Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Declaration of the European Armenian Federation on the occasion of H

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Declaration of the European Armenian Federation on the occasion of H

    Declaration of the European Armenian Federation on the occasion of Hrant Dink's funeral

    ArmRadio.am
    26.01.2007 11:52

    On the occasion of Hrant Dink's funerals, the Armenian journalist
    assassinated in Istanbul on January 19th, the European Armenian
    Federation pays tribute to the courage of this man who dared to talk
    about the Armenian Genocide in a State which persists in hiding this
    criminal truth from its citizens and continues its aggressive policy
    of denial at home and abroad.

    Hrant Dink was born in Malatya, a city where the vast majority of
    the Armenian inhabitants was exterminated and deported during the
    Genocide, an event which deeply affected Dink's family. His family was
    then forced to turkify its name under Mustafa Kemal's government,
    much as many other Armenian survivors who remained among those
    who had taken part in their destruction. Dink's family moved, many
    years later in the 1950s, to Istanbul, where -deprived of the normal
    avenues of educational advancement, Hrant and his two brothers were
    accepted into the academic care of the Armenian Evangelical Church
    of Besiktas. Since he began publishing "Agos," the Armenian Turkish
    bilingual weekly, 8 years ago, the main struggle of Hrant Dink was
    the recognition by Turkey of the Armenian Genocide.

    He took upon himself the mission of educating the Turkish people about
    the truth of the Armenian Genocide, a truth denied and falsified by
    successive Turkish governments. He was inspired by the government's
    superficial - and ultimately illusory - liberalization of discussion
    of this subject under pressure from the international community,
    and particularly Europe, on Turkey to join the family of civilized
    nations. These external trappings of tolerance were shown, by his
    assassination, to have been little more than window dressing intended
    to impress the outside world, while covering up an escalation of
    repression within Turkey's borders.

    Hrant Dink's struggle for Genocide recognition took place within the
    context of Turkey's desire for EU accession. He supported the Turkish
    government's effort to secure EU membership and fought against efforts
    in Europe and the United States to recognize the Armenian Genocide,
    holding that any such external pressure on Turkey would incite
    his country's "extremists" to greater heights of anti-Armenian
    "radicalisation." The tragic death of Hrant proves that Turkish
    extremists - acting on the cue of Turkish officials - need no such
    incitement to kill those who tell the truth.

    Dink's efforts led to great frustration, particularly as he came to
    understand that his path was blocked by entrenched forces within the
    Turkish state. Facing this hidden opposition and harsh public backlash
    it sparked, he considered leaving Turkey to live in Europe. In fact,
    prior to the European Summit of December 2004, fearing persecutions
    and outright execution if Turkey were rejected by the EU, he planned
    to never return in his country. Recently, condemned by the Turkish
    justice system for "insulting Turkishness," he reported widely on
    the racism he was subjected to as an Armenian in Turkey.

    Hrant Dink sought, until the end, to provide Europe with a positive -
    but ultimately false - image of Turkey as a place where the force
    of ideas can change the basic foundations of an authoritarian and
    ultra-nationalistic State. He paid with his life for this belief. It
    is regrettable to see that his death is not an isolated event in a
    society that was established - and continues to
    function - based on fostering hatred toward minorities.

    This is the same principle that led to the extermination of the
    Armenians. It is the same idea that currently fuels the denial of
    the Armenian Genocide - a continuation of this crime that must be
    forcefully condemned and legally prohibited within Europe.
Working...
X