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Turkey: Slaughter Of Three Martyrs In Malatya Mourned

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  • Turkey: Slaughter Of Three Martyrs In Malatya Mourned

    TURKEY: SLAUGHTER OF THREE MARTYRS IN MALATYA MOURNED

    Compass Direct News, CA
    April 24 2008

    Christian families, communities commemorate slain Christian workers.

    ISTANBUL, April 24 (Compass Direct News) - A year after the brutal
    martyrdom of three Christians for their faith in Malatya, Turkey's
    tiny Christian community gathered quietly this past week to honor
    their memories and pray for their sorrowing families.

    Turks Necati Aydin and Ugur Yuksel and German Tilmann Geske were tied
    up, taunted for their faith in Christ, tortured and then slaughtered
    with knives in Turkey's southeastern city of Malatya on April 18, 2007.

    Murdered in the local Zirve Publishing office by five young Turkish
    Muslims who claimed to be defending Turkey and Islam from Christian
    missionaries, the three men left behind two widows, five fatherless
    children and a grieving fiancée.

    Their memorials began mid-morning last Friday (April 18), in a small
    village cemetery in eastern Turkey.

    There a freshly installed tombstone marks the grave of Yuksel, buried
    at the edge of Elazig's Son village. He was 32 when he was slain.

    "He was killed like Jesus," reads the lettering at the foot of the
    gravestone. On either side of the monument are the words from one
    of Yuksel's favorite Psalms, "Whom have I in heaven but You? And I
    desire nothing on earth but being with You."

    Twenty of Yuksel's Christian friends came for the short ceremony of
    hymns, prayer and Scripture reading led by Diyarbakir pastor Ahmet
    Guvener.

    Comforting mourners at Yuksel's gravesite Yuksel's elderly parents
    also attended the service, screaming when news photographers and a
    filming crew from Dogan News Agency videotaped the entire ceremony -
    they had felt disgraced in the eyes of the local Muslim community when
    their son became a Christian, and the prospect of their presence at his
    Christian funeral being made public threatened even more loss of face.

    A second graveyard service took place several hours later, 60 miles
    away in Malatya's rarely used Armenian Christian cemetery.

    There German widow Susanne Geske and her three children, Michel, Lukas
    and Miriam, joined 35 others to commemorate the life of Tilmann Geske,
    murdered at age 46.

    Pastor Ihsan Ozbek of Ankara's Kurtulus Churches led the service,
    which one participant told Compass was filled with songs of praise
    and "a powerful celebration" demonstrating that followers of Christ
    "do not weep like those with no hope."

    Local gendarme delayed both ceremonies for nearly a half hour by
    stopping vehicles going to and coming from Son village. Christians
    were certain that the ostensible purpose of providing security was
    only an excuse to harass them. After examining the identity papers
    of all Christians attending Yuksel's service, soldiers allowed the
    mourners to drive on.

    "This was not a routine check, because we were travelling on a tiny
    side road into the village," complained one of the Christians who
    attended both graveside services. "It was disgraceful, nothing less,
    to treat people like this who were just going to commemorate the
    dead. They just wanted to find out who had come to Ugur's service."

    That same day, Christian-owned Zirve Publishing Co. published a
    traditional black-bordered death anniversary notice in the daily
    Sabah newspaper.

    "We remember with love and longing the ones mercilessly taken from
    us a year ago,"

    the notice declared, displaying in large bold print the names of the
    three martyrs.

    Aydin and Yuksel were both former Muslims who converted to
    Christianity. Geske was a German citizen who had lived in Turkey with
    his family for nearly 10 years.

    "In the hope of our faith, we will be together with you again beside
    our Heavenly Father," the ad concluded. "We have not forgotten you."

    Praying for widows, children in Istanbul Overflow Crowd in Istanbul

    On Sunday (April 20), a nationwide memorial service in Istanbul drew
    more than 900 Christians from across Turkey to pay honor to the lives
    and savage deaths of the three Christians. The crowd overflowed the
    spacious sanctuary, spilling out into the courtyard and ringing the
    balcony corridor with onlookers.

