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Turkish Army To Return Armenian Church Located On Base

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  • Turkish Army To Return Armenian Church Located On Base

    TURKISH ARMY TO RETURN ARMENIAN CHURCH LOCATED ON BASE

    Al-Monitor
    Dec 11 2013

    Author: Sabah (Turkey)Posted December 10, 2013

    The Turkish army is making an important contribution to the decision
    to return the property of minority foundations.

    Surp Kevork Armenian church, which is located inside the
    Sivas-Temeltepe 5th Infantry Training Brigade's base, will be restored
    and handed over to the Friends of Armenians Association of Sivas.

    Sebuk Kocak, the president of the Friends of Armenians Association
    of Sivas expressed his pleasure in a statement to Sabah. "The church
    has been inside that military zone since 1940. For many years, we
    were not allowed to go near it. This summer we went to the brigade
    with our friends. The commander allowed us in and we were able to
    see our church after so many years. Frankly, we were not expecting
    to be given permission [to enter]. We were all happy. We didn't have
    a church where we could worship and pay respect to our dead," he said.

    Before 1915, the Armenians had 198 churches and 21 monasteries in the
    Sivas region. The only one still standing is the Surp Kevork Church.

    There is an Armenian cemetery near it. Turkish Minister of Defense
    Ismet Yilmaz, who hails from Sivas, was personally involved in the
    work to return the church. Association officials visited the minister
    in October and asked him to restore and return the church. Yilmaz
    told them that the government had made serious efforts to return
    the properties of minorities. He promised them that he would try to
    expedite the return of the property after restoration was completed.

    Yilmaz later went to Sivas and instructed the governor of Sivas,
    Zubeyir Kemelek, and his deputy, Salih Ayhan, to start the work.

    The church has been inside a military zone for 73 years, thus saving
    it from treasure hunters. The church has little damage and should be
    restored quickly.

    Gov. Kemelek also spoke to Sabah. "It is the only structure that is
    standing with its walls and roof intact. The minister responded to the
    request made to him by coming and inspecting it. It is good fortune
    that the church was inside a military zone. As soon as formalities
    are competed we will ask for bids for restoration, which will not
    deviate from the original. I have asked our Armenian citizens to
    bring photographs of it," he said.

    Deputy Gov. Ayhan, who is coordinating the restoration work, said the
    church will be removed from the guarded military zone. He added, "That
    military base has been the largest military training base in the region
    since the 1940s. It is also a training center for our border units. The
    church occupies an area of about five acres in the military zone. We
    asked for its return from the Treasury and they wrote their approval
    to the Ministry of Defense. As soon the Defense Ministry agrees, that
    land will be handed over to us. Then the restoration will commence."

    Architect Zakarya Mildanoglu, who was in the delegation that visited
    Yilmaz, said, "Our people don't have a place of worship and somewhere
    that they can pay their respects to their dead in Sivas. There is one
    cemetery. After the Armenian deportation, churches were destroyed in
    many parts of Anatolia. Similar places exist in other military zones.

    I hope the procedures will be completed quickly."

    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/culture/2013/12/turkey-army-return-church-armenian-military-base.html#


    From: Baghdasarian
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