Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey restores Armenian church to show goodwill

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

  • Turkey restores Armenian church to show goodwill

    International Herald Tribune, France
    March 23 2007

    Turkey restores Armenian church to show goodwill
    The Associated PressPublished: March 23, 2007


    AKDAMAR ISLAND, Turkey: An ancient Armenian church, perched on a
    rocky island in a vast lake, has become a modern symbol of the
    divisions and fitful efforts at reconciliation between Turks and
    Armenians whose history of bloodshed drives their troubled
    relationship.

    The Akdamar church, one of the most precious remnants of Armenian
    culture 1,000 years ago, deteriorated over the last century, a victim
    of neglect after Turks carried out mass killings of Armenians as the
    Ottoman Empire crumbled around the time of World War I. Rainwater
    seeped through the collapsed, conical dome, treasure-hunters dug up
    the basalt floor, and shepherds took potshots with rifles at the
    facade.

    Next week, the church will showcase Turkey's tentative steps to
    improve ties with its ethnic Armenian minority, as well as
    neighboring Armenia. Turkey completed a US$1.5 million restoration of
    the sandstone building, and invited Armenian officials to a ceremony
    there on March 29 to mark what Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan, has called a "positive" message.

    An Armenian deputy culture minister and other prominent Armenians
    plan to go. Armenia's foreign minister welcomed the restoration, but
    said Turkey mistakenly believed the project would prove that it was
    dedicated to better ties with its neighbor.

    "A positive sign and a move on the part of Turkey ... would be the
    opening of the border with Armenia and establishment of diplomatic
    relations," the news agency Armenpress quoted Foreign Minister Vartan
    Oskanian as saying this week. He said the Armenian delegation could
    reach the church near the city of Van in eastern Turkey by land in a
    few hours if the border were open, but instead will have to fly to
    Istanbul, and then take another flight back toward the Armenian
    border.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 during a war between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan, a Muslim ally of Ankara. The move hurt the
    economy of tiny, landlocked Armenia. Also, Turkey lobbied against a
    proposed resolution in the U.S. Congress that would recognize the
    killings of Armenians in the last century as genocide. Some of
    Turkey's 65,000 Armenian Orthdox Christians say they endure
    harassment in Turkey, whose population is overwhelmingly Muslim.

    Hrant Dink, an ethnic Armenian journalist murdered in Istanbul in
    January, was apparently targeted by nationalists who detested his
    commentaries on minority rights and free expression.

    Patriarch Mesrob II, the spiritual head of the Armenian Orthodox
    community in Turkey, has asked the government to mount a cross on top
    of the church, which used to have one, and to allow religious
    services to be held there on occasion.

    The government has yet to respond, but placement of a cross could be
    sensitive for the Islamic-rooted government of Erdogan, who plans to
    attend the inauguration ceremony. The symbolism could upset some
    Muslims, and a parallel force, Turkey's secular establishment, led by
    the powerful military, might regard it as a concession to Armenia and
    the Armenian diaspora.

    "It speaks well of the Turkish government that they paid for it and
    took the initiative to make it happen," said David Phillips, an
    advocate of Turkish-Armenian reconciliation who helped gather
    international restoration experts and architects for the church
    project. But he noted that Turkey views the site as a museum rather
    than a place of worship.

    "It runs the risk of being viewed as an antiquity, instead of a
    living symbol of Armenian culture and spiritual life," said Phillips,
    executive director of The Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity, in New
    York City.

    The European Union urged Turkey in 2004 to consider registering
    Akdamar in UNESCO's World Heritage List. The EU has also urged
    Turkey, a candidate for membership, to improve treatment of
    minorities.

    Relief carvings on the outer walls of the Akdamar church depict Jesus
    Christ, barefoot and bearded, holding the book of Gospels; a sea
    creature devouring Jonah as he is tossed from a ship; Abraham
    grabbing his son Isaac's hair and holding a knife as he prepares to
    sacrifice him; David with a slingshot facing the giant warrior,
    Goliath; and Adam and Eve, holding the forbidden fruit.

    "Akdamar is an extroverted church," said Zakarya Mildanoglu, an
    ethnic Armenian architect who helped restore it. "It doesn't hide its
    face."

    Reliefs also show the church's builder, Armenian King Gagik I, in an
    ornate robe and crown, vines and grapes, eagles, bears, a peacock,
    cockerels, a man killing a lion, and a lion pouncing on a deer.
    Inside the church, deep blue frescoes show biblical scenes, though
    many have been destroyed and the walls have big, blank patches.

    "Both the frescoes and relief sculpture appropriate Byzantine and
    Islamic visual traditions; the Abbasid caliphate was of course very
    strong by this time, and Byzantine art was understood as a visual
    language of prestige and power," Christina Maranci, an expert on
    medieval Armenian architecture at the University of Wisconsin in
    Milwaukee, wrote in an email. The church "presents a very interesting
    use of both," Maranci wrote.

    Renovators replaced fallen roof stones to prevent more damage to the
    interior, restored the floor, strengthened walls and cleaned
    frescoes. The church still bears marks of ill treatment, with
    graffiti scratched next to some carvings.

    Akdamar, called the Church of Surp Khach, or Holy Cross, was
    inaugurated in A.D. 921. Written records say the church was near a
    harbor and a palace on the island on Lake Van, but only the church
    survived.

    Many local residents supported the renovation because it could
    generate tourism. Some Turks posted critical articles on the
    Internet. A leader of an extreme nationalist party said he welcomed
    the restoration as long as it is not interpreted as a political
    overture.

    "We are not guilty of anything," said Mehmet Sandir, associate
    chairman of the Nationalist Movement Party. "Why should we be making
    gestures?"
Working...
X