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  • He believed his love for his country would save him

    He believed his love for his country would save him: Murdered editor Hrant
    Dink did more than most dared hope to bring Turkey - and his two peoples -
    towards peace

    FIACHRA GIBBONS

    The Guardian - United Kingdom
    Jan 22, 2007

    The last time I met Hrant Dink he joked that he was "not dead
    yet". The next time I saw him was on television last Friday, murdered
    outside the newspaper he founded in Istanbul. Even with all the death
    threats, he believed his clear love of his country would save
    him. "They don't shoot pigeons here." Dink was an orphan. He was
    given up by his parents when he was still a small boy. To be an
    orphan in Turkey, a country where family is all, is a heavy burden.
    To be an Armenian orphan in Turkey is to simultaneously carry the
    genocide and the troubled consciences of all you walk among.

    Dink spent his life trying to create a new family that could
    accommodate people like him and the millions more who do not fit into
    the officially prescribed straitjacket of what it means to be a
    Turk. He tried to rid his country, and his two peoples of the
    nightmare of the death and the denial dividing them.

    It is all the more painfully tragic that in his own death he has been
    accepted into the Turkish family in a way that he never quite achieved
    during his lifetime.

    Dink's murder has shamed Turkey, just as his prosecution under the
    preposterous article 301 of the new penal code, which created the
    offence of insulting Turkishness, shamed it. All the more so that the
    judges - heroes in their own heads no doubt of Turkey's cherished
    secular order - had to horribly distort an article he wrote berating
    the Armenian diaspora, somehow claiming that his words poisoned the
    blood of Armenians with hatred of Turks, in order to somehow convict
    him.

    What rankled most with him to the end was that he had been held by the
    state to have insulted Turks. "I wish he could hear the thousands of
    people lining up all the way from Osmanbey to Harbiye shouting, 'We
    are all Hrant, we are all Armenian!'" a friend of his told me on the
    night of the killing.

    Only those who know Turkey can possibly imagine the emotional charge
    released by those last four words. Just as they will have winced at
    what the boy who shot him in the back of the head shouted as he ran
    away: "I have killed the gavur [the infidel, the foreigner]." Ogun
    Samast, the 16-year-old who has apparently now confessed to killing
    Dink, comes from Trabzon, where last spring, after the publication of
    the Muhammad cartoons, a boy of 15 walked into a church and shot an
    Italian priest in the back of the head.

    Trabzon and the whole Black Sea coast was one of the last places in
    Turkey where Islam took hold. But, like eastern Anatolia, it was also
    a place where many thousands died in the chaos of the Ottoman empire's
    collapse, mainly Greek-speaking Pontian Christians massacred for
    aiding the Russian invaders.

    Later, faced with flight to Georgia or forced migration to Greece,
    many apparently converted to Islam to remain. Even in Turkey, a place
    often unhappy in its own skin, there is a particular unease about the
    past on the Black Sea. Many of its inhabitants are acutely aware that
    a few generations ago they may have been neither Turkish nor Muslim -
    like the ancestors of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime
    minister.

    This often shows itself in self-consciously insistent nationalism or
    religious observance, two seemingly irreconcilable credos that have
    found common cause as Europe has shown ugly signs of Islamophobia and
    Turcophobia and, in the past few months, Turkey's EU accession process
    has stalled.

    No one would be angrier than Dink if his death were to give succour to
    Austrian or French politicians determined to keep Turkey out of
    Europe. He never saw acceptance of the Armenian genocide as a
    prerequisite for entry into Europe any more than it was for the
    Austrians, French, Poles, Lithuanians or Hungarians to face up to
    their part in the Holocaust.

    When the French parliament made denial of the Armenian genocide a
    crime last year, he even offered go to Paris to be the first to defy
    the new law for the sake of free speech. For him it was not just a
    matter for Turkey's conscience, or about rebuilding relations with its
    neighbour, Armenia, although all of this was important; most of all it
    was for the mental health of Turks. It was Turkey - and not the gavurs
    or the Armenian diaspora, who kept bringing it up - that was really
    suffering.

    Turkey has a long way to go to be at peace with itself, but a process
    has begun. And it has already gone further than anyone might have
    dared to dream a decade ago, thanks in good part to Hrant Dink. He did
    not just preach generosity, bravery and forgiveness, he lived it.

    Which is why he walked out of his office on Friday rather than hide
    away as if he had anything to be ashamed of. His newspaper is called
    Agos, after the Armenian word for opening a furrow for planting. It is
    for others now to stand at his plough.

    Fiachra Gibbons is writing a book on the Ottoman legacy in Europe
    [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])
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