27 December 2008

Use velcro for organizing cables

Use velcros (in turkish it is called CIRT CIRT) for organizing cables in the house or office..

You'll see that it is very pratical.

Also, please read how these things are discovered. It is cool, a swiss man saw the vegetable things which are stinked to his dogs fur, so he observed the structure of these things in the microscope, and decided to create a tool with following same principle...

Vel(ours) cro(ché)



Downloading Movies - Games - Programs easily

Many friends were asking me how to download easily movies and software...

Here is the way:

1- Browse the PirateBay

2- Download utorrent

You're ready to download. PirateBay is the most common platform for searching movies and software. And, utorrent is a good software to download these files...


16 December 2008

A new job

I found a job last month (since first november) in a young company. They are specialized in SAP BW consulting. For now, I'm working from home. I read documentations (about 1000 pages) and practice the system. I guess in one month, I'll participate to a project (unilever).

SAP is the most common software (%40 of the market) used in big enterprises (especially the global ones). Because, this huge system has lots of flexibilities, it supports many languages, many accounting systems, and it is independent from other database technologies.

The module I'm working on, basically is the reporting part of the system. So, it help the users to make analyses with reporting tools. For any department in an enterprise: Sales, Production, Procurement, HR, Accounting etc..

All this can be done with Office Excel, in small enterprises, but as big companies has big volume of data, they need a system for managing it.

SAP BW is a system for providing and organizing all these reports. Think the enterprises which sell millions of products. So, as the data is huge, the BW system also has huge functionalities.

15 December 2008

Zeitgeist the movie

Zeitgeist The Movie, this is a documentary made in 2007, I think everybody shall watch it, maybe it is a conspirancy theory, maybe not. It tells about religion and financial system. Also, it explains 9/11 facts.

I hope, this documentary can make people wake up from their sleeps. I hope :)

14 December 2008

Paris Combo

Paris Combo, they are wonderfull... If you also like Pink Martini, you'll adore them.

Especially, their song -attraction- is great. It's a pitty that I discovered them only now. Because, I was listening their song -Istanbul- since 2 years; but I wasn't aware that it was them who sing this. (the tag of the song was wrongly written, the singer was named as "Carla Bruni" in the mp3 : \ )

A friend told me that, it wasn't Carla Bruni, but Paris Combo : )

So listen them, from here.

25 November 2008

The turk

Above, is a picture of a weird machine :) Its name is the Turk, this is why I find it more interesting. The inventor of the machine, presented this thing as an automated chess machine but, in fact there was somebody in the machine who was controlling the moves. So, they were cheating people.

So, the inventor became very famous, with this very succesfull machine :o)
(he is from austria)

By the way, there is an amazon service which is called also Mechanical Turk.
Discover it from here. A very good business idea.

For details, read it from wikipedia...

21 November 2008

Politiki Kouzina


Yesterday, I watched a greek movie called "Politiki Kouzina", I like it a lot.

It talks about historical relations with greeks and turks. The story tells this story from greek side. Unfortunately, many greek familly are forced to leave Istanbul (greeks call it, Constantinapolis ;) ), after the Turkish Republic founded. The same thing happened in greek side, lots of turks left Greece. The population exchange is made only by looking to the religion.

The exchange is made many times, 1924 and between 1950-1960. I think, Turkey lost a good human resource, it is a pitty. But this is politics : \

One month ago, I met with two greeks who had same situation at 1960's.

This situation is caused by political crisis happened because of Cyprus Island.

20 November 2008

Islam in a nutshell


I think, this text is telling islam very basically. Everyone, who doesn't know about islam, shall read it.



09 November 2008

pivot table


Hey.

I would like to share something that I find very usefull.

In excel, there is a utility called Pivot table. Maybe you already know, it is very smart, you can use it a lot when reporting.

If you have data somewhere, (in another excel file, or database), it is very simple to create pivot tables.

You can also use, numbergo as an alternative program for this. The essential is that you have accurate data.

You can learn this concept from here.

For researching it from Google your keyword is:

pivot table excel

31 October 2008

Good Luck for Turkey


This is a notice board in Georgia near Turkey border. (Sarp border gate)

This made me laugh, they wish good luck to people who is going to Turkey.

Maybe they're right :)

18 October 2008

Tarlabasi


0378, originally uploaded by natale cozzolongo.

Tarlabasi, is a very interesting district of Istanbul. But, unfortunately it is not safe to walk there. I'm planning to drive to there one day with scooter. Sulukule district also is in my list.

In old times, like 19th century, these were very rich countries, their residents were jews, greeks and armenians. So the buildings are very beautfull. After, all these people left these buildings alone (because of politics; search greek&turk relation between 1919-1960) and generally gitanes comes in place of them.

Partitioning of the Ottoman Empire

The regions that Turks wanted to take (1) and that we have actually(2)

I found some interesting informations in Wikipedia.

if you're interested with history, I think it is usefull to know these things.


Partitioning of the Ottoman Empire (history)

Treaty of Sevres(The contact that they wanted to sign us)

Misak-i Milli (The contract that we wanted to sign)

Lausanne Treaty (Actual border treaty)

06 October 2008

Autumn in Istanbul

A new video which is dated 2-3 weeks ago.



Untitled from Coskun Istanbulluoglu on Vimeo.

