Foreign Policy Blogs

Art as Politics

Source: Asbarez

Source: Asbarez

It is not often that a rug becomes caught in the crosshairs of foreign policy and cast away from artistic appreciation, yet the 1920s Armenian orphan rug that was planned for display in December at the Smithsonian Museum suffers just this fate.

Bound by the common thread of their identity as children and survivors of the Armenian genocide, Armenian orphans in a Lebanon refuge camp wove a room-sized rug as a gift presented to the White House in 1925.

Each woven thread contained a symbolic message of gratitude for American humanitarian aid in the Middle East, Greece and Armenia — assistance that came in the form of education, healthcare and relocation for the hundreds of thousands of orphaned children in a region devastated by the Turkish atrocities committed against the backdrop of World War I.

As a work of art, this Armenian rug represents an image of the Biblical Garden of Eden. It was set for display at the Smithsonian before the Obama administration’s unexplained refusal to loan the rug. Now, it fades from significance in a White House storage room.

As a work of art imbued with a political subtext, the Armenian rug represents far more than meets the eye. Many note that its public display would complicate U.S.-Turkey relations. To this day, Turkey refuses to label the atrocities committed by the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

Yet to deny the American public access to the rug is to deny the openness necessary for historical scholarship and artistic appreciation.

President Obama has made diplomatic dances around the term “genocide” far too many times for the administration to worry about the rug’s negative impact on the foreign policy agenda with Turkey.

His promise as a presidential candidate was as follows: “America deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian Genocide and responds forcefully to all genocides. I intend to be that president.”

But the courage with which Mr. Obama confronted the issue as a presidential candidate has faded. During his presidency, he omitted the term “genocide” from his public statements.

Appeasing Turkey at the cost of glossing over historical facts had been regretfully swallowed in the past. The refusal to now display artwork for the sake of foreign policy considerations is not at all what the American public deserves.

And if the White House’s refusal does not rest on an attempt to politically appease Turkey and protect its relationship, then the Obama administration would do well to offer the American public an explanation that actually consists of an explanation. Otherwise, it leaves a political can of worms open in the form of speculation unpleasant to both the government and its public.

 

Author

Ani Torossian

Ani Torossian is working toward her master's degree in political science at Columbia University, where she focuses on international relations, U.S.-Russian relations and U.S. foreign policy. Born in Yerevan and raised in Moscow, she holds a bachelor's degree in political science from the University of California, Los Angeles. She works with the editorial team at the Foreign Policy Association on Great Decisions 2014.