Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: New exhibit at Tutun Deposu displays Kurdish issue

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: New exhibit at Tutun Deposu displays Kurdish issue

    NEW EXHIBIT AT TUTUN DEPOSU DISPLAYS KURDISH ISSUE

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Wednesday, January 27, 2010

    A new exhibition on the Kurdish issue opened at the Tutun Deposu
    (Tobacco Depot) in Istanbul's Tophane. The exhibition titled
    'Confrontations: The Other Side of Fýrat' displays photographs by human
    rights defender, journalist and documentary photographer Mujgan Arpat

    Having already stirred up controversies in previous exhibitions, the
    Tutun Deposu (Tobacco Depot) in Istanbul's Tophane is now hosting a
    striking new exhibition from journalist and documentary photographer
    Mujgan Arpat.

    Arpat has been following the Kurdish issue for 20 years, and is now
    displaying 100 photos chosen from her archive of more than 10,000
    photos.

    Arpat's earlier work "Gavur Mahallesi Kalanlar - Gelenler" (The Gioar
    Neighborhood Those Who Remain - Those Who Come), which she opened
    in 2008 at the Karþý Sanat Calýþmalarý in Beyoðlu, became a hot
    issue, too. She displayed the remaining structures from Armenians
    in Diyarbakýr. The most striking photo in the exhibition was a
    ruined historic Armenian church in the city. The church was put on
    a renovation agenda and work began shortly after the exhibition.

    She followed the Yeþilyurt case

    Speaking to the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review about her new
    exhibition, Arpat explained why she had chosen the title "Fýrat'ýn
    Ote Yanýnda: Karþýlaþmalar" (Confrontations: The Other Side of Fýrat)
    rather than "Guneydoðu" (Southeast), saying: "I would create a problem
    if I used a word highlighting Kurds. This is why I chose this title. I
    observed the experiences in the Southeast, namely the emergency region,
    for 20 years. It was too hard to work on the other side of Fýrat. This
    inspired me to choose this name."

    Arpat is not only interested in journalism and taking documentary
    photos. She is also an activist concerned about human rights
    violations. She has played active roles in projects regarding racism
    and violence against women. She worked as the deputy manager for the
    International Human Rights Union in Germany in the 1980s.

    In Turkey, where she came to work, she first followed the case known
    as the Yeþilyurt Feces Case, which left its mark on Turkey's recent
    history. The Yeþilyurt village of the southeastern district of Cizre
    was besieged by the gendarmerie in 1989. It was alleged that Cmdr.

    Cafer Tayyar Caðlayan and his soldiers made villagers eat feces.

    Following the incident, villagers went to court and as they did not
    get results from the process, they applied to the European Court of
    Human Rights. In 1994, the state was found guilty and sentenced to
    pay compensations.

    Victims of mine

    "I wanted to take a step with this exhibition," said Arpat, and
    continued: "The words that describe what happened in the Southeast are
    'civil war.' Since one side of me is German, I compare the situation
    with Germany. For example, Germany has never described the events in
    Afghanistan as war. Because it would take responsibility if it did.

    "The most striking photos in the exhibition are the photos of people
    who became disabled from land mine explosions. There are one million
    land mines laid by both the state and the terrorist organization the
    Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, in the Southeast, the other side
    of Fýrat. United Nations reports confirm it. The number is obvious
    but it is not known where these mines lay," said Arpat, adding:
    "I had feared when I went to talk to land mine victims. Because I
    knew that there were land mines in the area I passed."

    Income of catalog for Human Rights Foundation

    Arpat said whatever Turkey had for human rights and racial
    discrimination also existed in Europe with a different shape. "But
    there is a difference between Turkey and Europe. There is a strong
    public opinion supporting human rights defenders. This support is
    almost nonexistent in Turkey because society could not overcome of
    the fear embedded after the 1980 coup," she said.

    According to Arpat, the biggest handicap for Turkey's European Union
    membership is the hypocrite manner of Europe. "The EU behaves like
    it backs Turkey's membership process but this is not true. Turkey's
    inner problems are used by the EU," she said.

    Arpat explained her views about the Kurdish initiative lingering in
    Turkey's agenda for sometime. She said, "I don't believe that the
    initiative will be successful."

    Arpat's exhibition will remain open through Feb. 21. The funds raised
    by the catalog of the exhibition will be donated to a human rights
    foundation. The catalog is available at Anadolu Kultur in Istanbul's
    Elmadað.
Working...
X