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Turkey allows church service in gesture to Armenians

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  • Turkey allows church service in gesture to Armenians

    Agence France Presse
    March 25, 2010 Thursday 12:12 PM GMT

    Turkey allows church service in gesture to Armenians

    ankara, March 25 2010


    Turkey is to allow members of its tiny Armenian minority to conduct
    religious services once a year at an historic church in a gesture of
    reconciliation, officials said on Thursday.

    Armenians will be able to hold prayers at the 10th-century church in
    the eastern Van region in September when they mark their Feast of the
    Holy Cross, said provincial governor Munir Karaloglun.

    A decision "has been made to open the church for worship symbolically
    once a year," Karaloglu said on NTV television.

    The permission was granted by the culture ministry, which runs the
    church as a museum, following requests by leaders of the Armenian
    community, he said.

    The religious service will be open to a "limited number" of people and
    its duration will be determined by the authorities, the governor's
    office said.

    The Church of the Holy Cross, which sits on an island in the middle of
    the Van Lake, served for centuries as a leading religious centre and
    is valued as a prominent example of Armenian architecture from the
    10th century.

    Even though it is named after the prime symbol of Christianity, the
    dome of the edifice lacks a cross since the authorities have so far
    turned down Armenian appeals to erect one.

    It was opened to visitors in 2007 after a 1.9-million-dollar
    restoration, which Ankara hailed at a time as a step towards
    reconciliation with neighbouring Armenia.

    The church was abandoned after World War I when, Armenians claim, up
    to 1.5 million of their kin perished at the hands of their Ottoman
    rulers in what was a genocide.

    Turkey's Armenian minority, which numbers some 70,000 people, is
    concentrated in Istanbul, where they run their own churches.

    Following bridge-building talks to end decades of enmity, Turkey and
    Armenia signed a landmark deal in October to establish diplomatic ties
    and open their border.

    But the process has already hit snags, with both sides accusing the
    other of lacking commitment to the deal.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan added to the chill last week when
    he threatened to expel Armenian nationals working illegaly in Turkey
    if Western parliaments continued to pass resolutions accusing the
    Ottoman Empire of genocide.

    Turkey, the empire's successor, fiercely rejects the genocide label,
    arguing that thousands of Turks and Armenians were killed in civil
    strife when Armenians rose up for independence in eastern Anatolia and
    sided with invading Russian troops.
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