    Semse Aydin and Suzanne Geske sat side-by-side in the front pew of
    Istanbul's St. Esprit Catholic Cathedral during the 90-minute service,
    accompanied by their five children.

    They were flanked by clerics representing the local Orthodox and
    Catholic communities, foreign diplomats and several of the lawyers
    representing them in the murder trial against the five arrested
    suspects.

    Seated just behind them, Armenian Christian widow Rakel Dink had
    come to pay her respects to the memory of the Malatya victims and
    meet their families. Her high-profile journalist husband, Hrant Dink,
    was murdered in Istanbul three months before the Malatya slaughter.

    Both widows addressed the gathering briefly, sharing the difficulties
    they had faced over the loss of their husbands, along with the courage
    and hope they had found through God's promises and fellow Christians.

    "Every day without Necati this past year has been a bitter cup for
    me to drink," Aydin said. "I am sure it has been the same for Suzanne
    and for Ugur's fiancée."

    Geske quoted the Turkish words she had requested on her husband's
    tombstone: "He came to serve the people of Malatya, but unfortunately,
    the people he came to serve killed him."

    Tears trickled down the cheeks of 6-year-old Esther Aydin and
    9-year-old Miriam Geske as a 15-minute collage of photographs of
    their fathers and "Uncle Ugur" flashed up on an overhead screen,
    combined with recordings of the martyred men singing and speaking
    words of testimony.

    Turkish Officials Absent

    The absence of invited Turkish government officials and local media
    was conspicuous. According to the organizing committee for the
    memorial sponsored by the Alliance of Turkish Protestant Churches,
    both government officials and the Turkish press had been sent formal
    invitations.

    With the exception of Cumhuriyet newspaper and the English-language
    Turkish Daily News, Turkish media made no mention of the Malatya
    murders memorial ceremony in Istanbul.

    But in the closing address of the afternoon, the chairman of
    the Alliance of Turkish Protestant Churches tackled head-on the
    significance of "this merciless massacre" for Turkey.

    Declaring that individuals as well as society make deliberate choices,
    Izmir pastor Zekai Tanyar begged leaders governing Turkey to "awaken
    to the realities" taught in Christian Scriptures.

    "Those who sow death cannot reap life. Those who sow evil cannot reap
    goodness. Those who sow curses cannot receive blessing," he stressed.

    "I knew Necati, Ugur and Tilmann, and especially Necati very well,"
    Tanyar said. "I laugh bitterly to hear the unscrupulous lies told
    about them. The only crime my three brothers committed was believing
    in God, following Jesus and telling people about God's message of
    love and hope for them."

    Tanyar spoke against the common mindset that to be Turkish is to
    be Muslim.

    "Give permission for my faith, and let the Creator be the
    judge!" Tanyar pled. "My heart loves my country and my Lord, and no
    slander, anti-propaganda, pressure or politicians can change that!"

    Turkish Protestants have listed 19 incidents of violence perpetrated
    against their community of fewer than 4,000 during the past year.

    At the close, dozens of participants filed down the side aisles of
    the church to lay long-stemmed red roses and flickering vigil candles
    before the cathedral altar.

    A special edition of the Turkish Christian magazine Gercege Dogru
    (Toward the Truth) dedicated to the Malatya martyrs was distributed to
    attendees out in the cathedral courtyard, along with a newly published
    book of Necati Aydin's poetry entitled My Name is Written in Heaven.

    A third graveside service will be observed by Turkish widow Semse Aydin
    and her children Elisha and Esther next week in the Aegean coastal
    city of Izmir, where Necati Aydin was buried just weeks before his
    36th birthday.

    END

    *** Photographs of the first three Christian memorial services for
    the Malatya martyrs are available electronically. Contact Compass
    Direct News for pricing and transmittal.

    --Boundary_(ID_zB5BFVdloRn2Tj/7hfB6N Q)--
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