Rarely do we know whether a struggle is worthy
during our passing life. We are used to fight out of a need, without knowing
whether there actually is an evaluative element proving the rationality of our
stance in an objective way. Recognition of genocide belongs to these rare cases
in which humanness touches humanity directly. This struggle is valuable
regardless of the fighters giving it. When a whole people became victim of
inhumanity, humanity itself was the one to have been hurt. The same holds for
the genocide of the Pontiacs. This is not only a local problem concerning a
minority. Pontus as a Greek element and as an acritic entity of our
civilization constitutes one of the singularities characterizing our
multiplicity. Consequently, we shouldn’t isolate the Pontiac cause neither as a
historic fact nor as a strategic goal. On the contrary, we have to integrate
the know-how we possess in the human rights domain. The example of the genocide
of the Armenians recognition is both indicative and efficient; because intermediate
targets were not attained by state institutions, but by lobbies. When the
European Union recognized the genocide of the Armenians in 1987, Armenia was
not an independent state yet.
Thus, the framework of a state is not
indispensable, and consequently this is not an excuse for inertia. The example
of the 2004 European Union report on the Imvros issue is spectacular, because
many Greeks had been considering that Imvros was one of the ‘lost homelands’
and just that. However, the most efficient example at personal level is the
recent Cypriot struggle in the domain of the massive appeals against Turkey.
For, at this level each refugee contributes to the indirect liberation of his
country, by transforming a moral and humane problem into one to be characterized
as economic and strategic.
Through
the human rights strategy, the Cypriots proved that economy can be interpreted
as the dynamics of ethics. In total, all these historic examples substantially
constitute the basic elements of a strategic mix, which in coordinated moves
proves that it is a powerful weapon in the human rights domain; especially as
regards the genocide of the Pontiacs recognition issue.
The Pontiacs are not alone in this struggle for
recognition, because other peoples, too, have suffered and are still suffering
by the Turkeys’ diachronic military regime. However, they have both experiences
and successes in difficult cases and it’s those that we have to use dynamically
within a strategic framework in which the sentimental and traditional elements
do not suffice.
This struggle should be organized through
appeals at an individual level, but also through specialized lobbies at a group
level, too.
Nikos Ligeros
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