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An Interview with Hilmar Kaiser
By Khatchig Mouradian
"The Armenian Weekly", Volume 74, No.
9, March 8, 2007
Hilmar Kaiser is a scholar of the
Armenian genocide who is also known in scholarly circles and the
Armenian community for the controversy he generates with some of his
lectures and interviews. We first sat down at the editorial offices
of the Aztag Daily in Beirut on Sept. 22, 2005, for a fascinating
interview about the Ottoman archives and the Armenian genocide.
Kaiser received his PhD from the European University Institute in
Florence, Italy. He specializes in Ottoman social and economic
history as well as the Armenian genocide. He has done research in
more than 60 archives worldwide, including the Ottoman Archives in
Istanbul.
His published works—monographs, edited volumes and articles—include
“Imperialism, Racism, and Development Theories: The Construction of
a Dominant Paradigm on Ottoman Armenians,” “At the Crossroads of Der
Zor: Death Survival and Humanitarian Resistance in Aleppo,
1915-1917,” “The Baghdad Railway and the Armenian Genocide,
1915-1916: A Case Study in German Resistance and Complicity,”
“1915-1916 Ermeni Soykirimi Sirasinda Ermeni Mulkleri, Osmanli
Hukuku ve Milliyet Politikalari,” “Le genocide armenien: negation a
‘l'allemande’” and “From Empire to Republic: The Continuities for
Turkish Denial.”
In this interview, conducted in Boston in Dec. 2007, Kaiser
discusses the archives and speaks about his views on Turkish
scholars—both the liberals and state-sponsored genocide deniers.
Khatchig Mouradian—Let’s talk about your Turkish colleagues
and how they approach the Armenian issue.
Hilmar Kaiser—When I looked in Turkey over the past year for
organized “academic” treatment of the Armenian issue, I could
identify at least eight centers, which are in competition with each
other; and then, within the centers there is competition. What you
have there is a flourishing chaos. This is also understandable
because the Turkish government puts money into it. The government
puts money into the project without having a right assessment, so
they burn a lot of money on staff that has zero impact.
There has to be a realization in certain circles—especially at the
Turkish Historical Society—that this level doesn’t suffice. Some
people claim “our product is inefficient because it’s only in
Turkish and no one can read it.” They should understand that it is
good that no one can read it, because once it is translated, it will
do more damage than anything else. Some authors areas if talking in
their own bathroom.
But now within the Turkish Historical Society and among some others
there is agreement that production has to meet U.S. University press
standards and anything else is a total waste of time.
We agreed that we disagree, and then we had discussions about the
concept of genocide, we have now discussed joint projects. It’s
something else if that will happen or not, but we at least explored
what can be done together, in areas where basically you wouldn’t
burn the house. After two and a half years in the Turkish archives,
they got used to me being in Turkey, there was no scandal, slowly
they got used that I am a reality and they get more comfortable and
confident about the situation.
Personally, I have no problem talking to official historians or
genocide deniers because these guys have the nationalist
credentials. They don’t have to prove that they’re not Armenian
spies so they are very cool about it. They are very surprised that I
don’t talk to the “liberals” about it, and I tell them very clearly
that it is, in my view, a self-deception to think that a few Turkish
scholars—regardless of how good or how bad their work is, how
respectable or unrespectable they are—who represent a very small
layer, a very privileged layer of Turkish society, the société, the
upper one percent, will change the country.
These people teach at very few places where very few students go to
and they basically dismiss a whole state university system with tens
of thousands of history students. So I just ignore them. If you want
to talk to people who train the teachers in Turkey, who go to
countrywide universities, you have to talk to other people.
From a German perspective—I am German and it inspires me given the
dialogue of the 1970s and 1980s between east and west—it was always
clear that engaging the other side is inevitable and you make them
part of the solution. We can’t get rid of all of those we don’t like
and then start everything from the beginning, because these people
will fight to the end if they have nothing to lose. Respectable
scholarship has nothing to do with the name of the person who has
written it—it is assessed on its own merit. So people might change
and agreements might replace disagreements. Never give up too easy.
There’s a substance on which you can move on and I have been
involved in it during the last few years. There are hopeless cases
among historians in Turkey, of course. At one dinner, one outed
himself as a fan of Adolf Hitler. In Germany, I would report him to
the police and he wouldn’t leave the country for what he said. This
was, at the same time, Holocaust denial, racism and a call for
inter-ethnic violence. You don’t have to deal with those guys. There
are clear standards. These standards are not to be compromised. But
the other guys, I don’t boycott them, clearly.
K.M.—You criticize the liberal scholars. But most of the
decent scholarship by Turks on the Armenian genocide is done by the
liberal scholars and not the ones on the state’s payroll, am I
wrong?
