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ISTANBUL: Small church service in Diyarbakir signals bigger reconcil

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  • ISTANBUL: Small church service in Diyarbakir signals bigger reconcil

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    June 19 2011

    A small church service in Diyarbakır signals bigger reconciliation

    Sunday, June 19, 2011
    VERCÄ°HAN ZÄ°FLÄ°OÄ?LU
    DİYARBAKIR - Hürriyet Daily News


    Surp Giragos' restoration was widely supported by Istanbul Armenians,
    although the Turkish Culture Ministry, Diyarbakır's Sur Municipality
    and diaspora Armenians also contributed to refurbishing the church.

    Hearkening back to Diyarbakır's cosmopolitan past, diaspora Armenians
    and clergy held a small service in a local church Saturday in what
    many hope is a harbinger for a more multicultural future in the
    southeastern city.

    `The sounds of the call to prayer and church bells will mix here on
    this land from now on,' Diyarbakır Mayor Osman Baydemir said following
    the service at the restored Surp Giragos Church. `There were major
    sorrows experienced in the past. We [condemn] the heartlessness of
    those days in our hearts and we want a new start.'

    `Diyarbakır was a multicultural city in the past but we lost a lot
    with the `monist' policy with the [Turkish] Republic. To be able to
    resurrect social peace, lessons should be learned from the past and
    history needs to be encountered. Kurds want to live together with and
    embrace those populations that [hegemonic actors] set at loggerheads
    with each other,' Diyarbakır Sur Mayor Abdullah DemirbaÅ? told the
    Hürriyet Daily News, adding that he was very pleased to be able to
    host the guests.

    Surp Giragos' restoration was widely supported by Istanbul Armenians,
    although the Turkish Culture Ministry, Diyarbakır's Sur Municipality
    and diaspora Armenians also contributed to refurbishing the church.

    Noting that Sur Municipality had recently printed Armenian poet
    Hovhannes Tumanyan's `Gatil mi Meghr' [A drop of honey] in Armenian,
    DemirbaÅ? said: `Tales for children, history for adults; we are giving
    back to what belongs to this land by looking after languages.'

    Baydemir greeted visitors with carnations in his office immediately
    following the service and said he was conscious that they had been
    rather late in doing something for Armenians.

    Meanwhile, Archbishop and Deputy Patriarch Aram AteÅ?yan said, `It is a
    start that Diyarbakır Armenians come and visit the land they have been
    born. We hope it [this trend] continues.'

    Defined as the largest church in the Middle East by some experts, the
    historic Surp Giragos Church will host a more grandiose service in
    October. Along with the representatives of Armenian Apostolic Churches
    from all around the world, representatives of sister churches and
    leading names from the diaspora are expected to form part of the large
    congregation.

    `Telling the world about Anatolia'

    Among the diaspora Armenian group of about 20 professors, historians
    and businesspeople that attended Saturday's service was world-famous
    lute maestro, Armenian-American Udi Yervant, who is also known as
    Yervant Bostancı.

    Born in Diyarbakır and visiting his hometown after a 19-year break,
    Bostancı said: `I have yearned for the land I was born in for years. I
    am not a diaspora Armenian: Not for one moment has my country left my
    soul and my heart. I live in Los Angeles but my songs tell of Anatolia
    to the world.

    `I was never able to become a [true resident of] Istanbul, and I am
    not able to become an American. I have always lived in Diyarbakır and
    still live there. I wish people were able to live and die in the land
    where they were born,' he said.

    In a special evening event organized by Baydemir for the diaspora
    Armenians, Bostancı took the stage and performed several songs in
    Turkish, Armenian and Kurdish.

    Coming from Toronto, former Istanbul resident Raffi Bedrosyan said
    some difficulties occurred while collecting donations from diaspora
    Armenians for the church's restoration.

    `They did not want to donate money for the restoration of this church
    because they thought it prioritized Turkish and Kurdish interests. The
    diaspora is still living the trauma of 1915,' he said.

    Last Armenian in Diyarbakır

    The last Armenian to have lived in Diyarbakır, 81-year old Sarkis
    Bedrosyan, said it was a special feeling to see Surp Giragos with his
    own eyes once more.

    Expressing his happiness that the mayor was able to host them, he
    said: `The mayor talked about a truth that was forgotten in this city.
    The Armenian past was mentioned; that was extremely important.'

    The Istanbul Armenian businessman who started the church's restoration
    process, Diyarbakır-born Ergün Ayık said he was happy but added that
    he wished there had been more support for the church.

    The total cost of the restoration is around $2.5 million; once the
    church is open for services its annex buildings will host several
    culture and arts projects.

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