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  • Rakel Dink in Boston

    AZG Armenian Daily #020, 07/02/2009

    Diaspora; Armenians in Turkey

    "I DID NOT WANT TO UNCOVER THE BLANKET OVER MY FATHER'S ASSASSINATED
    BODY IN ORDER NOT TO REKINDLE MY EMOTIONS OF REVENGE"

    Invited by newly formed nonprofit and human rights advocate
    organization "Friends of Hrant Dink, Inc." Mrs. Rakel Dink, the widow
    of assassinated journalist Hrant Dink was in Boston to participate in
    the panel discussion at MIT.

    The Armenian International Women's Association that invited Mrs. Dink
    last year to its international conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina,
    used this opportunity and organized a conference at Armenian Cultural
    Foundation in Arlington on Saturday, January 31.

    Rakel Dink presented her life. She was born in a village near Syrian
    and Iranian borders. Her family members lived together and spoke only
    Kurdish. In 1988, when the earthquake happened in Armenia, her father
    gathered all the village members and collected money to send to
    Armenia and then recommended to all of them by saying, "Now take your
    wives and go to your houses and try to have more babies in order to
    make up for the loss of the earthquake".

    When she moved to Istanbul as a student at a boarding school to learn
    Turkish and Armenian, there she met Hrant.

    She said she was always in audience when Hrant used to give speeches,
    and now after his assassination, she has taken the podium to continue
    her husband's work.

    She and her children are continuing the humanitarian work of Hrant
    Dink and the conversation that he started with the people of Turkey by
    establishing the International Hrant Dink Foundation. Three days after
    the assassination, when all the family was seated sadly at home, one
    of her daughters said, " I am feeling 1915 recurring". To that, Rakel
    comforted her by saying not to compare with that tragedy because at
    that time millions were perished and now they have lost only one
    person, however precious to them.

    Then she said his son once wrote, "I did not want to uncover the
    blanket over my father's assassinated body in order not to rekindle my
    emotions of revenge".

    "My second daughter said during the funeral, `Please stop the
    bleeding, stop the pain, and stop the hate'".

    Mrs. Dink continued by saying that her husband's death, as painful as
    it was, brought a strong message to all people of Turkey, people
    started to talk about events, which were never presented to the public
    before.

    "People that I have never heard of even said that if Hrant Dink would
    have known that his death would bring more then 100,000 people to the
    streets of Istanbul chanting `we are all Armenians', he would have
    wished to be assassinated earlier".

    Rakel Dink will continue Hrant Dink's Humanitarian efforts in Turkey,
    she devotes herself to teaching of the Armenian history and culture
    and in 2010, she will organize an event in Europe to focus on
    tolerance and discrimination.

    Two Years Later, Scholars Reflect on Legacy of Slain Journalist

    By Thomas C. Nash, Mirror-Spectator Staff

    With the second anniversary of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink's murder renewing attention across the world about his struggle
    for reconciliation of the two sides of his identity, Turkish and
    Armenian, his widow and colleagues are continuing their plea for Turks
    and Armenians to take up the cause.

    "In the moment of his death, he was alone," said Armenian Weekly
    editor Khatchig Mouradian, who served as the moderator for a
    discussion panel on Dink's legacy held Sunday at MIT's Kresge
    Auditorium. "But as we observe the sacrifices and legacy of Hrant Dink
    ' and work for truth freedom and justice everywhere ' we will become
    better versions of ourselves."

    The discussion was organized by Friends of Hrant Dink, a newly-created
    Cambridge-based non-profit group that aims to promote the journalist's
    legacy.

    Dink, who founded and edited the Agos weekly since 1996 before his
    murder in January 2007, was remembered by panelists from a range of
    academic and national backgrounds as both a daring journalist during
    his lifetime and a unifying figure in death.

    More than 400 people from the Boston area Armenian and Turkish
    communities attended the panel, a display of common interest that many
    speakers noted as symbolic of the appeal of Dink's message.

    "Ultimately, Hrant Dink's legacy showed us that neither Armenians nor
    Turks can claim ownership of him," Mouradian said. "He does not belong
    to Armenians alone, and he does not belong to Turks alone. He belongs
    to humanity."

    Hrant's Dream

    Harvard Medical School Lecturer Dr. Robert Jay Lifton, a long-time
    activist against genocide and totalitarianism, gave introductory
    remarks focusing on the search for meaning in the wake of genocide.

