Today's Zaman, Turkey
Feb 1 2007
Friend of Turkey Feigl to be buried on Monday
Austrian historian Prof. Erich Feigl, who demonstrated that the
Armenian allegations of genocide were untrue, will be buried on Feb.
5 at Simmering cemetery in Vienna, after a funeral at Feuerhalle
Hall.
Prof. Feigl died last week at the age of 76 from kidney failure,
following hospitalization for a stomach hemorrhage. He began his
writing career during his university years and furthered it by making
a large number of documentary movies and films in the Middle East,
the Far East, the Central Asia and the United States to foster
intra-religious and intra-cultural dialogue.
When his close friend, Erdoðan Özen, a labor attaché at the Turkish
Embassy in Vienna, was assassinated by Armenian terrorists in 1984,
he decided conduct a comprehensive study on Armenian terrorism.
Having proven that the alleged genocide claims of the Armenian
diaspora and the Armenian terrorist group ASALA were based on
fictitious documents and photographs put forward by Armenian author
Aram Andonian, he gathered all the evidence he was able to find in a
book titled, `A Myth of Terror,' which exposed the roots and
strategic aim of Armenian terrorism. Feigl devoted this book, which
was published in English, German, French and Turkish, to his friend
Özen.
Feb 1 2007
Friend of Turkey Feigl to be buried on Monday
Austrian historian Prof. Erich Feigl, who demonstrated that the
Armenian allegations of genocide were untrue, will be buried on Feb.
5 at Simmering cemetery in Vienna, after a funeral at Feuerhalle
Hall.
Prof. Feigl died last week at the age of 76 from kidney failure,
following hospitalization for a stomach hemorrhage. He began his
writing career during his university years and furthered it by making
a large number of documentary movies and films in the Middle East,
the Far East, the Central Asia and the United States to foster
intra-religious and intra-cultural dialogue.
When his close friend, Erdoðan Özen, a labor attaché at the Turkish
Embassy in Vienna, was assassinated by Armenian terrorists in 1984,
he decided conduct a comprehensive study on Armenian terrorism.
Having proven that the alleged genocide claims of the Armenian
diaspora and the Armenian terrorist group ASALA were based on
fictitious documents and photographs put forward by Armenian author
Aram Andonian, he gathered all the evidence he was able to find in a
book titled, `A Myth of Terror,' which exposed the roots and
strategic aim of Armenian terrorism. Feigl devoted this book, which
was published in English, German, French and Turkish, to his friend
Özen.
