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ANKARA: PIPPA BACCA: Dead But Not Forgotten

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  • ANKARA: PIPPA BACCA: Dead But Not Forgotten

    PIPPA BACCA: DEAD BUT NOT FORGOTTEN
    Fazä°Le Zahä°R Muä~^La

    Today's Zaman
    April 20 2008
    Turkey

    Hrant Dink, a well-known Turkish-Armenian journalist, was the last
    murder victim to inspire a mass reaction of sympathy from the Turkish
    nation. His death was followed by demonstrators wearing placards saying
    "We are all Hrant" to underline their empathy for and sympathy with
    the man, his grieving family and the cause of the Armenian citizens
    he represented.

    Now the nation's women have taken to the streets wearing similar
    placards, but these say "We are Pippa."

    Pippa Bacca was an Italian performance artist who decided to make
    a public and personal plea for peace in areas of conflict. With her
    friend Sylvia Moro, they designed wedding dresses and the two women set
    out as "Brides on Tour" to hitchhike from Milan to Tel Aviv. Leaving
    Italy on March 8 they proceeded with little trouble through Eastern
    Europe and reached Ä°stanbul at the end of March. Here they decided
    to take different paths across the country and meet up again in
    Beirut. Pippa was in touch daily with family and friends by mobile
    phone messages.

    On March 31 these texts abruptly stopped. Her family raised the alarm
    and her sister and fiancée flew to Turkey.

    The Turkish police put a trace on Pippa's phone's unique IMEI
    ((International Mobile Equipment Identity) number and on Friday April
    11 they caught truck driver Murat KabataÅ~_ after he used it. He
    confessed to having picked Pippa up just outside the industrial
    northern town of Gebze and to dumping her naked body in a shallow
    grave after having raped and strangled her. In addition to her phone,
    the Turkish police found parts of her necklace in the truck cabin and
    her camera at his house. She had taken photos of all the people who had
    offered her lifts -- the final photo she had taken was of KabataÅ~_.

    The reaction to the violation and brutal murder of this vibrant 33
    year old has been enormous. The country was both embarrassed and
    mournful. The Hurriyet newspaper ran a headline announcing "We are
    ashamed" and Milliyet had one that said "Siamo Molto Addolorati"
    (Our pain is great). Prime Minister Erdogan made a personal statement
    that he was deeply saddened by the murder of such a remarkable
    peace envoy and expressed gratitude to Pippa's family who have been
    highly benevolent in their press statements toward Turkey and Turks
    in general.

    Elena Manzoni, Pippa's mother, has led her family through the crisis
    and has, since the discovery of Pippa's body late last week, been
    very kind in all her comments: "We cannot blame all Turks for this
    incident. No one could have predicted my daughter would encounter such
    a maniac." Her sister, Antonietta Pasqualino, followed her mother's
    lead, adding that there were "bad people everywhere" and telling
    interviewers that her sister "had been talking about Turkey a lot;
    she was so impressed."

    The family's stoicism and their refusal to blame Turks for their
    daughter's death combined with the poignant image of the raped bride
    dying for the cause of international peace have set the nation's
    imagination aflame. In a country of hopeless romantics, idealists
    and dreamers Pippa Bacca may well have, in death, found her true
    spiritual home.

    The tributes have been fast in coming. On April 14 Gebze Mayor Ä°brahim
    Pehlivan released a statement saying that council representatives
    would be going to Ankara to offer an official apology on behalf of
    their town to the Italian consulate and Pippa's family. They were also
    going to consult with the people of Gebze and either form a group to
    finish her walk or erect a monument to peace in the town.

    On April 15 a memorial service was held at the Italian consulate in
    Ankara. Women's groups in attendance carried signs saying "NO to the
    rapist violence of men" and "Peace." Again on April 15, Hayrettin
    Bulan, the head of Å~^efkat-Der, a group that runs a women's shelter
    and works on behalf of abused women, whose headquarters is in the
    city of Konya, said: "We have given her the nickname Angel Pippa and
    we are going to name one of our shelters after her. ... She is an
    angel in our eyes and we want to draw the whole world's attention
    to her message of peace and the fight against violence and rape of
    women." On the same day 30 women from the city of Antalya's Women's
    Parliament donned wedding gowns and veils and walked silently and in
    single file through the main streets of their town, carrying banners
    saying, "We are all ambassadors of peace." They demanded that all
    women be safe and free to walk the streets and were applauded en route.

    A day later Hurriyet columnist Mehmet Yılmaz wrote a piece calling on
    Turkish women to come forward and finish Pippa's walk and has already
    sought the support of leading women's magazine Elele. The magazine's
    editor has promised to provide wedding dresses and cover the expenses
    of the journey. He believes that Pippa should be an inspiration. "What
    if we were to transform Pippa's 'peace walk' into the 'freedom walk'
    of Turkish women in our country? ... Let's get moving. Let's stop just
    feeling sorry. If we don't take this opportunity to claim the right
    for women to walk freely down streets and roads of this country now,
    we never will!" Pippa's own family has now flown her body home for
    burial and is focusing its energy on bringing the now iconic wedding
    gown back to Milan to be displayed in a memorial exhibition.

    As well as bringing out the best in some people, the murder has
    brought out the worst in others. Web site forums have been lively with
    criticism of both Pippa and Turks. An article on www.ynetnews.com,
    an online Israeli newspaper outlining Pippa's intentions of
    finishing her walk in Tel Aviv, has rampantly hostile comments,
    including "Muslim barbarity strikes again against foreigners" and:
    "It is clearly stated in their scriptures what Muslims are forced
    to do to non-Muslims. Going to a Muslim country means you are
    putting yourself in a life threatening situation," as well as
    "Laugh out loud, that's what you get when trying to make peace
    with Muslims." Another Web site (for self-confessed skeptics),
    www.jref.com <http://www.jref.com>, announced "Irony has a new name:
    Pippa Bacca." The members of this forum accuse Pippa of being suicidal,
    stupid, naive and gullible. "Her name, 'Bacca,' sounds just like
    the Japanese word 'Baka' (idiot/fool). One can only hope news of her
    death will prevent others from being so foolish" and: "I wonder what
    her mental age was. No 33-year-old thinks that all you need is trust,
    right? But if her mental age really was 33, what went wrong then?"

    Groups that condemn both Pippa and the Turks are those who face the
    future with pessimism. Pippa herself was a determined optimist,
    willing to do more than just write on the "walls" of public Web
    sites. The terrible truth of the story is that like most martyrs for
    a cause, Pippa, through her death may have actually accomplished more
    for peace than she would have, had her walk been completed without
    incident. Her murder has sent a powerful message about peace and about
    the continuing struggle of women for personal safety -- she became
    what she was demonstrating about a powerless player caught up in
    the turmoil and violence of a stronger party. The reaction in Turkey
    shows these people have the heart and soul to understand her message.

    --Boundary_(ID_EelGyKCAfwbGiBzqT7jtWw)--
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