04 October 2008

Northern Iraq

After the thing happened today (15 turkish soldier died near Iraq frontier, at the point marked on the picture), I think that, Turkey have to occupy northern Iraq for a while. At least, until there is a more powerfull government in Iraq.

Because, it is almost impossible to make defense at this region due to geographical conditions (lots of mountains).

We shall advance until Kerkuk and Mosoul which are very strategical zones.

I guess nobody will let us do that, because Kerkuk and Mousoul's situation is a very complicated case. (These places are very rich oil zones).

I also belive that the actual frontier designed after WWI is wrong.

You shall research the region history to understand the current situation.

Here is the keywords for your research:
-First World War Ottoman Middle East
-Treaty of Sevres
-Treaty of Lausanne
-Treaty of Sykes-Picot

01 October 2008

News

Hey!
It's for saying that I'm fine. But on Monday I had a car accident. It was the day before the national holiday which is 9 days. So, the roads were almost empty, but it was raining. I had my cousin going to Pologne (Krakow), my familly told me to accompany them to airport.

Everything is fine, thanks to God. The accident was serious, but we had luck.This is because of a car which forced me to change the line (the driver had no license), then another car hit me from the back. My speed was about 90 kms, the car who hit me was about 120 (maybe more). He made us hit the barriers then made us turn 360 degree on the road.

Unfortunately the report which is written by the police was invented for protecting the driver with no-licence.

I think the car will go to the trash. It is not very very serious, the car had insurance. But, the fact that there isn't justice made me uncomfortable for a while.

Now, I'm not sad, because I belive that, one day these people will pay their faults. (I hope, I can find video records which show road situation at the accident location. Today, I sent a mail to police department about the case.)

25 September 2008

Facts about Iraq

When we look to the world, we see lots of things which are happening. Lots of people are died and still continue to die because of wars for getting the power.

Sometimes, the problems we have in the life become meaningless when we think these people life's. People in Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine, Africa they are sacrificed.

Shell company signed a new agreement for 4 billion dollars with Iraq. Iraq and Shell will share this money for %50. I really hope that at least %10 this money will be spent for people who live in misery.

This stat below show oil production and revenue after the occupation of Iraq.


19 September 2008

Praying

Selimiye Mosque Dome (Edirne)

Here is the translation of the main pray of Islam Religion.

In Turkey, people speaks turkish, and most of them don't know arab.
So, it seems me very strange that, people pray in a knowledge that they don't understand.
People generally memorize the prays, and forgot their sense.

Christians also were praying in latin in the middle age. I don't know if this thing (to pray in a language that we don't understand) still continues in europe countries except Vatican.

When I was in France, I saw the fathers who pray in latin but they were not accepted by the church,and they could only make their ceremonies at the garden of the church.

So, the prays, when we don't understand them, I think they are like magic words, for sure it make us feel the spiritual atmosphere;but, I think that, they are useless if we don't understand.

After the republic of Turkey, Ataturk changed lots of things. Turks started to use latin alphabet in place of arab alphabet that they were using since 8th-9th century.

The call for prays (ezan) began to be made in turkish.

We don't know, if Ataturk wanted to do same thing for prays also.

But, after 1940; the call for prays became one more time arab.


10 September 2008

Searching a job

Last thursday, 4th september , I returned to Istanbul.

I can say my adventure of Europe finished. If I wanted, I could find a job in Europe, but the conditions made me choose Turkey (familly, friends etc). There wasn't so much thing which motivated me to stay in France.

Now, I want to find a good place to work here. Generally, firms want to recrute people who completed its military service, so finding a job in this condition it is harder.

The military service in Turkey it is obligatory, and it is not possible to refuse it. It takes 6 month or 1 year, the duration depends on the need of army.

29 August 2008

Latest news

It is one week that I left Istanbul. Our trip (with Matthieu) by car was very good but a little tiring.

Wednesday night we slept in a beach near Thessaloniki.Than, we crossed adriatic sea with a ferry, and friday morning we were at Ancona. Then, we eat a pizza in Torino. Then that night we crossed France-Italy border, and slept in the tent near the highway.

The morning, we arrived to Clermont Ferrand. my friend Matthieu showed me approximately all beauties of the Auvergne region.
Then, monday morning I left him, and took the train for Grenoble, and met Ihsan.

Wednesday, I was in Geneve, Switzerland.
Thursday, I was in Annecy.

And tomorrow I'm going to Lyon.

17 August 2008

trip Istanbul --> Paris

Next week, I'll leave Istanbul, and go to Paris by car with a french friend that I find by the help of couchsurfin.com

In France, I shall do a presentation to finish my master studies (at 1st september)

Actually, I don't know where I'll sleep during this 10 days.

So, if you have a suggestion contact me please.

I'll return to Istanbul at 4th september.


You shall use these phone numbers: (because I don't use my french phone no more)
0090 533 638 14 67
0090 541 638 14 67



13 August 2008

Eurotrip

I just watched the movie, Eurotrip (2004) with my brothers.

It made us laugh a lot. It is a must see.

 



11 August 2008

songs which touch me a lot

1. Yann Tiersenn - Summer 78
2. Cranberries - TwentyOne
3. cat power - I found a reason

Why everything happens around Turkey ?

Can anybody answer this question?

Everybody knows the facts:

o Caucasia (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Russia, Chechenia)
o Middle east (Iraq, Iran, Palestine, Israel)
o Balkans (Serbia, Kosovo, Bosnia)

I don't know maybe Turkey shall leave his " light " politics. Because, generally we only watch the things which happens.

