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Armenian Christians celebrate rare Mass in Turkey

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  • Armenian Christians celebrate rare Mass in Turkey

    Armenian Christians celebrate rare Mass in Turkey
    By BURHAN OZBILICI (AP)
    19 Sept 10

    AKDAMAR ISLAND, Turkey - Hundreds of Armenian Christian pilgrims took
    boats to an ancient island church in eastern Turkey on Sunday for the
    first Mass held there since it was abandoned during the mass killings
    of Armenians 95 years ago.

    In 2007, Turkey restored the 10th century Akdamar church perched on a
    rocky island in Lake Van - a vast body of water in eastern Turkey -
    and opened it up as a museum. Earlier this year, Turkey's
    Islamic-oriented government, which is aiming to expand freedoms as
    part of its bid to join the European Union, agreed to allow
    once-yearly worship as a gesture to Armenia and its own ethnic
    Armenian minority.

    "This is a historic event," said Karapet Hajipogosyan, who traveled
    from Yerevan, Armenia for the service. "I am reliving our past, I am
    remembering what we went through. My feelings are mixed."

    Turkey and Armenia are locked in a bitter dispute over the deaths of
    Armenians in Turkey. Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million
    Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I.
    Turkey denies that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll
    has been inflated and those killed were victims of civil war and
    unrest.

    Efforts to overcome historical animosity and normalize ties between
    the neighbors launched last year have been thrown back by the conflict
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.
    Azerbaijan is a close Muslim ally of Ankara.

    Armenian Christians from Turkey, Armenia and Georgia traveled to the
    brown sandstone church for the first liturgy. Many others reportedly
    did not travel to protest the fact that a large cast iron cross was
    not mounted on top of the church as planned.

    Turkish officials postponed installing the cross atop the church until
    after a nationwide referendum that was held last week, saying they
    wanted to avoid the symbolism attached to the cross being used as
    propaganda tool against Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's ruling
    party. The symbolism could upset some Muslims; and a parallel force,
    Turkey's secular establishment, led by the powerful military, might
    regard it as a concession to Armenia and the Armenian diaspora.

    But officials again postponed putting up the cross after the
    referendum, citing technical difficulties.

    The cross was mounted on a platform outside the church for Sunday's
    service, and many pilgrims at Akdamar kissed it or kneeled in front of
    it to pray. Some wept.

    In 1915, Ottoman authorities evicted Armenians from their homes in
    actions that spiraled into the mass slaughter of the Armenian
    population. Scholars widely view the event as the first genocide of
    the 20th century.

    Some pilgrims took part in the service inside the church, which is
    decorated with deep blue frescoes showing biblical scenes. Some,
    though, have been destroyed and the walls have big, blank patches.

    Many others watched the service from a large screen on the church grounds.

    "This is a very positive development," said Armen Aroyan, a retired
    electrical engineer from Los Angeles, California. "Turkey made a nice
    gesture making it available for Armenians to come here."

    Akdamar, called the Church of Surp Khach, or the Holy Cross, was
    inaugurated in A.D. 921. historical records say the church was near a
    harbor and a palace on the island on Lake Van, but only the church
    survived.

    One of the finest surviving monuments of Armenian culture 1,000 years
    ago, the church had deteriorated until its restoration at a cost of
    US$1.5 million (euro1.15 million). Rainwater had seeped through the
    collapsed, conical dome. Its basalt floors were dug up by
    treasure-hunters, and its facade riddled with bullet holes.

    Some of Turkey's 65,000 Armenian Orthodox Christians complain of
    harassment in Turkey, which has an overwhelmingly Muslim population.

    Hrant Dink, an ethnic Armenian journalist murdered in Istanbul in
    2007, was apparently targeted by nationalists for his commentaries on
    minority rights and freedom of expression.

    Associated Press writer Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey, contributed to
    this report




    From: A. Papazian
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