian-Turkish dialogue, Prof. Akçam relocated to the United States in 2001,
the year that his writings began to appear in English and the campaign against
him was launched in response.
In a sensational commentary published by the Washington, DCbased Assembly of
Turkish American Associations, Akçam was denounced as a mastermind of terrorist
violence, including the assassinations of American and NATO military personnel.
Disseminated online by the 19,000-member Turkish Forum and posted since 2004 at
the influential Genocide-denialist site Tall Armenian Tale, these allegations
were soon copied to well over 10,000 Web pages, including Akçams book reviews
at Amazon and his persistently vandalized biography at Wikipedia. He began
receiving death threats after Turkish Forum posted his contact information so
that readers could send greetings to this traitor.
Following the November 2006 publication of Akçams critically acclaimed study, A
Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility,
the campaign intensified. Akçams lectures and book tour were violently
disrupted, and poison-pen letters were emailed to the hosting universities.
Tellingly, a planned disruption at Yeshiva University was called off after
conference organizers appealed to the Turkish Consulate in New York. In February
2007, en route to lecture at McGill University Law School, Akçam was detained in
the Montreal airport for nearly four hours on suspicion of terrorism. He was
shown, as evidence, his vandalized Wikipedia biography.
Just one month before the Montreal incident, the assassination of Akçams friend
and colleague, Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, had put Turkeys
intellectuals on high alert. They knew that in the months before his murder,
Dink had been targeted as a traitor by an increasingly vicious media campaign.
Leading the pack was Hürriyet, one of the most widely read newspapers in Turkey.
In May 2007, citing the heightened danger to his own life, Akçam unmasked the
secretive Webmaster of Tall Armenian Tale as Turkish-American illustrator Murad
Holdwater Gümen of New York City. Death threats and denunciations followed.
Hürriyet portrayed Akçam as a cowardly traitor who vomits hate towards our
country. No attempt was made to interview him, and his letter to the editor was
ignored.
Once again, intellectuals and activists who dare to question the governments
official history are being put on notice, said Akçam on July 16. This
shameful campaign not only endangers my life and the lives of my colleagues, my
family and friends; ironically enough, the very notion of free expression is
being undermined by the very institution that depends on it most: the public
press.
And what is the point, after all? he continued. I published a scholarly study
that deviated from the official position of the Turkish State. One should ask
the Turkish authorities whether they truly believe that shooting the messenger
will prove that their position on 1915 is the correct one.
July 17, 2007
Contact: Prof. Taner Akçam, t
akcam@umn.edu
, (612) 624-2988