Absolutely, it is not our fault only; EU also forces us to do nothing.


08 August 2008

Bosphorus Video

A video which I made 2 years ago.


Untitled from Coskun Istanbulluoglu on Vimeo.

06 August 2008

turkish hamam

Yesterday I was in hamam with friends.

It made me very relaxed, and helped me to sleep like a baby :o)

I'm going frequently to Cemberlitas Hamami, and also Cagaloglu Hamami is very known.

So, I suggest you to add it to "To do list in Istanbul".




17 July 2008

Banksy

This man is very talented,

I hope, one day he'll paint something to Istanbul.

You can see some of his work from here.


(see also his web site)

Ryan Air

I guess everybody knows this firm:

Ryan Air

This low-cost airline offers very cheap flights;

last week, I bought a ticket from Paris to Venice for 20 euro (all included)


How to buy low cost flights?

14 July 2008

j'aime les filles

That's a beautifull song from Jacques Dutronc.

Listen it from deezer, which is a very pratical music site.

13 July 2008

A good place to work ;)


Watch this video, it is awesome

It is made in the Vimeo office, by the employees of the firm... They are very cool.



12 July 2008

world oil distribution

Who has the oil?

Answer:

The middle East controls more than 60 percent of the world's remaining oil.


List Producers:
o Saudi Arabia
o Iran
o Iraq
o Kuwait
o United Arab Emirates
o Venezuela
o Russia
o Kazakhstan
o Libya
o Nigeria
o USA
o China
o Canada
o Qatar

Place of Turkey in the world economy

Turkey is the world's biggest producer of hazelnuts, figs, apricots
o 4th biggest producer of olive,
o 2nd biggest producer of tomato,
o 5th biggest producer of apple,
o 6th biggest producer of tobacco,
o 8th biggest producer of wheat,
o 10th biggest producer of cotton,
o 4th biggest producer of tea,
o 2nd biggest producer of watermelon

and also,
o europe's biggest manufacturer of bus
o world's 8th biggest manufacturer of ship in the world

My Logs

Here is my logs for 2004-2005; 2005 Summer; and 2005-2006

log 2004-2005

log 2005 Summer


log 2005-2006

Music

Here is a list of songs which I listened a hundred times in repeat mode:

o david vendetta - unidos para la musica
o yann tiersenn - piste 16
o take five
o bjork - frosti
o Eternal Sunshine soundtrack - phone call
o Cat Power - I found a reason
o spotless mind - Eternal Sunshine soundtrack
o Vivaldi - Four Seasons Winter
o lali puna - people I know
o carpathian ridge - Donnie Darko soundtrack
o Liquid Spear Waltz - Donnie Darko soundtrack
o Oi Chartaetoi - Zorba Soundtrack
o Rumba De Barcelona - Manu Chao
o Mesescina - Goran Bregovic
o Ab-i Tarab - Mercan Dede
o Start Wearing Purple - Gogol Bordello
o Firar - Goksel
o Prettiest thing - Norah Jones
o Mi Confession - Gotan Project
o Istanbul'da - Pinhani
o Santa Maria - Gotan Project
....

11 July 2008

ScreenGrab Extension for Firefox

Screen Capturing within your browser is very easy with this addon.

This plugin is one of the reasons that I use Firefox

10 July 2008

Bird Houses



Very cute bird houses in old ottoman mosques.
I think that, these little houses show people how ottoman civilisation was developped.

In our modern world, we don't even think about humans life, but at these times, they thought birds life.

Modern Miniatures


These paints are called Minyatur, the painter is dead before two months ago (Nusret Colpan). You can see some of his works at this site.

08 July 2008

Istanbul and Holy Grail

There is some people who says Holy Grail is in Istanbul.
Below is the story which they say:


Constantine has erected a huge building in the area called Forum Constantine. Today it is called Cemberlitas. The pieces of the tower was brought from Rome pagan temple Apollon. The statute on top of column was originally Apollon, he replaced it with his statue.

Recent inspections with geo-radar device revealed that there is a room approximately 1X2 meters in the huge stone mass that holds the tower. It is believed the mother of emperor; Helen placed the relics herself into the cell.

According to the historians papers written in 300-400 AD. Constantine sent his mother Helen to Jerusalem in 324 AD. He made open the ossuary believed to belong to Jesus (rad). Along with Jesus' belongings, they took away relics from Jerusalem: holy soil, original cross parts, holy nails, holy grail, holy bread crumb, Holy stone believed to belong to Moses (rad), Holy stick believed to belong to Lut (rad), Holy ax believed to belong to Noah (rad), Holy stone believed to belong to Moses (rad), 7 arm Holy chandelier believed to belong to Solomon (rad).
Constantine has conquered and demolished Rome empire in 325 AD. A Pagan temple Apollon was dismantled to be re-erected in Istanbul.

Vatican has tried unsuccessfully in 1918 to dig out the reliquary.

07 July 2008

What's happening in Turkey?



These days are very hot in my country. I hope that everything will be fine...

As a summary, I can say that all is about getting the power :o)
it is about army whose mission is to protect the regime, and government who is claimed to be against to regime.
We hear lots of conspiracy theories, like Contre-guerilla forces ("deep state"), which is founded by old army members for creating an environment to make fall the government.

