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  • The death of a hero

    Ottawa Citizen
    January 28, 2007 Sunday
    Final Edition

    The death of a hero

    by David Warren, The Ottawa Citizen

    Hrant Dink, a Christian Turk of Armenian extraction, was the editor
    of Agos, a prominent weekly in Istanbul. He campaigned fearlessly for
    recognition in Turkey of historical facts surrounding the forced
    expulsions and massacres of Armenians in 1915-17, when the "Young
    Turks" governed the collapsing Ottoman Empire. He also campaigned for
    Turkish-Armenian reconciliation, thus earning the enmity of radicals
    on both sides. And he campaigned for open democracy.

    Last year, he was tried and convicted under Article 301 of the
    Turkish penal code, for "insulting Turkishness." That is an article
    that has been used repeatedly to silence discussion of the Armenian
    holocaust. He wrote in his newspaper of the pain he felt, at being
    taken as an enemy of his own country. Also of the pain of receiving
    constant death threats and having to behave like a pigeon, "always
    alert, looking right, left, in front, behind."

    Hrant was gunned down on Jan. 19. Ogun Samast, a 17-year-old high
    school dropout, has confessed the murder, declaring that Hrant had
    "dirtied Turkish blood." Turkish police have made several further
    arrests, for the boy was obviously not acting entirely on his own.

    >From an account of the funeral, by an eyewitness in Istanbul:

    "It started with a memorial service in the street in front of the
    Agos offices. His widow gave a passionate speech, written in the form
    of a letter to her husband. Speaking of the killer, she wrote, 'We
    know he was once a baby. Without questioning the darkness that can
    turn a baby into a killer, nothing will change.' She also quoted John
    15:13: 'No one can have greater love than to lay down his life for
    his friends.'

    "In spite of being surrounded by tens of thousands of people, during
    much of the service a white dove stayed on top of the black vehicle
    that held Hrant's coffin."

    This last is the sort of detail journalists instinctively delete from
    copy, since it will be disputed no matter how many witnesses there
    were. (The dove was one of many released at the funeral.) But the
    fact that, according to Turkish press, as many as 100,000 walked the
    eight-kilometre route of the procession is itself remarkable. And the
    fact that many chanted, "We are all Armenians!" in Turkish, when they
    were mostly Turks, must serve to remind my reader that no country can
    be painted in one colour.

    The Columbia Journalism Review has described Turkish penal code 301
    as "a law that stinks of suppression of speech." For once I agree
    with the CJR. And yet before we think, smugly, that we do not have
    such laws in the West, we must look at the whole tendency of
    "political correctness," which is to stink in like manner.

    Everywhere I can see, we are losing the finest achievement of
    liberalism. Not of "gliberalism," as I call it -- the degenerate
    child of liberalism, which embraces its forms and denies its content
    -- but of the fine tradition itself, of opening rat's nests of state
    and clerical privilege, and exposing human claims to free enquiry.

    True liberalism originated in the impulse to tell the truth, and in
    so doing, "vindicate the ways of God to man."

    Free speech in all its forms, including freedom of the press,
    airwaves, and web, is something beyond law that goes into the dye and
    fabric of a society. It is not licence, and it dies when it becomes
    licentious. It exists, while it survives, for a purpose -- "that we
    may know the truth, and the truth will set us free." Free speech
    exists so that the truth may be defended, and so that ugly lies,
    dressed up as pretty platitudes and plausibilities, can be exposed
    and destroyed.

    Hrant was a true hero of journalism -- though few of his licentious
    colleagues around the world will ever remember his name or care for
    his mission. The massacre of around 1.5 million Armenians is not
    something that will ever stay swept under a Turkish carpet.

    Its denial by Turkish nationalists and Muslim chauvinists can serve
    no honest cause. Lies serve only lies.

    Yet freedom is indivisible. Hrant had last made news in October, when
    he attacked a French parliamentary bill that would have made denial
    of the Armenian holocaust a criminal offence. He called this the flip
    side of the coin, and said: "Those who restrict freedom of expression
    in Turkey and those who try to restrict it in France are of the same
    mentality."

    David Warren's column appears Sunday, Wednesday and Saturday.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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