H.K.—You have to look at the footnotes. Every book tells you
what you have done, at least what you claim to have done. Much of it
is based on published resources. It shows that they are not at the
cutting edge. If you want original research on a certain issue,
given the low state of our knowledge because of archival issues and
other issues, you have to put in the time. All these concepts about
the Armenian genocide are developed on generalization of a very
narrow source basis. We have developed a lot of Holy Grail items
that we hear over and over again, but these are generalizations of
local events that didn’t necessarily spread. There is a lot of crap
that we have to throw out, and we have the documents to make that
point. One has to be more humble and more relaxed about it and be
careful about one’s findings.
K.M.—Talk about your relation with the head of the Turkish
Historical Society Yusuf Halacoglu
H.K.—I met him at the Istanbul conference almost two years ago.
Then I visited him at the Historical Society’s conference about a
year ago, where he received me in a very friendly manner. Then we
had little contact and I visited him in June and in November again.
Halacoglu is the only Turkish historian who has put material on the
table I cannot reconcile with my current knowledge. He is an
extremely smart guy, very professional. He is ahead of me in some
regards.
K.M.—Why do you say that?
H.K.—He has the material on the prosecution of war criminals
during the war. Meanwhile, I have obtained my own copy of the
material, but there has to be academic respect—it means, he has the
right to publish it first.
According to this material, people who stole money, killed etc.,
were punished. The list identifies the perpetrators, what they did
and what their punishment was. We know, for example, that the
murderers of Zohrab and Vartkes Effendi were executed by Djemal, and
there were other executions. People who stole money from the
Armenian population and put it in their own pocket instead of
transferring it to the government got punished. We know this but we
need a careful analysis of it. We have no decisive answer yet.
K.M.—But they aren’t punishing them for stealing from the
Armenians, are they?
H.K.—We haven’t researched that. This element is surely part
of it, but do we really fully account for it?
K.M.—How would you qualify Halacoglu’s scholarship…
H.K.—The book on the 16th century is very good…
K.M.—No, I mean his scholarship on the Armenian genocide…
H.K.—This is not so easy, you have to see who is he. He is
the representative of the Turkish state. If there is a real debate
between persons with intellect and command of sources, Halacoglu
leads the Turkish team.
Dismissing him for past weak scholarship or political fanaticism—or
whatever argument you want to bring up and you may even have
something in support of your point—will not necessarily be
productive. Don’t underestimate Yusuf Halacoglu. I respect him. I
might disagree with him emphatically but I’m comfortable that I
don’t have a fight with him at this point. The academic resources of
an entire state converge on this one person. The Armenians have
nobody coming even close to the shadow of him.
On the other hand, he is not antagonistic like the fascist I just
mentioned. Halacoglu is interested in dialogue, the question is on
what terms. He has no problem to talk with me, to talk with others…
K.M.—The way you are describing a notorious genocide denier
might come as a surprise to many…
H.K.—First of all, the description of deniers as a group is
false. You have people who are fully paid talking heads who have
nothing to offer; they are, unfortunately, the people who write the
briefs for Erdogan when he goes abroad. Then you have the kind of
politically well-connected third-rate academic creatures who are
only interested in escalating the situation because they can only
live on escalation, because they have nothing to offer. And then you
have people who have serious disagreements with you.
The way Turkish materials have been used in one recent
English-language publication in this country—which is celebrated as
great research—is totally unscholarly. The celebration is there
because no one is able to check the sources. If that publication had
been an Armenian genocide denial publication, there would have been
an outcry. Same methods of misrepresentation of sources,
speculation, you name it. It’s all there.
K.M.—Can you give a concrete example?
H.K.—For example, one scholar claims that the president of the
Ottoman Chamber was going to Germany in March 1915 to coordinate the
decision of the Armenian genocide, and he gives the source. The
source says exactly the opposite. I don’t want to go now into detail
because I am publishing it.
K.M.—Talk about the Ottoman archives. What has changed in the
past couple of years?
H.K.—The Directorate for Demography in the Ministry of the
Interior was reopened. This collection was open for some time in the
1990s and was closed for at least two years since 2005. This was a
reopening, not a new opening of collections.
The opening of other files is rapid, tremendous. They have opened
the Ministry of the Interior files for the Abdul-Hamidian period
until the second constitutional period. This is massive.
They have also opened the files of the Paris embassy and they are
opening more embassy files now. This is at a pace that has never
been there.
However, there are still files—collections we spoke of in our
previous interview, like the files of the so-called abandoned
property commissions—that are not made available. We also don’t have
possibly the most crucial files on WWI concerning the Armenians,
because they were removed in 1919 from the files that were opened so
far and have been put in a new collection for the purposes of the
government. So this is not—as some people now claim—a cleansing of
archives. This is just that certain files were carried from one
office to another office in the context of administrative
organization. This stuff, from what I understand, is not going to be
opened soon, not because the archivists are not motivated, not
because they are not interested, but simply because you have so many
people and so much work. There is a lack of resources.