Here is an article which explains the actual situation.

06 July 2008

Reading List

I want to share some interesting articles:

Us congress: Especially, the comments of this article shall be read


Vatican_II: I will research this event more; because Turkey have some common problems.

Fall_of_Constantinople:this is interesting that europeans call this event 'Fall'; because for us it is the Conquest :o)

05 July 2008

Resources for software


Resources for software searching and downloading


Snapfiles
tucows
filehippo

04 July 2008

Listen online music




Finally, I discovered LAST FM. It seems, this site is something very cool for listening music and sharing it with friends.

So, start using it!

:o)

Religional Map

A map which shows islamic religion frontiers.


Old maps

Here is some old maps of Istanbul, before the conquest












01 July 2008

Couchsurfing Project

This site is one of the most cool thing I found in the internet world.

It helps you to find a place to stay or a guide for the city that you visit, and much more.

It is also usefull for finding activities in the city that you're visiting.

So, create your profile, and have some references, and contact people before your trip; and than enjoy a free holiday!

30 June 2008

Places that I want to see this summer

Here is a list of places I want to see this summer:
(at least some of them)

  • Prag
  • Zagreb
  • Budapest
  • Rome
  • Barcelona
  • Berlin

Video Downloading From Youtube



Lots of people don't know how to download a video from Youtube

You shall get a Firefox; then download this add-on!

Trip to Wien / Euro 2008 Turkey-Croatia Game


Wien trip was unbelievable, I guess one of my best trip in my life. We watched the Euro2008 game between Turkey-Croatia (that we won 3-1 after penalty shoutouts).

The trip is done suddenly without planning: I bought the airplane ticket, one day ago; and find a place to sleep at the same day that I arrived. We went to Wien with Uzay and Ihsan (very cool guys). We lived there lots of interesting stories.

New House



Since last friday, I live in my new home, in the city center.

I have a great view of Amiens cathedral (see the pic). But, it is quite small, and the WC and baths are common for all the people living at the same floor. So, I don't think to live here more than one month.

My Office


Hi people; here is the office where I'm working since 5 months.

It's a very cute place, 20 minutes by bus from the city center. It is in the middle of the nature there is lots of rappids :o) And also, it is near to a shop center popular in France (auchan).

I'm happy, it is a stressless place to work. I'm programming with a powerfull php framework developped by the firm. I'll give you some detail information about it next days!

10 March 2008

istanbul at high speed

Hi, Here is the second video.


istanbul at high speed from Coskun Istanbulluoglu on Vimeo.

Istanbul two times faster than usual

My last video : )

with 2 hours effort, I made this...

it is recorded 2 years ago.


Istanbul two times faster than usual from Coskun Istanbulluoglu on Vimeo.

09 March 2008

Scribd.com document sharing

A very usefull website for sharing documents.

it is also a very big resource of information

Piclens, a magic utility for Firefox

Hi people...

Piclens, is a magic utility to use to view galleries in facebook.

Try it please, you'll be glad to use it.

02 March 2008

About Turkey Candidature to EU


Original Presentation

Turkeys Trade with EU: (2005)
-Exports to the EU: 52.4%
-Imports from the EU: 42.2%




Why Turkey Wishes to Join EU?

Political:
-More stability in the democracy
-Freedom of movement,
-“Role model” for the Middle-East and more influence
-More defence and safety power
-Improve international policy efficiency

Economic :
-Improve efficiency and make Turkish firms more competitive
-More attractive for FDI, agricultural sector reforms
-Adhere to EU quality of consumer goods

Social:
-Possibility to improve the Turkish social model
-Improve living standards and education
-Reducing the regional differences and the “Gini factor”

The Advantages for the EU
Political:
-Influence growth in the Turkish neighbor countries
-Strategically good location (ex. Aegean See)
-Turkey got important energy resources (hydrocarbon)
-Turkey is the only state which can gain the trust of Israel and Palestine
-Islamic state

Economical:
-Biggest population growth rate, dynamical growth market
-FDI, new infrastructure, growth economical power for EU
-65 million new customers more competition
-Important location for energy and transport networks with the east

Social:
-New big market new employment
-The young Turkish population changes the demographic structure
-Only if Turkey fulfills the standards in social and ecological politics

RISKS:
-Biggest population => most important role in Council of ministers and in the Parliament
-Economical deployment and agreement process goes slower
-Turkey will need every year €27 billion; no backflow because already in the Customs Union
-Turkey is culturally different, it is impossible to implement the European value system
-Danger for migration waves
-Surrounded by crisis regions

RESUME

-Different cultures and history
-Would become very influential in the EU.
-Strategically and economically important
-Access to the Islamic world

About Armenian-Turkish issues at 1915

Here is a very good text.

Read it to be informed about the problem.

Find the reference list from here

----

The Armenian Genocide Accusation


The Ottoman Turks are accused of planning and executing a scheme to exterminate its Armenian population in Eastern Anatolia beginning on or about April 24, 1915 by relocating them hundreds of miles to the Southwest and away from the Russian war front and massacring those who resisted. The mass relocation (often mischaracterized as "deportation") exposed the Armenians to mass killings by marauding Kurds and other Muslims and deaths from malnutrition, starvation, and disease. After World War I concluded, the Ottoman Turks are said to have continued their Armenian genocide during the Turkish War of Independence concluded in 1922.

