Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azeri church sparks political row

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Azeri church sparks political row

    Azeri church sparks political row

    Armenians say the church is part of their heritage

    BBC
    10 March 05

    The restoration of a centuries-old Christian church in predominantly
    Muslim Azerbaijan is hanging in the balance amid a row over wall
    inscriptions.

    The local Udi people, a Christian community, removed lettering they
    say was put there by Armenian Christians.

    The white-stone building in the northern mountain village of Nij
    is undergoing renovation with funding from a Norwegian charity, the
    Norwegian Humanitarian Enterprise, but the organisation is unhappy
    about the alterations.

    The Udis say they erased the inscriptions over the entrance to the
    church and next to the altar to right a historic wrong.

    Armenians, they contend, put the lettering there long after the church
    was built so they could lay claim to it.

    'Fake inscriptions'

    "If those fake inscriptions are not erased, the renovation will lose
    its importance," the head of the Udi community told Azerbaijan's
    ANS TV.

    The Udis, who number around 8,000, are keen to distance themselves
    from Azerbaijan's arch-foe, Armenia.

    I regret that they have been erased. This was a chance for Azerbaijan
    to set an example to the whole world

    Norway's ambassador Steinar Gil

    "We live in Azerbaijan, and when people came into the church and saw
    Armenian letters, they automatically associated us with Armenians,"
    one of the village elders told the AFP news agency.

    The Udis have struggled to separate their heritage from that of their
    fellow Christian Armenians, who fought a war with Azerbaijan over
    the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region in 1988-1994.

    The Armenians argue that churches with this type of inscription are
    an indication of their long roots in the region.

    'Vandalism'

    The Norwegians view the erasing of the inscriptions as "tantamount
    to vandalism", the Azeri newspaper 525 Qazet reported.

    The Norwegian ambassador to Azerbaijan, Steinar Gil, said politics
    should not play a role.

    "Any historical monument should be protected. One should take care
    of historical monuments despite political relations," he said.

    "I visited that village in November last year and saw the Armenian
    inscriptions. I regret that they have been erased... This was a chance
    for Azerbaijan to set an example to the whole world."

    And the head of the Norwegian Humanitarian Office in Azerbaijan,
    Alf Henry Rasmussen, told the BBC that the organisation was now
    reconsidering the whole restoration project.
Working...
X