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ANKARA: EU Fully Supports Gul's Yerevan Visit

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  • ANKARA: EU Fully Supports Gul's Yerevan Visit

    EU FULLY SUPPORTS GUL'S YEREVAN VISIT

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 14 2008
    Turkey

    The topic of the cultural footprint left behind by Armenians on
    Anatolian soil was discussed yesterday at a conference on the Armenian
    legacy in Turkey, organized at the European Parliament.

    President Abdullah Gul's recent visit to Yerevan was described as a
    "turning point"at the conference -- during which it was noted that
    the Erzurum Congress, one of the two congresses that founded the
    Turkish Republic, was held in a building constructed by Armenian
    architects. The conference also sparked a negative reaction from
    Turkish-Armenians.

    Hosted by European Parliament French Liberal parliamentarian Bernard
    Lehideux and organized by the Armenian General Benevolent Union
    (AGBU), the conference, titled "A Journal of Cultural Rediscovery:
    Armenian Heritage in Turkey," was held at the European Parliament
    building. AGBU Brussels representative Nicholas Tatvian gave the
    opening speech, and the European Commission, emphasized that Gul's
    trip was "a turning point."

    European Commission Director-General for Enlargement Michael Leigh and
    the EU-Turkey Joint Parliamentary Committee Co-chair Joost Lagendijk
    were previously announced as participants at the conference, but
    they did not attend. Representing the commission was Jean-Christophe
    Filori, the head of the Turkey desk, who commented on Gul's visit,
    describing him as "a courageous man that the European Union supports
    wholeheartedly."

    Fethiye Cetin, the writer of the bestselling book "My Grandmother,"
    said the modern Turkish state was based on denying its past and
    cutting its ties with this past, after a very painful period of
    transition to a nation-state from a multicultural, multi-religious
    and multi-national empire.

    Cetin said Turkey was imposing a permanent ban on "remembering
    things." She also said discussions on 1915 incidents were simplified
    to mere figures, numbers, documents and discussions on the meanings
    of words, with complete disregard to the real human tragedy and pain
    caused by the incidents.

    Reaction from Turkish-Armenians

    Meanwhile, Turkish-Armenians have reacted to the lack of
    Turkish-Armenian speakers at the Brussels conference Verkin Kasapoglu
    said such conferences were being used politically, noting that not
    a single Turkish-Armenian had been invited to participate.

    Kasapoglu, a member of the Foundation to Protect Historical Legacy,
    said the Armenian diaspora did not even support funding the restoration
    of Armenian historical monuments and buildings in Turkey, out of
    fear that Turkey would benefit from such restoration projects. "I
    really doubt the sincerity of such conferences. My dad bought a
    house in Paris in 1946. Then they confiscated it because my dad was
    a foreigner. These things happen every where in the world," he said.
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