The number of alleged Armenian casualties began at approximately 600,000, but soon inflated to 2 million. The entire pre-war Armenian population in Eastern Anatolia is best estimated at 1.3 to 1.5 million.

A. Was there an intent to exterminate Ottoman Armenians in whole or in part?

The evidence seems exceptionally thin. The Government's relocation decree was a wartime measure inspired by national self-preservation, neither aimed at Armenians generally (those outside sensitive war territory were left undisturbed) nor with the goal of death by relocation hardships and hazards. The Ottoman government issued unambiguous orders to protect and feed Armenians during their relocation ordeal, but were unable because of war emergencies on three fronts and war shortages affecting the entire population to insure their proper execution. The key decree provided:

"When those of Armenians resident in the aforementioned towns and villages who have to be moved are transferred to their places of settlement and are on the road, their comfort must be assured and their lives and property protected; after their arrival their food should be paid for out of Refugees' Appropriations until they are definitively settled in their new homes. Property and land should be distributed to them in accordance with their previous financial situation as well as current needs; and for those among them needing further help, the government should build houses, provide cultivators and artisans with seed, tools, and equipment."

"This order is entirely intended against the extension of the Armenian Revolutionary Committees; therefore do not execute it in such a manner that might cause the mutual massacre of Muslims and Armenians."

(Do you believe that anything comparable has been issued by Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to his troops in Kosovo?)

The Ottoman government prosecuted more than one thousand soldiers and civilians for disobedience. Further, approximately 200,000 Ottoman Armenians who were relocated to Syria lived without menace through the remainder of the war.

Relocation of populations suspected of disloyalty was a customary war measure both at the time of World War I and through at least World War II. Czarist Russia had employed it against Crimean Tatars and other ethnic Turks even in peacetime and without evidence of treasonous plotting. The United States relocated 120,000 citizens and resident aliens of Japanese ancestry during the Second World War despite the glaring absence of sabotage or anti-patriotic sentiments or designs. Indeed, the Congress of the United States acknowledged the injustice in the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 which awarded the victims or their survivors $20,000 each.

In sum, the mass wartime relocation of Ottoman Armenians from the Eastern front was no pretext for genocide. That conclusion is fortified by the mountains of evidence showing that an alarming percentage of Armenians were treasonous and allied with the Triple Entente, especially Russia. Tens of thousands defected from the Ottoman army or evaded conscription to serve with Russia. Countless more remained in Eastern Anatolia to conduct sabotage behind Ottoman lines and to massacre Turks, including civilians. Their leaders openly called for revolt, and boasted at post-World War I peace conferences that Ottoman Armenians had fought shoulder-to-shoulder with the victorious powers. Exemplary was a proclamation issued by an Armenian representative in the Ottoman parliament for Van, Papazyan. He trumpeted: "The volunteer Armenian regiments in the Caucasus should prepare themselves for battle, serve as advance units for the Russian armies to help them capture the key positions in the districts where the Armenians live, and advance into Anatolia, joining the Armenian units already there."

The Big Five victors -Great Britain, France, the United States, Italy, and Japan acknowledged the enormous wartime service of Ottoman Armenians, and Armenia was recognized as a victor nation at the Paris Peace Conference and sister conclaves charring the post-war map. Armenians were rewarded for their treason against the Ottoman Empire in the short-lived Treaty of Sevres of 1920 (soon superceded by the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne). It created an independent Armenian state carved from large swaths of Ottoman territory although they were a distinct population minority and had always been so throughout the centuries of Ottoman rule. The Treaty thus turned President Woodrow Wilson's self-determination gospel in his Fourteen Points on its head.

The Ottoman government thus had overwhelming evidence to suspect the loyalty of its Armenian population. And its relocation orders responded to a dire, not a contrived, war emergency. It was fighting on three fronts. The capital, Istanbul, was threatened by the Gallipoli campaign. Russia was occupying portions of Eastern Anatolia, encouraging Armenian defections, and aiding Armenian sabotage. In sum, the mass relocation of Armenians was clearly an imperative war measure; it did not pivot on imaginary dangers contrived by Ottoman rulers to exterminate Armenians.

The genocide allegation is further discredited by Great Britain's unavailing attempt to prove Ottoman officials of war crimes. It occupied Ottoman territory, including Istanbul, under the 1918 Mudros Armistice. Under section 230 of the Treaty of Sevres, Ottoman officials were subject to prosecution for war crimes like genocide. Great Britain had access to Ottoman archives, but found no evidence of Armenian genocide. Scores of Ottoman Turks were detained on Malta, nonetheless, under suspicion of complicity in Armenian massacres or worse. But all were released in 1922 for want of evidence. The British spent endless months searching hither and yon for evidence of international criminality- even enlisting the assistance of the United State yet came up with nothing that could withstand the test of truth. Rumor, hearsay, and polemics from anti-Turk sources was the most that could be assembled, none of which would be admissible in any fair-minded enterprise to discover facts and to assign legal responsibility.

None of this is to deny that approximately 600,000 Ottoman Armenians perished during World War I and its aftermath. But Muslims died in even greater numbers (approximately 2.5 million in Eastern Anatolia) from Armenian and Russian massacres and wartime privations as severe as that experienced by relocated Armenians. When Armenians held the opportunity, they massacred Turks without mercy, as in Van, Erzurum, and Adana. The war ignited a cycle of violence between both groups, one fighting for revolutionary objectives and the other to retain their homeland intact. Both were spurred to implacability by the gruesome experience that the loser could expect no clemency.

