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Then, Now And Later: The Legacy Of Hrant Dink

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  • Then, Now And Later: The Legacy Of Hrant Dink

    THEN, NOW AND LATER: THE LEGACY OF HRANT DINK
    By Liana Aghajanian

    ianyan magazine - Independent Armenian Magazine
    Jan 21 2010

    Three years ago today, Hrant Dink was brutally gunned down near the
    headquarters of his Turkish Armenian newspaper Agos by a 17-year-old
    Turkish nationalist. As any Diasporan can attest to, it's very easy to
    be so unaware of what is going on outside the bubble of your adopted
    homeland, thousands of miles away from where you originated from.

    When Hrant Dink died, I was a wide-eyed journalism student who had
    just recently become acquainted with him, a man with ideals I felt I
    had been searching for for so many years, a man who I felt somehow
    managed to extract the thoughts I had in my head and form the most
    eloquent, admirable and respectable sayings and speeches, a man who
    didn't have an agenda, who wasn't blinded by ulterior motives or
    fanaticism. When Hrant Dink died, a part of me died.

    To put it in the most understandable of terms, Hrant Dink was the
    Armenian equivalent of Martin Luther King Jr. He strongly held on
    to his unconventional beliefs and made no apologies for them. He
    was someone who understood that communication was the only way to
    understanding and peace. He was the one who poignantly declared that
    "Turkish-Armenian relations should be taken out of a 1915 meters-deep
    well."

    He, unlike a majority of Diasporans lived and breathed and worked
    among Turks. Here was a man who tried to bridge the gap between two
    groups with an unfortunate history, a man who suggested that diaspora
    Armenians free themselves of the deep seated hatred against Turks
    without never stopping to fight for human and minority rights. To
    Dink, hatred and violence were not synonymous with recognizing
    discrimination. To him, they were counterproductive to it all.

    Though he had critics, one only has to look as far as his funeral,
    in which two hundred thousand people marched in protest of his
    assassination chanting "We are all Hrant Drink" to see the amazing
    impact he made on both Armenians and Turks. This alone should be
    enough for both sides to understand that in order to succeed, you
    need to climb out of the aforementioned well.

    At the time, Joel Simon, the Executive Director of the Committee to
    Protect Journalists said that one of Turkey's most courageous voices
    had been silenced. Hrant Dink died three years ago and a part of me
    died. After much reflection, I brought that part back to life again
    and I would be lying if I said that the man who risked his life to
    bring about change did not have a hand in convincing me to finally
    start this site which you are reading now.

    Last year on the anniversary of his death, a campaign was started to
    show support for Dink by declaring "I am Hrant Dink." Shortly after,
    Patrick Azadian wrote a reflective piece questioning the validity of
    that statement on both sides.

    "Are we really Hrant Dink?," he wrote."Dink is still not fully
    understood in Turkey nor the Diaspora. So forgive me for feeling that
    the slogan "We are all Hrant Dink" can ring hollow at times.I leave
    you with a few simple thoughts: To my Armenian brothers and sisters:
    "Are we willing to free ourselves of our genocide-centric identity?

    How long will we allow an outside entity to dictate our actions? "To
    my Turkish cousins: "Is your collective conscience clear? Are you
    proud of what your ancestors did to mine?"

    We are not Hrant Dink."

    I don't think I can say it any better, so I will refrain from doing
    so, but what I will say is that I hope his dreams of understanding,
    communication and the ability to forge relationships free of
    hate, ignorance and bigotry from both sides can one day come to
    fruition. We owe it to him to see that it does. See you on the other
    side, Mr. Dink and lastly, thank you. Thank you for making such an
    enormous, progressive contribution to this collective culture. You,
    not the uncompromisable, flag yielding, blind masses are one the many
    reasons why I am proud to call myself Armenian as well as a journalist.

    Further Reading:

    Hrant Dink - Three Years After the Murder

    Documentary About Hrant Dink to be Shown in Istanbul

    http://www.ianyanmag.com/?p=1907
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