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U. Texas Community Mourns Journalist Slain In Turkey

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  • U. Texas Community Mourns Journalist Slain In Turkey

    U. TEXAS COMMUNITY MOURNS JOURNALIST SLAIN IN TURKEY
    By Lindsey Mullikin, Daily Texan; SOURCE: Univ. of Texas

    Daily Texan via U-Wire
    University Wire
    January 24, 2007 Wednesday

    Mourners were given red carnations and copies of Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink's last article as they entered the memorial service held
    for him in the Sinclair Suite at the Texas Union at the University
    of Texas Tuesday night. Dink was shot to death in Turkey on Jan. 19.

    Various university organizations sponsored the memorial service,
    including the Armenian Cultural Association.

    Students were invited to share the importance Dink's work had in
    their lives.

    "It was one of the last things I expected to happen in my country,"
    said graduate student Emrah Zarifoglu. "He was always talking about
    unity."

    Dink was the editor of an Armenian-Turkish publication, Agos.

    Actively involved in the furtherance of democratization in Turkey,
    he utilized his paper to help unify the Armenian and Turkish peoples
    by bridging communication gaps between the two cultures.

    Over time, however, tensions began to rise between Dink and the
    Turkish community. In May 2006, he was charged by the Turkish court
    with "insulting Turkishness."

    After being convicted, matters got worse for Dink. In a later interview
    with The Associated Press, Dink revealed that he had been receiving
    numerous threatening messages. In what was to be his last article
    in Agos, the journalist expressed severe concerns for his personal
    safety. The day that article was published, he was assassinated
    outside of his newspaper's office building.

    The response to his death has been overwhelming. Tuesday in Turkey,
    more than 100,000 citizens paid tribute to the journalist by marching
    five miles. At the University of Texas, students celebrated the life
    that Dink led.

    "He was a voice of freedom and unity," said Taleen Asadourian, Plan
    II senior and president of the Armenian Cultural Association. She
    and others were glad that representatives from the Turkish University
    Students Association and Armenian Cultural Association attended the
    vigil. "It's symbolic to bring these groups together who historically
    haven't been," she said. Nearly all in attendance agreed.

    Dink was only 53 when he died, but his dream of unification will
    perhaps continue for generations to come.
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