The horrifying scale of the violence and retaliatory violence, however, were acts of private individuals or official wrongdoers. The Ottoman government discouraged and punished the crimes within the limits of its shrinking capacity. Fighting for its life on three fronts, it devoted the lion's share of its resources and manpower to staving off death, not to local law enforcement.

The emptiness of the Armenian genocide case is further demonstrated by the resort of proponents to reliance on incontestable falsehoods or forged documents. The Talat Pasha fabrications are emblematic.

According to Armenians, he sent telegrams expounding an Ottoman policy to massacre its Armenian population that were discovered by British forces commanded by General Allenby when they captured Aleppo in 1918. Samples were published in Paris in 1920 by an Armenian author, Aram Andonian. They were also introduced at the Berlin trial of the assassin of Talat Pasha, and then accepted as authentic.

The British Foreign Office then conducted an official investigation that showed that the telegrams had not been discovered by the army but had been produced by an Armenian group based in Paris. A meticulous examination of the documents revealed glaring discrepancies with the customary form, script, and phraseology of Ottoman administrative decrees, and pronounced as bogus as the Protocols of the Elders of Zion and the Donation of Constantine.

Ditto for a quote attributed to Adolph Hitler calculated to liken the Armenians in World War I to the Holocaust victims and to arouse anger towards the Republic of Turkey. Purportedly delivered on August 22, 1939, while the Nazi invasion of Poland impended, Hitler allegedly declared: "Thus for the time being I have sent to the East only my Death Head units, with the order to kill without mercy all men, women, and children of the Polish race or language. Who still talks nowadays of the extermination of the Armenians."

Armenian genocide exponents point to the statement as evidence that it served as the model for Hitler's sister plan to exterminate Poles, Jews, and others. Twenty-two Members of Congress on or about April 24, 1984 in the Congressional Record enlisted Hitler's hideous reference to Armenian extermination as justification for supporting Armenian Martyrs' Day remembrances. As Princeton Professor Heath W. Lowry elaborates in a booklet, "The U.S. Congress and Adolph Hitler on the Armenians," it seems virtually certain that the statement was never made. The Nuremburg tribunal refused to accept it as evidence because of flimsy proof of authenticity.

The gospel for many Armenian genocide enthusiasts is Ambassador Henry Morgenthau's 1918 book, Ambassador's Morgenthau's Story. It brims with assertions that incriminate the Ottoman Turks in genocide. Professor Lowry, however, convincingly demonstrates in his monograph, "The Story Behind Ambassador Morgenthau's Story," that his book is more propaganda, invention, exaggeration, and hyperbole than a reliable portrait of motivations and events.

According to some Armenian circles, celebrated founder of the Republic of Turkey, Atatürk, confessed "Ottoman state responsibility for the Armenian genocide." That attribution is flatly false, as proven in an extended essay, "A 'Statement' Wrongly Attributed to Mustafa Kemal Atatürk," by Türkkaya Ataöv.

Why would Armenian genocide theorists repeatedly uncurtain demonstrative falsehoods as evidence if the truth would prove their case? Does proof of the Holocaust rest on such imaginary inventiveness? A long array of individuals have been found guilty of participation in Hitler's genocide in courts of law hedged by rules to insure the reliability of verdicts. Adolph Eichmann's trial and conviction in an Israeli court and the Nuremburg trials before an international body of jurists are illustrative. Not a single Ottoman Turk, in contrast, has every been found guilty of Armenian genocide or its equivalent in a genuine court of law, although the victorious powers in World War I enjoyed both the incentive and opportunity to do so if incriminating evidence existed.

The United Nations Economic and Social Council Sub-Commission on the Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities examined the truthfulness of an Armenian genocide charge leveled by Special Rapporteur, Mr. Benjamin Whitaker, in his submission, "Study of Genocide," during its thirty-eighth session at the U.N. Office in Geneva from August 5-30, 1985. The Sub-Commission after meticulous debate refused to endorse the indictment for lack of convincing evidence, as amplified by attendee and Professor Dr. Ataöv of Ankara University in his publication, "WHAT REALLY HAPPENED IN GENEVA: The Truth About the 'Whitaker Report'."

B. If the evidence is so demonstratively faulty, what explains a widespread credence given to the Armenian genocide allegation in the United States?

As Napoleon once derisively observed, history is a fable mutually agreed upon. It is not Euclidean geometry. Some bias invariably is smuggled in by the most objective historians; others view history as a manipulable weapon either to fight an adversary, or to gain a political, economic, or sister material advantage, or to satisfy a psychological or emotional need.

History most resembles truth when competing versions of events do battle in the marketplace of ideas with equally talented contestants and before an impartial audience with no personal or vested interest in the outcome. That is why the adversarial system of justice in the United States is the hallmark of its legal system and a beacon to the world.

The Armenian genocide allegation for long decades was earmarked by an absence of both historical rigor and scrupulous regard for reliable evidence and truth. The Ottoman Empire generally received bad reviews in the West for centuries, in part because of its predominant Muslim creed and military conquests in Europe. It was a declared enemy of Britain, France, and Russia during World War I, and a de facto enemy of the United States. Thus, when the Armenian genocide allegation initially surfaced, the West was predisposed towards acceptance that would reinforce their stereotypical and pejorative view of Turks that had been inculcated for centuries. The reliability of obviously biased sources was generally ignored. Further, the Republic of Turkey created in 1923 was not anxious to defend its Ottoman predecessor which it had opposed for humiliating capitulations to World War I victors and its palsied government. Atatürk was seeking a new, secular, and democratic dispensation and distance from the Ottoman legacy.

