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Turkey Restores Ancient Armenian Church As Museum, Armenia Calls On

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  • Turkey Restores Ancient Armenian Church As Museum, Armenia Calls On

    TURKEY RESTORES ANCIENT ARMENIAN CHURCH AS MUSEUM, ARMENIA CALLS ON TURKEY TO REOPEN BORDER
    Linda Young - All Headline News Staff Writer

    All Headline News
    March 30 2007

    Ankara, Turkey (AHN) - At a ceremony marking the restoration of the
    historic Akdamar Church the spiritual leader of Turkey's Armenian
    Orthodox community on Thursday issued a call for Turkey to open the
    ancient Armenian church to worship. Patriarch Mesrob II said that
    authorizing at least one worship service annually in the ancient church
    would help heal the rift caused by the mass slayings of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I.

    Turkey and Armenia do not have diplomatic ties, but 70,000 Armenians
    still live in Turkey and the Turkish government invited a delegation
    from Armenia to the ceremony.

    The head of the Armenian Apostolic Church declined an invitation
    to speak because the structure will not be used for worship, BBC
    news reported.

    The Akdamar church was originally built between 915 and 921. The
    Turkish government restored it, at a cost of $1.5 million, to use as
    a museum and cultural center.

    "Our request from our government is for a religious and cultural
    service to be held at the church every year and for a festival to be
    organized," Mesrob said, the International Herald-Tribune reported
    on Thursday.

    "If our government approves, it will contribute to peace between
    two communities who have not been able to come together for years,"
    he added.

    The Armenian government has said although it appreciates the
    restoration of the church that it would prefer to have the border
    between the countries opened. That border was closed in 1993 because of
    a war and the economy of landlocked Armenia has suffered as a result,
    the International Herald-Tribune reported.

    The sandstone church is perched on a rocky island in eastern Turkey.

    Over the past century the condition deteriorated, it was looted and
    riddled with bullet holes.
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