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Funeral of Hrant Dink, Istanbul, 23/01/07

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  • Funeral of Hrant Dink, Istanbul, 23/01/07

    Funeral of Hrant Dink, Istanbul, 23/01/07

    Words: Jerome Taylor,

    The Independent - United Kingdom
    Published: Jan 24, 2007

    The crowd

    In an extraordinary outpouring of public grief and spontaneous protest
    against militant Turkish nationalism, more than 100,000 mourners march
    through Istanbul in a funeral procession for the slain Turkish-Armenian
    writer and editor Hrant Dink, who was gunned down last week outside
    his office.

    The media

    The assassination of Hrant Dink has caused a media sensation in Turkey.
    Just four weeks ago, media buses like these were placed across the
    country's capital to record Turkey's notoriously buoyant New Year
    celebrations. Now they capture a very different national mood: anger
    and defiance.

    The mourned writer

    One of Turkey's best known Armenian writers, Dink paid the ultimate
    price for encouraging reconciliation between his country's Turkish
    and Armenian populations. His insistence on recognising the Armenian
    genocide not only landed him in court, but also, it appears, infuriated
    ultranationalists enough to want
    him dead.

    The family

    Dink's immediate family follow directly behind the hearse as it winds
    its way through the streets of Istanbul. His daughter Sera marches in
    front of the coffin carrying a portrait of her father, as the former
    editor's close friends
    and colleagues link arms to f lank the hearse.

    The flowers

    Crammed on to every overpass and bridge lining the funeral route,
    thousands more people clap as the procession goes by and throw
    blood-red roses on to the
    hearse. Roses have come to symbolise Dink's assassination, and shrines
    bearing his portrait bedecked with the f lowers have sprung up across
    the city.

    The flagless protest

    In a country where Turks are taught from a young age to revere their
    country, its f lag and their secular, nationalist founder Kamal
    Ataturk, the procession's anti-nationalist stance is noticeable for
    its lack of Turkish f lags, a symbol found f luttering on f lagpoles
    across the country.

    The placards

    Mourners hold placards and wear T-shirts with provocative slogans
    (including "We are all Armenians" and "Shoulder to shoulder against
    fascism") in Armenian, Turkish and Kurdish. Such condemnation of Dink's
    murderers is astonishing in a country where the use of non-Turkish
    languages is controversial.

    The route

    The procession travels through five miles of unusually traffic-free
    Istanbul. It began at the bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper where
    Dink was editor, winding through Taksim Square and over the Golden
    Horn to a small Armenian church, passing some of the city's most
    iconic tourist spots along the way.
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