ARTO TUNCBOYACIYAN TO SHARE STAGE WITH TURKISH MUSICIANS IN ISTANBUL
/PanARMENIAN.Net/
26.06.2009 00:53 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ A Turkish music band will share the same stage
with Armenian and Palestinian musicians in the following week, one
of soloists of the band said.
Turkish "Kardes Turkuler" (Bogazici Performing Arts Ensemble) will
perform together with Armenian musician Arto Tuncboyaciyan and
Palestinian musician Reem Kelani at Istanbul's Turkcell Kurucesme
Arena on June 30, soloist Fehmiye Celik told a press conference,
Anadolu Agency reports.
"We are expressing our demands that nations should live equally on
these soils with these shows," Celik also said.
Celik said the Middle East needed urgent peace, and defined both Arab
enmity and Anti-Semitism as bad.
"Therefore, we will altogether voice Arab and Jewish songs,"
Celik said.
Also, Tuncboyaciyan said that races and religions were the spices
of life.
"What is important is humanity. As an Armenian, I have no hatred
against Turks," Tuncboyaciyan said.
Kardes Turkuler came into being in 1993, as a concert project by
the Bogazici University Folklore Club. The concert, which aimed to
interpret Anatolian folksongs based on their own cultural structure
and in their original languages, was comprised of different sections:
Turkish, Kurdish and Armenian.
/PanARMENIAN.Net/
26.06.2009 00:53 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ A Turkish music band will share the same stage
with Armenian and Palestinian musicians in the following week, one
of soloists of the band said.
Turkish "Kardes Turkuler" (Bogazici Performing Arts Ensemble) will
perform together with Armenian musician Arto Tuncboyaciyan and
Palestinian musician Reem Kelani at Istanbul's Turkcell Kurucesme
Arena on June 30, soloist Fehmiye Celik told a press conference,
Anadolu Agency reports.
"We are expressing our demands that nations should live equally on
these soils with these shows," Celik also said.
Celik said the Middle East needed urgent peace, and defined both Arab
enmity and Anti-Semitism as bad.
"Therefore, we will altogether voice Arab and Jewish songs,"
Celik said.
Also, Tuncboyaciyan said that races and religions were the spices
of life.
"What is important is humanity. As an Armenian, I have no hatred
against Turks," Tuncboyaciyan said.
Kardes Turkuler came into being in 1993, as a concert project by
the Bogazici University Folklore Club. The concert, which aimed to
interpret Anatolian folksongs based on their own cultural structure
and in their original languages, was comprised of different sections:
Turkish, Kurdish and Armenian.