There is no political opposition now towards declassification and
processing. What they simply don’t have is sufficient resources,
which is regrettable.
K.M.—What is the significance of the embassy files regarding
the Armenian issue?
H.K.—I haven’t worked with this, but, for example, the
catalogs indicate that the embassy files of London, St. Petersburg,
Paris provide a lot of insight into the massacres of the 1890s.
Also, the embassies were spying outposts. They were spying on the
Armenian diaspora communities and the spying was directed by the
Ministry of the Interior through the embassies. So you find a lot of
Ministry of the Interior material in embassy files and you find
embassy reports to the Ministry of the Interior. This is very
important because we might have lost some material—physically
totally rotten—because of maintenance problems. So you might lose
the draft in the Ministry of Interior file but since the letter went
out to the embassy, you can have it in the embassy file, because the
Paris embassy had a better storage facility. Some of these files
have been very recently repatriated, which is exciting.
K.M.—You are talking about hundreds of thousands of files,
and among them, thousands of files might have relevance regarding
the Armenian issue. How many people are actually involved in
researching these files?
H.K.—There is increasing interest among Turkish historians in
Istanbul and the provinces who have not been involved in organized
campaigns so far against Turkish “traitors” who say it was a
genocide or against “Armenian allegations.” But what has transpired
now during my talks is that the Armenians have become a topic. One
scholar is publishing 16th-century tax registers from Yerevan—in
Istanbul, not Yerevan. This has nothing to do with the genocide but
is very important for Armenian history. We have 19th-century income
tax registers, 1840s, very important again. So where we are going
right now is a periodization of the Armenian cause/issue/problem, as
it is called in Turkey. The people no longer mix together the
Tanzimat era, Abdul-Hamid era, second constitutional period with the
genocide and then the occupation period. We see now increasingly
very well-respected and motivated scholars working on it not just
because they want to prove or disprove something—that might be just
one aspect in it—but because there is interest in the material.
From the outside, Dr. Taner Akcam was there some time ago for three
weeks, and now he lectures us on the Ottoman archives, for which I’m
very thankful. Then, Garabed Moumdjian was there with me in 2006 for
two weeks working on the Young Turks on the ARF. He has sent shock
waves through the whole establishment. Every time I think about it
I’m laughing. An Armenian walked in, he spoke better Turkish than
the Turks, he read Ottoman, handwritten documents like we read the
New York Times, he talked to the archival staff in Arabic... The
idea of the ARF, fanatic, blood-drinking killer and so on got a
devastating blow. There’s no one else. He’s the only Armenian who
went there possibly in decades (before, only Ara Sarafian went).
Which shows that these programs, whatever they do, don’t do one
thing: They don’t bring people to that point where many people had
hoped they would bring them. So we’re at that point and, this year,
it seems I was alone.
K.M.—There’s so much research that needs to be done in these
archives. Why is the interest by scholars from outside Turkey so
little?
H.K.—I was criticized by some less-informed elements in the
Armenian diaspora for going to the archives because now they cannot
say it’s closed anymore. Why did we push for having it open if we
don’t want it open? For some people, this was obviously just
political talk. I have to be very critical about this. All these
donations the community put into research, obviously none of it is
coming there. So when I am going there, people should not think that
I am going on an Armenian ticket. If there was five percent Armenian
money in it, it would be nice.
My colleagues ask me in Turkey where all these Armenians are. They
feared that the moment they opened the door, a mob would raid their
place. So you had basically the cavalry waiting for the Indians to
attack and in four to five years one lone Indian has showed up. And
so they understand that their projections of a big Armenian
conspiracy is just a formulation of their own fears that has
relatively little to do with reality.
When I say the archives are open, it’s limited, clear, but there
certainly is no excuse not to do it. It’s a very simple thing.
Crucial evidence, about whose existence we know, is not available at
this time. But there is no excuse not to exhaust what they have made
available, because this has to be done anyhow. If people say, Well
we want to see the rest and then we’ll do something, well that is
unprofessional. One has to be at the cutting edge of research. I
think this kind of concept is not present.
K.M.—What do you think about Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan’s
proposal for a joint historical commission?
H.K.—A commission would have little to do. We have gone
pretty well through the Ottoman archives and not much is left on
World War I. So what should a commission do? Xerox the documents a
second time? That would be perfect nonsense. The cataloging of WWI
files has to make rapid progress to provide an archival basis for a
commission. The issue is an illustration that Erdogan does not have
the best advisors when it comes to the Armenian genocide. These
people develop ideas without checking first whether the
pre-conditions for their own proposal exist within their own
institutions.
Another matter is getting rid of such obstacles as Article 301. I
cannot expect anyone to agree with me when that would mean he would
be regarded as a criminal for doing so. The AKP government in Ankara
has inherited a mess created by its predecessors over decades. So it
is small steps for the time being, while hoping that the AKP does
its homework and continues its overall positive course.
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