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ANKARA: Turkey's Armenians In Crossfire Between 'fanatics' On Both S

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  • ANKARA: Turkey's Armenians In Crossfire Between 'fanatics' On Both S

    TURKEY'S ARMENIANS IN CROSSFIRE BETWEEN 'FANATICS' ON BOTH SIDES

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 14 2007

    Photo: Archbishop Mesrob Mutafyan, patriarch to Turkey's Armenian
    community, feels Turkish Armenians are caught in the crossfire as
    fanatics on either side attack one another.

    Speaking to Zaman daily journalist Nuriye Akman, Patriarch Mesrob
    II expressed his frustration with religiously motivated attacks in
    Turkey, including last year's killing of an Italian pastor and the
    more recent slaying of three Bible publishers in Malatya.

    "I can say that we sometimes experience the feeling of 'being stuck
    in between' Turkish and Armenian fanatics. This sometimes appears to
    me as being stuck in a crossfire and sometimes two kinds of love. Two
    fires, for the nationalists on both sides are firing at each other
    unabated, which is harder on us as the Armenians of Turkey. Two
    kinds of love, because we have adopted and we love the language,
    traditions and culture of both sides. For this reason, as I always
    say, establishing peace between these two peoples would make Turkey's
    Armenians the most happy."

    The patriarch also told Akman that having lived in a Muslim country for
    centuries offered the benefits of an environment of tolerance between
    different religions. "Church bells ringing and the Muslim prayer call
    mix with each other, particularly in Ýstanbul, and create a mystical
    atmosphere. At the end of the day both the church bell and the ezan
    praise God's name and call believers to prayer. We should stand against
    any formation that might threaten this environment of tolerance."

    Mesrob II also said he found it hard to believe what was currently
    going on in Turkey. "In the neighborhood where I grew up we all lived
    together as Turks, Armenians, Greeks and Jews and played together as
    kids. Everybody used to know the dates of holidays for all religions
    and exchanged greetings during these times. Now that I look at these
    recent painful incidents we have been through I hardly know my country
    that I had known as well as my own life."

    The patriarch also expressed his opinion that it was time for Turkey
    to improve dialogue with Armenia and the diaspora. "Journalists, youth
    organizations, academics and civil society organizations should make
    frequent visits to both countries and improve humane relations between
    the two countries. Difficult issues could be dealt with later. First
    mutual confidence and understanding should be established."

    Patriarch Mesrob II also offered his belief that if Turkey's Armenian
    community was represented in the Turkish Parliament it would contribute
    greatly to improving tolerance and understanding. "If our political
    parties were more supportive of Armenian students who might be
    interested in politics, they would have made a concrete step to
    improve the more abstract concepts of citizenship and tolerance."

    Common grounds between Islam and Christianity

    The patriarch said there were many common points between Islamic and
    Christian mysticism. "Mysticism is actually tantamount to transcending
    the dogma. Is it possible not to agree with [Turkish Sufi thinker]
    Mevlana Jelaluddin Rumi on most issues?" He said Mevlana's message
    was most important, referring to Mevlana's widely known poem, "Come,
    come again, whoever you are, come!" The patriarch interpreted Mevlana's
    call as an invitation to the door of God. He also said he respected
    Islam's Prophet Mohammed as the founder of a great civilization. "I
    feel great respect," he explained.

    Sarkozy in France

    The patriarch expressed hopes that Nicolas Sarkozy, who recently
    won the presidential elections in France, would change his staunchly
    anti-Turkish discourse once he took office. In response to a question
    asking what would happen if a bill, taken up by the French Parliament
    earlier, criminalizing the denial of Armenian claims of a genocide
    committed by the Ottoman Turks in 1915, the patriarch said if the
    bill reappeared on the agenda it would harm French-Turkish relations.

    Instead, he opined that a board of Turkish and Armenian historians
    as well as French historians should be set up to investigate
    the allegations and the relations of the two nations throughout
    centuries. "True, painful events happened under the Union and Progress
    government [which came to power in 1908], however it would be wrong
    to leave an entire history behind the shadow of those incidents,
    given the friendly relations the Turkish and Armenian people have
    had since the fifth century."

    --Boundary_(ID_PP5tTNJ3akTaioU90Yk rNg)--
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