    "Survivors of the Holocaust are sometimes known as collectors of
    justice," Lifton said. "I think many Armenians can well understand
    that stance. It wasn't a call for revenge so much as a need that those
    who had perpetrated genocide be brought to some justice or at least
    acknowledgment of what they had done and the suffering they had
    caused.

    "For that cause and for that reason, the life and work of Hrant Dink
    ¦ all have great importance for Armenians and Turks, but importance
    even beyond ' for the entire flow of human history."

    Speaking in both Turkish and Armenian through a translator, Hrant's
    widow Rakel Dink spoke of the life of persecution she and Hrant
    endured as Armenians in Turkey ' and the threats that came when Hrant
    founded Agos.

    In addition to constant threats for his acknowledgment of the Genocide
    and calls for increased dialogue between Turks and Armenians, Dink
    faced prosecution under the infamous Article 301 of the Turkish Penal
    code, which forbade insulting Turkishness.

    More than 100,000 demonstrated in solidarity with Dink following his
    murder by a young Turkish nationalist.

    Rakel Dink recalled the aftermath of her husband's death, and the
    reaction of her children.

    "My daughter, she said, `Mother, I feel as if I am in 1915.' I'm a
    mother, and I'm a believer. I was going through the same pain she was
    going through," Dink said. "But I had to ask her not to compare (the
    murder) with 1915. We were living in the comfort of our home, we were
    sitting on our sofa and we had friends supporting us. In 1915, people
    did not have everything that we have today. "We do not need to give in
    to hatred," she added. "We really do not need to return to the
    murder."

    Striking on a theme running throughout the event, Dink also noted that
    the election of Barack Obama to the presidency holds symbolic meaning
    for her.

    "The dream of Martin Luther King was realized years later," she
    said. "And it is our hope that one day in Turkey all people,
    regardless of their ethnic backgrounds, will enjoy equal rights,
    justice and freedom. This is Hrant's dream."

    Facing History

    Speaking in his new role as a senior manager for educational
    non-profit Facing History and Ourselves, former Anti-Defamation League
    New England Executive Director Andrew Tarsy stressed the role of the
    Boston-area Jewish community in supporting his battle with the
    national ADL over Genocide recognition.

    Tarsy left his position at the ADL in late 2007 after being fired and
    later re-hired as the organization received criticism for its lack of
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

    "I was extremely gratified at the time to know that the entire Jewish
    community of Greater Boston stood unanimously with me," he said, "and
    for those of you who didn't know that then it's important you know
    that now."

    Through Tarsy's new position, he said he has worked to ensure the
    Armenian Genocide is taught to 1.8 million students around the world.

    Oktay Ozel, a history professor at Ankara's Bilkent University working
    as a visiting scholar at Harvard, said Dink's writing inspired him to
    encourage other scholars to look more closely at the Armenian Genocide
    ' a plea, which he said, may gain traction in the wake of Dink's
    death.

    "For us historians, along with this sense of guilt, I think the bitter
    legacy of Hrant's death is that historians should do better," Ozel
    said. They will feel much better when they do (their job) with a
    little decency. Then they won't need to do anything extraordinary `
    just do their job properly. That's the job in front of historians in
    Turkey."

    Peter Balakian, an English professor at Colgate University who wrote
    the bestseller Black Dog of Fate about his quest to find the meaning
    in his ancestral roots, spoke of both the discouraging circumstances
    surrounding Dink's death and the hope that the aftermath could create
    a new relationship between the historically feuding Armenian and
    Turkish communities both at home and abroad.

    "The outpouring of commemoration around the world for Hrant Dink
    became an opening to something new. In the two years since his death
    commemorative events have created civic spaces where some gurglings of
    Armenian memory and history have erupted and certainly a dialogue
    about the absences of democracy in Turkey are taking place," Balakian
    said.

    "Armenians need to embrace that sense of complexity of a possibility
    for a shared history, certainly for a shared humanity and a deeper
    understanding. I think it's important for Turks and Armenians to
    de-ethnicize the past. The idea that this is somehow a debate between
    two cultures is a-historical."

    Following the discussion, organizers from Friends of Hrant Dink
    presented Rakel Dink with $10,000 for her efforts to continue his work
    ' which she began just after he was killed.

    "She has so much wisdom," said Armenian International Women's
    Association member Barbara Merguerian of Dink's work. "I feel that's
    there's a new breath of air."
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