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Ankara: The Wooden Bridge Connecting The Two Sides Of The River

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  • Ankara: The Wooden Bridge Connecting The Two Sides Of The River

    THE WOODEN BRIDGE CONNECTING THE TWO SIDES OF THE RIVER

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Wednesday, October 14, 2009
    Bursa

    I encountered an interesting situation in Bursa where I came for
    the return game between the national football teams of Turkey and
    Armenia. After a short conversation, Umit Gunes_, my taxi driver, asked
    me whether I was of Armenian origin or not. I told him I am an Armenian
    of Istanbul origin and I came to Bursa to follow news for my newspaper.

    This was the beginning of an interesting dialogue. I told Gunes_
    that I want to share his story with the readers of the Hurriyet Daily
    News & Economic Review. Although he was working, Gunes_ pulled over
    and answered my questions for the next 20 minutes.

    The wooden bridge

    Gunes_is from one of the farthest eastern locations of Turkey. He was
    born in Kockiran Village of Igdir, near the River Aras, only meters
    away from Armenia. Gunes_ said his family was one of the oldest in Igri
    and the first wooden suspension bridge over the River Aras between
    Turkey and Armenia was built by his grandfather. "There was not much
    of a border in those years, passing through each side is free but you
    had to walk through the waters of Aras to get to the other side. My
    grandfather was a carpenter and he had built that bridge with help
    from his Armenian neighbors from one end to the other," he said.

    Gunes_ said the wooden bridge was still standing on the River Aras
    although it cannot be used due to the border problem. Gunes_ said
    the people of Igdir like Armenians very much and continued: "The
    most painful events were experienced during the era of the Ottomans'
    fall. Armenians are true children of this land. We are a family;
    agitations and afflictions are experienced in every family but now
    is the time to hug each other."

    A sad stare to the other side

    GuneÅ~_ had spent his childhood near the River Aras. "We used to walk
    through the river to the other side, to Armenia. We did not even know
    it was a different country.

    ur Armenian friends there and play games.

    GuneÅ~_ said the border was closed in the following years because
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh war between Azerbaijan and Armenia. "My
    [Armenian] friends were left on the other side. We still saw each
    other but obviously it was not like before because passing through
    to the other side was forbidden. GuneÅ~_ said he used to stand at
    the Turkish side of the bridge at night and sadly stare to the other
    side. "The bright lights of the capital Yerevan were blinking from
    the other side. I was promising myself each time that I would pass
    to the other side again one day. If the border opens, visiting my
    village and meeting my friends by passing to the Armenian side is
    the first thing I would do."

    'Open the border'

    GuneÅ~_ said he has been closely following the process of
    reestablishing diplomatic relations between Turkey and Armenia. "I am
    very angry with the diaspora. Our neighbors in Armenia are experiencing
    great economical difficulties. Closed borders do not benefit anyone in
    this age. They should not intervene to the process," he said. GuneÅ~_
    wanted to end his words by making a call to the Turkish authorities:
    "My request from you, as someone from Igdır, is the border to be
    opened. Armenians are people of those lands, they are our neighbors,
    let us not treat them as stepchildren."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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