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  • Apigian-Kessel: Reader Mailbag

    Apigian-Kessel: Reader Mailbag

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2011/01/29/apigian-kessel-reader-mailbag/

    Sat, Jan 29 2011
    By: Betty Apigian-Kessel

    Ah, those passionate, hot-blooded Armenians. Their temperatures rise,
    rightfully so, freely displaying their angst and sorrow, coupled with
    unabashed disappointment at the behavior of their fellow countrymen.
    The object of some of their anger? Armenians residing in Istanbul,
    Turkey.

    A concerned reader writes: It's bad enough that after four years
    Armenians are still waiting for justice to be served in the cowardly
    shooting in Istanbul of Agos's editor Hrant Dink. The photo of his
    lifeless body on the ground covered with papers in front of his
    newspaper office, with only his shoed feet exposed, remains forever
    embedded in our minds.' The martyred Dink was a civilized man trying
    to build peaceful dialogue between Turks and Armenians.

    Another irate reader sent me a recent article about an
    Armenian-Turkish couple marrying in Trebizond after six years of
    waiting because of `bureaucratic obstacles.' (Remember Trebizond, the
    city of romance, where the Turks drowned 15,000 Armenians in the Black
    Sea during World War I?)

    The groom was a widower with four children and an ill mother. The
    bride's sister had introduced them and they had fallen in love, with
    the Armenian woman agreeing to marry him, producing two children prior
    to the civil marriage.

    It is said the Armenian bride converted to Islam after succumbing to
    the sound of the azan and watching her Muslim husband praying; ditto
    her mother. All apparently are living happily ever after.

    But not my reader. His note with the subject line `WHAT A CROCK'
    followed on the footsteps of yet another Armenian-Turkish marriage I
    was notified of. So I posed the following question to him: `Am I to
    understand you do not approve of this marriage?' His reply:
    `ANSHOOSHT' (Of course note). I attached a copy of my recent column
    asking him if he thought the marriage issue would be upsetting to me.

    He responded, `Yes, Hamagir of the Year. I did think this would upset
    you. I read your column and you are right on. I know the Hyes over
    there must be under extreme pressure but that would only seem to make
    them more resistant to this type of thing, one would think.'

    Another debate has been started by a Turkish writer who questions the
    fact that most of the beautiful architecture in Turkey was
    accomplished by Armenians and Greeks. He asks that someone showcase
    the works of Turkish architects as proof to the contrary.

    A reader addresses that issue by stating: `Many Turks are continuing
    the state mentality. They always deny that anybody else had any
    contribution to their culture. For centuries Turks excelled in
    warfare, not arts or architecture. Instead of downgrading the Armenian
    and Greek architects, they should try to have a similar exhibition of
    Turkish architects of the same Ottoman era if they can.'

    They can never erase the fact that Armenian architects of five
    generations of Balyans (Balian) were imperial architects during the
    18th and 19th centuries, or that the names of Sinan and Manuel remain
    prominent in Turkish architectural history.

    ***

    Taken from the Yerevan Scope travel handbook: `Zorats Kar or Karahunj
    believed to be an ancient observatory quite similar to Stonehenge in
    England. The columns sit like soldiers on a hill, huddled in
    formation. The 204 stones near Sissian have been ascribed with
    mystical, fertility and cosmic powers, but rarely have ancient
    monuments caused such a sensation in astronomical circles.'




    From: A. Papazian
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