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- Newsgroups: soc.culture.greek
- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!news.cs.columbia.edu!vh
- From: vh@cs.columbia.edu (Vasileios Hatzivassiloglou)
- Subject: Re: Turkish minority in Greece ????
- Message-ID: <Bzn6Mt.9w6@cs.columbia.edu>
- Sender: news@cs.columbia.edu (The Daily News)
- Organization: Columbia University Department of Computer Science
- References: <BzG4C8.IAv@cs.columbia.edu> <1992Dec21.113120.14179@usage.csd.unsw.OZ.AU>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 03:49:41 GMT
- Lines: 103
-
- In article <1992Dec21.113120.14179@usage.csd.unsw.OZ.AU> trevore@vast.unsw.edu.au (Trevor Elbourne (Supr. Hell) BE) writes:
- >vh@cs.columbia.edu (Vasileios Hatzivassiloglou) writes:
- >: In article <1go0g8INN6aj@TERMINATOR.AI.CS.YALE.EDU> tsiout%thailand@cs.yale.edu (Dimitris Tsioutsias) writes:
- >: >So, you that support the above view, can you tell me how is it
- >: >then than an "oppressed" minority in Greece can elect 2 representatives
- >: >into the greek parliament? How many Armenians or Kurds does the
- >:
- >: That was a mistake... proper care has been taken so that embarassing
- >: minority MPs will not be elected again.
- >:
- >: >turkish parliament have? Since Kurds are 20% of the Turkish population
- >: >I would expect a reasonable number between 12-30, right??
- >: >
- >: >
- >: >->dimitris
- >:
- >: Comparison with the far worse record of Turkey does not exonerate Greece;
- >: it is a shame that a country with such a glorious history of civilization
- >: cannot come to terms with respecting human rights for minorities, but
- >: instead denies them things as their ethnic identity. This kind of short-
- >: sighted policy was a much more important factor in alienating the Turkish/
- >: Muslim minority and elevating to prominence uncompromising fanatics such
- >: as Sadik than any encouragement from the turkish side.
- >
- > Oh come on. It's been beated to death. In the reasent human rights
- >reports Greece is praised for it's respect for the human rights in Greece.
- >To add to that a special note is made on the much improved conditions
- >of the muslem minorities. Also mentioned is critsism made to the USA for
- >turning a blind eye to Turkey and supplying aid contrary to their statment that
- >they wont supply to countries that abuse human rights. What the muslems are
- >called is a matter settled in the Lausane treaty for obvious reasons. They
- >were called muslems because they alot don't identify them selves as Turks.
- >Officialy then as a group they are considered as Muslems. The books are
- >provided by the Turkish goverment (which only recently has bothered to send
- >them before the middle of the term !!!). What more should Greece do ?
- >Call them Turks !!! Wow that sounds quite stupid. It's like asking for
- >trouble the muslems probably don't want anyway. They live MUCH better
- >than the Turks in Turkey (let alone any other minority)
- >
- >
- >:
- >:
- >: - Vasilis.
- >:
- > A re Vasili, read a report by Amnesty internationsal, or any other
- >world recognised human rights report and find out independantly by you
- >self.
- > George
-
- In my message, I first of all referred to "the far worse record of Turkey";
- it is undisputable that Greece treats the minority rather well (i.e. they
- have (relative) freedom of religion, they are allowed to speak their own
- language, have their own schools, are not hunted down like the Kurds in
- Turkey, etc.); it should also be accepted that the members of said minority
- are not treated as equals to the rest of the Greeks. You referred to
- reports by AI and other human-rights organizations, but whenever these
- reports are released, they always say something like "Greece does not
- oppress the minority too much, but ..." and the Greek government and
- press immediately denounce the report-writers as "misled" or "influenced
- by the Turks"; I personally believe more the human-rights organizations
- than the goverment. Human rights organizations do praise Greece, but
- only in the sense that its record is better than its neighbors, nor that
- it is adequate.
-
- To give an example : I completed my undergraduate studies in the University
- of Patras; there one could see some non ethnic Greek students who were
- all Palestinians or from other Arab countries; I never met one muslim
- student from Thrace (while I met many ethnic Greeks from the same area)
- and I can see only two reasons for that : either all members of the
- minority are stupid/indifferent to higher studies (which I can't believe),
- or they were discouraged from enrolling in the University. Don't get me
- wrong on the last one; I'm not saying that if a qualifed minority member
- wanted to enroll he wouldn't be allowed, but that the conditions under
- which people of the minority live are much worse than for the rest of
- Greece, and therefore their opportunities for advancement are far fewer.
- That their life might be better than that of Turks in Turkey is
- irrelevant to my original posting; I'm not comparing the two countries,
- I'm just saying that Greece is at fault too.
-
- As for the MP matter, I don't believe you disagree that the electoral
- law change was shameful for a democratic country; the people of the area
- are now deprived of their natural right to elect the person they prefer,
- no matter if we don't like their choice. The story of trying and
- convicting one of the minority MPs on ridiculous charges (for inciting
- political passions, while the respected leaders of both big parties
- do that daily on a far greater scale) is also a blow to the human rights
- record of Greece.
-
- Finally, for the name matter. It may be true that the muslims in Thrace
- are not ethnically Turks, and it may be true that they felt non-Turks
- at the start of the century; however, they now feel Turks (or they
- wouldn't elect and support Sadik, for example), and no matter what
- Greeks want to call them officially doesn't matter. The situation of
- calling them just muslims seems to me as ridiculous as calling the
- Greeks in southern Albania "Orthodox Christian Albanians". My position
- is that the short-sightness of the Greek government in the past
- allowed these people to seek support from Turkey, and this influenced
- their ethnic identity; as long as Greece tries to suppress the
- minority (e.g. their political expression) and treats them as second
- class citizens, they will naturally resent that and move even closer
- to Turkey. If instead Greece chose to adopt a policy of inclusion,
- then I believe they would realize that they can be better off in a
- Greece that respects them than in the present Turkey.
-