Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Istanbul: bridge b/w East and West : Still not much said re Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Istanbul: bridge b/w East and West : Still not much said re Genocide

    Cape Breton Post, Canada
    Aug 11 2007

    Istanbul: bridge between East and West
    Still not much is being said about Armenian genocide


    GARRY HAMILTON
    The Cape Breton Post

    (Garry has recently returned from a sea cruise in the Mediterranean.
    This is one story from that trip.)



    Our most significant and intriguing stop was Istanbul. I have visited
    much of continental Europe. Buildings dating to the Renaissance
    period are considered old. Buildings and ruins dating to the
    Mediaeval period are considered ancient. And of course the
    cobblestone roads built by the Romans predate Christ. But all of this
    isas a newborn next to the antiquity of Greece and Turkey.

    Turkey is the only country and Istanbul is the only city to be
    located on two continents, Asia and Europe. Although the area was
    occupied since about 4000 BC, recorded history starts around 700 BC
    when it was settled by Byzas, a Greek. He modestly named it Byzantium
    after himself.

    When history books tell us an occupied land was settled by someone,
    this usually means the original inhabitants were enslaved or
    murdered. However, settled sounds ever so much more civilized doesn't
    it? The city has a population of 17,000,000 or about half of Canada.
    It boasts mosques, minarets, obelisks and other architecure of
    amazing size skill and beauty. Particularly striking was the Hagia
    Sophia. It was built as a Christian cathedral between 532 and 537 AD
    using 20,000 slaves. The work went on 24 hours a day, no time off. It
    was the largest most impressive, church in the world for over a
    thousand years until St. Peters was built in Rome.

    Istanbul lies at the mouth of the Bosphorus strait. It has long been
    the port where goods from the Silk Path in Asia crossed paths with
    goods from Europe. In 306 AD, Byzantium was seized and `settled' by
    the Romans under Constantine. He called it guess what?
    Constantinople. It was to remain a Christian city for centuries,
    competing with Rome for dominance. The top priest or pope in each
    city excommunicating the other. In 1453 the Ottomans seized control
    and the city was returned to Islamic rule.

    Fast forward almost 500 years to 1923 and Mustafa Kemal. Turkey as a
    modern Islamic democracy owes its present status to this towering
    military visionary. Mustafa Kemal with other military officers
    plotted and succeeded in overthrowing the despotic rule of the
    Ottomans. He was determined not only to liberate his people, but also
    to educate them. He abolished Islamic religious law and introduced a
    parliamentary system that maintained a separation of mosque and
    state. Women were given equal rights in law including the right to
    vote. Primary education was made compulsory for both sexes. He
    reformed writing to incorporate the Latin alphabet with Turkish.
    Agriculture and technology were subsidized. And all this was done
    between 1926 and 1938.

    Obviously he was way ahead of his time. He achieved all this progress
    ruling as an autocrat. But at his death, he left behind a country
    with democratic institutions, a vibrant economy and a sense of pride.
    In a twist on the practice of naming a city after oneself he was
    named after the country. He is known now as Ataturk - the father of
    Turkey. All Turks revere him.

    One thing stood out on all our travels in places of ancient
    civilizations. The people all have an intimate and deep knowledge of
    their own origins. This is both blessing and curse. Blessing for the
    cultural richness and sense of identity; and yet a curse, for almost
    every ancient civilization has a history of murder and subjugation of
    or by its neighbors. The collective memory of events is almost always
    very subjective. And for many there is neither forgiveness nor trust.
    His voice rising with righteous anger, our tour guide told us that
    Istanbul had been invaded 18 times since 4000 BC. Among others, the
    attackers included Greeks, Persians, Romans, Arabs, Christian
    crusaders, Ottomans and Russians. He didn't mention the Turkish
    genocide of the Armenians. I think it slipped his mind.



    Garry Hamilton is a Cape Breton artist. We welcome your comments on
    this column or any other material appearing in the Post. You can
    write c/o Letters to the Editor, Cape Breton Post, 255 George St., PO
    Box 1500, Sydney, N.S., B1P 6K6; Fax to (902) 562-7077; or e-mail to
    [email protected]
    http://www.capebretonpost.com/index.cfm?sid=53254 &sc=150
Working...
X