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  • Hrant Dink

    Toledo Blade, OH
    Feb 4 2006


    Hrant Dink

    by Jack Lessenberry

    We talk a lot about freedom of the press in this country, something
    that is guaranteed us by the First Amendment to the Constitution. But
    there are many journalists around the world who are mourning a man
    who was a far more courageous advocate for press freedom than any
    American I know.

    His name was Hrant Dink. As far as I know he never visited this
    country. Matter of fact, I'm not sure he ever left his native Turkey.
    Yet he symbolized what our First Amendment is supposed to be about.

    He believed anybody has the right to say whatever they believe - and
    that no government has the right to shut any free citizen up.

    In Turkey, it is illegal to tell the truth about the world's first
    genocide, the murder of 1.5 million Armenians by Turks during World
    War I. Mr. Dink, the editor of a small independent newspaper he
    started himself, insisted on telling the truth about that, though he
    repeatedly was fined and jailed. But here's something even more
    incredible. France has been discussing making it against the law to
    deny that the Armenian genocide occurred. Last fall, Mr. Dink
    declared that if France did so, he would rush to that country - and
    deny that the Armenian genocide happened!

    "Then we can watch both the Turkish Republic and the French
    government race against each other to condemn me. We can watch to see
    which will throw me into jail first," Mr. Dink said, adding, "What
    the peoples need is dialogue, and all these laws do is harm such
    dialogue."

    He had no First Amendment to protect him - and yet he was willing to
    risk his life for freedom of speech. Then on Jan. 19, Mr. Dink, who
    was 52 and had a wife and two children, was shot in the back of the
    head by a teenage dropout who, police said, was told to do it by an
    ultranationalist.

    More than 100,000 people showed up at his funeral. Many wore buttons
    saying, "We are all Hrant Dink." Think of what a better world this
    would be if it had more journalists who were as courageous as was he.

    Anyone with a concern about fairness or accuracy in The Blade is
    invited to write me, c/o The Blade; 541 N. Superior St., Toledo,
    43660, or at my Detroit office: 189 Manoogian Hall, Wayne State
    University, Detroit, MI 48202; call me, at 1-888-746-8610 or E-Mail
    me at [email protected]. I cannot promise to address every question in
    the newspaper, but I do promise that everyone who contacts me with a
    serious question will get a personal reply.


    Jack Lessenberry, a member of the journalism faculty at Wayne State
    University in Detroit and The Blade's ombudsman, writes on issues and
    people in Michigan.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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