Armenians in the United States were also more vocal, politically active and sophisticated, numerous, and wealthy than Turks. The Armenian lobby has skillfully and forcefully marketed the Armenian genocide allegation in the corridors of power, in the media, and in public school curricula. They had been relatively unchallenged until some opposing giants in the field of Turkish studies appeared on the scene to discredit and deflate the charge by fastidious research and a richer understanding of the circumstances of frightful Armenian World War I casualties. Professor of History at the University of Louisville, Justin McCarthy, and Princeton Professor Heath Lowry stand at the top of the list. Professor McCarthy's 1995 book, Death and Exile: The Ethnic Cleansing of Ottoman Muslims, 1821-1922, is a landmark. Turkish Americans have also organized to present facts and views about the Armenian genocide allegation and other issues central to United States-Turkish relations. But the intellectual playing field remains sharply tilted in favor of the Armenians. Since public officials with no foreign policy responsibilities confront no electoral or other penalty for echoing the Armenian story, they generally acquiesce to gain or to solidify their standing among them.

The consequence has been not only bad and biased history unbecoming an evenhanded search for truth, but a gratuitous irritant in the relations between Turkey and the United States. The former was a steadfast ally throughout the Cold War, and Turkey remains a cornerstone of NATO and Middle East peace. It is also a strong barrier against religious fundamentalism, and an unflagging partner in fighting international terrorism and drug trafficking. Turkey is also geostrategically indispensable to exporting oil and gas from Central Asia to the West through pipelines without reliance on the Russian Federation, Iran, Afghanistan or other dicey economic partners.

Finally, endorsing the false Armenian genocide indictment may embolden Armenian terrorist organizations (for example, the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia) to kill and mutilate Turks, as they did a few decades ago in assassinating scores of Turkish diplomats and bombing buildings both in the United States and elsewhere. They have been relatively dormant in recent years, but to risk a resurgence from intoxication with a fortified Armenian genocide brew would be reckless.


III. Conclusion


The Armenian genocide accusation fails for want of proof. It attempts to paint the deaths and privations of World War I in prime colors, when the authentic article is chiaroscuro. Both Muslims and Armenians suffered horribly and neither displayed a morality superior to the other. Continuing to hurl the incendiary charge of genocide on the Turkish doorstep obstructs the quest for amity between Armenia and the Republic of Turkey and warmer relations between Armenians and Turks generally.

Isn't it time to let the genocide allegation fade away and to join hands in commemorating the losses of both communities during World War I and its aftermath?

Letter from Mr. E. Vartanian, an Armenian-American Volunteer in the Russian Service, to His Brother-in-law in Egypt; Dated 9th /22nd July,1915, and Published in the Armenian Journal "Houssaper," of Cairo.

" We have been here three days. Some of us are going to be sent to Erivan; the rest of us are starting in two days for Van.

The enthusiasm here is very great. There are already 20,000 volunteers at the front, and they are trying to increase the number to 30,000. Each district we occupy is placed under Armenian administration, and an Armenian post is running from Igdir to Van. The Russian Government is showing great goodwill towards the Armenians and doing everything in its power for the liberation of Turkish Armenia.

When we disembarked at Archangel the Government gave us every possible assistance. It even undertook the transport of our baggage, and gave us free passes, second class, to Petrograd.

At Petrograd we received an equally hearty welcome, and the Governor of the city presented each of us with a medal in token of his sympathy. The Armenian colony put us up in the best hotels, entertained us at the best restaurants, and could not make enough of us. This lasted for five days, and then we continued our journey, again at the Government's expense, to Tiflis.

Everywhere on the way the population received us with cheers and offerings of flowers. Just as we were leaving Archa gel, a young Russian lady came with flowers and offered one to eaeh of us. I also saw a quite poor man who was so moved by the speech in Russian that one of our comrades had made, that he came and put his tobacco into the pipe of a comrade standing next to me, and kept nothing for himself but a bare half-pipeful. A third, an old man, was so moved by the speech that he began to cry and nearly made off, but a little while after I saw him standing in front of the carriage window and, with a shaking hand, holding out a hard-boiled egg to our comrade the chemist Roupen Stepanian. Probably it was his one meal for the day.

And so at every step we found ourselves in the midst of affecting scenes. At Petrograd Railway Station the crowd was enormous. There was an Armenian lady there who offered each of us a rose. There were boys and young men who wept because they could not come with us. At Rostov a young Russian joined our ranks. He was caught more than once by his parents at the stations further down the line, but he always succeeded in escaping them and reioining us. We have christened him Stepan.

When we arrived at Tiflis, we marched singing to the offices of the Central Armenian Bureau, with our flag unfurled in front of us, and the people marched on either side of us in such a crowd that the trams were forced to stop running.

That is enough for to-day. My next letter shall be written from Armenia itself..

