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Tens of thousands mourn ethnic-Armenian editor

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  • Tens of thousands mourn ethnic-Armenian editor

    Boston Globe, MA
    Jan 24 2007

    Tens of thousands mourn ethnic-Armenian editor
    Killing triggers soul searching in Turkey


    By Yesim Borg and Laura King, Los Angeles Times | January 24, 2007

    ISTANBUL -- Tens of thousands of mourners wound through the heart of
    this ancient city yesterday in the funeral procession for an
    ethnic-Armenian journalist whose killing triggered soul searching
    over national identity, freedom of expression, and the historical
    ghosts that shadow Turkey.

    Followed by the largely silent throng, a black hearse slowly bore the
    flower-strewn coffin of editor Hrant Dink to an Armenian Orthodox
    church, where he was eulogized as a voice of courage and conscience.
    A teenage nationalist reportedly has confessed to gunning down the
    52-year-old journalist Jan. 19 outside his office.

    The extraordinary display of public mourning shut down much of
    downtown Istanbul, whose narrow back alleys and wide boulevards are
    normally the scene of a raucous commercial free-for-all. Onlookers,
    many dabbing their eyes, leaned from balconies and watched from
    doorways as the cortege passed by. Some applauded, in the traditional
    sign of respect for honored dead.

    Dink, a Turkish citizen of Armenian extraction, was best known as an
    advocate for the rights of the country's Armenian minority --
    including efforts to win official recognition by Turkey that the
    deaths of some 1.5 million Armenians in the final years of the
    Ottoman empire constituted the first genocide of the 20th century.

    Turkey blames the deaths on fighting, cold, and hunger rather than
    any systematic campaign of extermination, a stance that is widely
    viewed internationally as an obstacle to its aspirations to join the
    European Union.

    Scores of Turkish academics, journalists, and novelists, including
    Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk, have been prosecuted under a provision
    known as Article 301, which contains a wide-ranging ban on "insulting
    Turkishness." Any public reference to an Armenian genocide, even in
    carefully couched language, can result in being hauled into court and
    possibly jailed, as Dink was.

    Hours before the daylong funeral rites began, mourners gathered
    outside the offices of Agos, Dink's newspaper, whose name refers to
    the nurturing of a seed. Many carried placards saying "We are all
    Armenians" and "We are all Hrant Dink."

    Even among those Turks who believe their country has been unfairly
    tarred with genocide allegations, the violent backlash by right-wing
    nationalists has prompted profound unease. Many were disturbed by the
    young age of the alleged killer, identified by authorities as
    17-year-old Ogun Samast, and the fact that he had apparently come
    under the sway of nationalist militants.

    A mood of quiet desolation pervaded the day's events. Loudspeakers
    played a mournful folk song. At the site of the slaying, his
    supporters released white doves.

    "I feel like I lost a brother," said Zeynep Catik, a 55-year-old
    housewife who joined the funeral procession. "Turkey lost one of its
    core values."

    The Armenian patriarch, Mesrob II, addressed the mourners, urging
    that the 60,000 Armenians living in Turkey be accepted as an integral
    part of society.

    "We still hope that [Turks] . . . will accept that the Armenians are
    Turkish citizens who have been living in this land for thousands of
    years, and are not foreigners or potential foes," he said.
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