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Turkey: Istanbul Funeral Home Fosters Muslim-Christian Understanding

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  • Turkey: Istanbul Funeral Home Fosters Muslim-Christian Understanding

    EurasiaNet.org, NY
    March 9 2012


    Turkey: Istanbul Funeral Home Fosters Muslim-Christian Understanding

    March 9, 2012 - 11:58am, by Constanze Letsch


    More than 40 years ago, Kirkor Ã?apan, an ethnic Armenian, and his
    father set up what today is one of the last Christian funeral homes
    still operating in Istanbul. But the funeral parlor is not a religious
    island unto itself. With so few Christians left in Turkey, the
    stonemasons and carpenters working with Ã?apan are Muslim Turks.

    `There are no more non-Muslim master craftsmen in my profession,'
    commented stonemason Senol Ekinci, one of Ã?apan's craftsmen, who has
    been carving Christian and Jewish tombstones for 35 years.

    Standing in the Greek-Orthodox cemetery in the Istanbul neighborhood
    of Sisli, where he is responsible for the graves' maintenance and
    renovation, Ekinci explained what drew him to work on non-Muslim
    tombstones. `These graves here are a bit more elaborate; they require
    more work and craftsmanship. Turkish tombstones do not necessitate as
    much effort,' Ekinci said. He is particularly proud of making the
    tombstone for the grave of Lefter Küçükandonyadis, a Turkish football
    legend of Greek descent who died this year.

    Opportunities to work on such tombstones are shrinking. The Turkish
    government claims that 99 percent of the country's 79.7 million
    inhabitants are Muslim; and according to official statistics, the
    country's Christian population has diminished by nearly half since
    1965, when it stood at 207,000. The US Department of State's annual
    Freedom of Religion report puts the numbers of Christians living now
    in Turkey at approximately 115,000; only 2,500 of which are Greek
    Orthodox, and 20,000 Armenian Apostolic.

    While Ã?apan serves all Christian denominations, most of his customers
    are ethnic Armenians. He also has set up a separate funeral home that
    is now the only Greek Orthodox funeral home left in Istanbul.

    While Istanbul's Greek population was exempted from the 1923
    population exchange with Greece, changes in tax status, the 1955
    anti-Greek pogroms and the dispute over Cyprus in the 1960s prompted
    thousands to leave. Nonetheless, the community's influence lingers on.

    Ekinci learned his profession from his father, who in turn learned
    from a Greek master stonemason. He uses five different alphabets on
    his tombstones -- Greek, Russian Cyrillic, Armenian, Hebrew and Latin.
    `I learned Greek in the graveyard, from my colleagues,' he said. `It's
    very hard, especially the grammar, but I finally managed.'

    Ekinci claims that his friends and family never criticized his choice
    to craft non-Muslim tombstones. `There used to be a lot of pressure on
    non-Muslims, but things have much improved in the last 10 years," he
    said.

    He attributes the change to the controversial Ergenekon trial of
    senior military officers and civilians accused of plotting to
    overthrow the government of the Islamic-rooted Justice and Development
    Party. `There was much more anti-Christian propaganda before many of
    the main suspects were arrested, more aggression,' he said. `We sense
    a difference.'

    Ã?apan agrees that Christians now feel safer in Turkey. `Turkey has
    come a long way in this matter,' he said.

    Despite such affirmations, most of Istanbul's Christian cemeteries are
    still surrounded by high walls. To enter, visitors have to ring a
    doorbell: desecration of non-Muslim graves is still an issue, even if
    the frequency of such incidents has decreased. "Before, we did not
    allow any strangers to stroll through the vicinities,' Ekinci
    explained. `And, yesterday, the patriarch [Ecumenical Patriarch
    Bartholomew] came to visit, accompanied only by his driver. Before, he
    would have had to come with bodyguards.'

    While the Turkish government in the past confiscated many buildings
    owned by non-Muslims, few cemeteries were affected. One notable
    exception was the Armenian Surp Agop Cemetery, on the grounds of
    today's Divan and Hyatt Regency Hotels, which was leveled by the
    Istanbul city government in 1939.

    Currently, Ã?apan is coping with uncertainty. Urban renewal plans for
    the formerly Greek neighborhood of TarlabaÅ?i mean that Ã?apan risks
    losing the garage where he parks his hearse and stores coffins and
    other supplies. Most churches and Christian graveyards are close to
    his office, and he fears that moving to the outskirts would increase
    his costs substantially.

    Another business concern persists -- a government ban on cremations.
    `Our requests have been ignored for years,' Ã?apan said. `They say that
    `It's against our religion. It's not possible in Islam.' But the ones
    asking for cremation are not Muslims.'

    The Eastern Orthodox Church also forbids cremation, arguing that it
    contradicts the central dogma of resurrection, but Ã?apan claims that
    demand runs high among foreign tourists whose relatives or friends die
    in Turkey, and would run `much higher still if the Turkish government
    would finally legalize the cremation procedure here."

    Both Ã?apan and Ekinci lament the small numbers of Christians left in
    Istanbul, and not only because of their bottom line. `On religious
    holidays, many families came to the cemetery and visited the graves,'
    Ekinci recalled. `Now, most of them call from abroad and ask us to
    take care of everything, if at all. There used to be at least three
    priests coming to the cemetery every day. Now if there is one, we are
    surprised.'

    But as any resident can attest, change in Istanbul is constant. Noting
    the Greeks now migrating to Turkey for work, Ekinci wagers that the
    city's Christian cemeteries might not always be bereft of regular
    visitors. `With the economic crisis in Greece,' he said, `this might
    change again.'

    Editor's note: Constanze Letsch is a freelance writer based in Istanbul.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/65110



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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