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Armenian church brought back to life

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  • Armenian church brought back to life

    Armenian church brought back to life

    19 September 2010

    By Jonathan Head

    BBC News, Lake Van, Turkey

    There had not been a service at the Church of the Holy Cross for the
    past 95 years
    There can be few settings for a church as lovely as Akdamar island in
    Lake Van, Turkey, and few churches that fit that setting so well as
    the 1,100 year-old Armenian Cathedral Church of the Holy Cross.

    With a backdrop of rugged mountains and the impossibly blue waters of
    Lake Van, it is a heavenly spot to hear a church Mass; and yet for the
    past 95 years, there had not been one, until Sunday.

    Continue reading the main story
    `
    Start Quote
    My parents are dead, my grandparents are dead, and I'm left with the
    memory of what this place was to them. Armenians were here for three
    millennia'
    End Quote
    Paul Shahenian
    Listening to the glorious sounds of the ancient Armenian liturgy in
    that setting was a profoundly moving experience; hundreds of Armenians
    had travelled, from Istanbul and also from the diaspora - from the
    United States, from Greece, Germany, even Armenia itself - to
    celebrate this symbolic reconnection with the land of their ancestors.

    It was all the more moving, knowing they were praying among the ruins
    of the monastery - there was no room for them inside the 42-sq-m
    (452-sq-ft) nave of the church; the monks and priests were all killed
    in 1915, along with most of the population of the area.

    The decision to allow the Armenian Patriarchate in Istanbul to hold a
    Mass there was made by the governing AKP, the party believes both in
    loosening restrictions on religion imposed by the secular state, and
    in improving relations with Turkey's minority groups.

    "We believe that it is very important gesture towards freedom of
    faith," the provincial governor, Munir Karaoglu, told the BBC.

    "Also we believe that it is important to eradicate the prejudices
    between the Turkish and Armenian people. It could also help improve
    relations Turkey and Armenia."

    New beginning

    Those who had chosen to come saw this as a positive step by Turkey
    towards confronting its history in this area.

    "Let's just say that this is a beginning," said Harry Parsekian, a
    retired estate agent from Boston, whose parents escaped the Armenian
    killings.

    "I hope the Turkish authorities realise that this is an opening - it's
    just a symbolic gesture right now."

    For others, coming back was difficult. Paul Shahenian had never been
    to Turkey before. His family came from Van, and his grandparents
    barely escaped the mass slaughter which began in April 1915.

    "Coming here is a bittersweet experience," he said.

    The Turkish authorities have not allowed a cross to be erected on the
    church's dome for the service "My parents are dead, my grandparents
    are dead, and I'm left with the memory of what this place was to them.
    Armenians were here for three millennia. Even if the Turkish
    government wanted to reconcile, I don't know how they would begin. So
    I think this is a very good first step."

    Paul said there had been strong pressure on his family not to come
    from the rest of the Armenian community.

    Many Armenians boycotted this service, either because they do not
    trust a government which will not acknowledge the 1915 killings as a
    genocide, or over the government's refusal to hand the church back to
    the Armenian Patriarchate.

    It is still officially a state museum, and the authorities would not
    allow a cross to be erected on the dome for the service.

    So the numbers were smaller than expected - a few hundred, rather than
    the thousands the local government had been hoping to welcome.

    The crush of journalists and the crowds of curious local sightseers
    who had been encouraged to come to the island for the occasion also
    robbed it of any spiritual atmosphere.

    'Be braver'

    The church was built by the Armenian King Gagik in the 10th Century,
    and is the most complete ancient Armenian building left in Turkey.

    As such it is very important to the Armenian community's sense of
    historical connection to this area - and that may be the reason the
    government is so wary of handing the church back.

    Nationalists in Turkey still fear that Armenia has designs on their
    eastern provinces.

    After all, the city of Van was briefly taken over by the Armenian
    community in 1915 after an armed uprising.

    At the Treaty of Sevres in 1920, following the Ottoman defeat in World
    War I, the city was awarded to a new Armenian state.

    It was only with the military successes of Turkish nationalists under
    Ataturk that the city reverted to Turkish rule.

    "This government has been better than all the others," said Rober
    Koptas, editor-in-chief of Agos, the main Armenian newspaper in
    Istanbul.

    "They renovated the church, which is great. But they must be braver.
    This was not enough. Most of Turkish society is ready to accept this
    is an Armenian church. Now it is the government's turn."




    From: A. Papazian
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