Please say nothing to my sister about this resolution that I have taken. I hope, of course, that she would know how to sacrifice her affection for her brother to her love for the nation and for liberty.. I should curse any of my relations who lament my resolution; they would have committed treason against the nation. There are five of us brothers; was it not imperative that at least one of us should devote himself to the cause of a national emancipation ? Let us keep up our courage, realise the urgency of the moment and do our duty. "


26 February 2008

Istanbuls people

people from Istanbul tell about their city and situation in Turkey.



Oh, Istanbul from Maria on Vimeo.

What I miss from Istanbul

Bosphore boats : Vapur


Untitled from CIPURA on Vimeo.

16 February 2008

Armenian Problem


Middle East Map

The 325-kilometer-long Turkish-Armenian border is closed in April 1993 in response to Armenia's ambivalence over the recognition of its common border with Turkey and Armenian aggression directed toward Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

This situation is harming the economies of both countries; Turkey and Armenia. The trade to Armenia from Turkey is made by using border of Iran. In addition, the oil pipeline between Azerbaidjan (Baku-Ceyhan) passing trough Georgia instead of Armenia which was a shortcut.

I think unless Armenia continues to his statu quo politics; there will be no solution for this case. (Armenia wants to change the borders and wants compensation because of the things happened in 1st world war)

I will write a more detailled article about this problem...

Independence for Kosovo

Kosovo war which happened in 1389 between Serbs-Christian allies and Ottomans, has very important results. (the second one in 1448 )


Now, US and EU are deciding about the independence of Kosovo.
We will see what it will bring to Balkans, more war or peace.

I wish, a world without borders could be possible...This can be a solution ;)

Here is the geographical location of Kosovo

Remember Srebrenica

Srebrenica, Bosnia, the world's first United Nations Safe Area, was the site of the worst case of genocide in Europe since World War II. In July 1995, the Bosnian Serb army staged a brutal takeover of the small, intimate spa town and its surrounding region. Over a period of five days, the Bosnian Serb soldiers separated Muslim families and systematically murdered over 7,000 men and boys in fields, schools, and warehouses.

Holland army who was responsible to protect the area, only watched (and also helped) the serbs.

There is no word to tell, unfortunately. I hope justice and peace for all.

REMEMBER SREBRENICA

video1

video2

Some Facts from November 2003 Istanbul


5 years ago, on 15 and 20 November in Istanbul after suicidal attacks 62 people died , 718 people injured. The first target was two sinagogs. After five days, the next was the english consulate and Hsbc central office in Levent which are situated in cultural and economical center of Istanbul.





2600 kilogram of explosif are used (one third of explosifs exploded)for this attacks regarding to reports.

here is a video of explosion.

15 February 2008

Iraq war

Here is some interesting statistics about US service members who died in Iraq.

For example, this page is showing the soldiers categorized by their homestate


For the people interested about Iraq facts, please look at this timeline to understand better the history of Iraq.

12 February 2008

3D Pictures of Istanbul and more


Here is a very interesting site!!

You too can visit these unique places: Just download and run the programs in the site. Once inside the program, move the mouse to the direction you want to look at. You can use the scroll wheel to zoom in and out. If there is no intervention for five seconds, the program will start showing you around automatically.

Press F9 to get a list of the 3D sites you downloaded (residing in the same directory) and load the one you like by moving the selection with the direction keys and pressing Enter. Click the left mouse button to jump to the closest (visible) site.

04 February 2008

Contact Me

if you have any questions regarding me, you can contact me by calling
or e-mailing ne and I'll get back to you as soon as possible. Thanks!


coskunist (at) gmail.com

FAQ | Frequently Asked Questions

Q:Where and when did you born?

A: 1983 , Erzurum

Q:Do you have brothers and sisters?

A: I have two big brothers

Q:Where do you live?

A: In Istanbul.

Q:What are you doing in your life?

A: Actually, I am a master student in Picardie University, at Information Management. I also work in a software office, as a programmer.I graduated from Galatasaray University, Computer Engineering.

I like to spend time with my computer, with my friends like all people. I try to not watch much television these days, I only try to be selective (movies, documentaries, concerts...). I am a supporter and a member of Galatasaray Football Club, so I'm very interested about soccer. Furhermore, I am a member of the Galatasaray Scuba Club. In addition, I like cycling, walking, excursions, trekking etc...

Q:What kind of music you listen?

A: I listen all kind of music. My favourite bands are the followings:
Gogol Bordello, Tea Party, Led Zeppelin, Ben Harper, Yann Tiersen,Louise Attaque, Jamiroquai, Buena Vista Social Club, Manu Chao, Bob Marley, Cake, Björk, Moloko, Norah Jones, Manic Street Preachers, Smashing Pumpkins, Dead Can Dance,Burhan Ocal, Asik Veysel, Yansimalar and many more...

Q:What are your favourite movies?

A:Hard Question.. Some of them are the followings...
Good Bye Lenin, Dancer in The Dark, Back to the Future I II III, The Ring, Fight Club, Matrix I, American History X, Donnie Darko, American Beauty, Peuple Migrateur, Equilibrium, Forrest Gump, Memento, Lord of the Rings I II III, Avare (an indian movie), L.A. Confidential, Snatch, Lock Stock&Two Smoking Barrels,English Patient, Willow, Truman Show, Le Fabuleux Destin D'Amelie Poulain, As good as it gets, Neredesin Firuze...
cidade de deus- city of god
(favourite actors Jack Nicholson, Brad Pitt, Edward Norton)
(favourite actress scarlett johansson, natalie portman )