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Christian rebirth in southeastern Turkey amid calm, EU bid

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  • Christian rebirth in southeastern Turkey amid calm, EU bid

    Associated Press Worldstream
    December 30, 2004 Thursday 10:13 AM Eastern Time

    Christian rebirth in southeastern Turkey amid calm, EU bid

    by JAMES C. HELICKE; Associated Press Writer

    HABERLI, Turkey


    Nine-year-old Ninua Saliba played hide-and-seek outside a stone,
    seventh century village church as men drank tea and chatted in an
    ancient tongue similar to the one spoken by Jesus Christ.

    These Assyrian Christians, a tiny minority in Muslim Turkey, were
    waiting for the local Turkish governor who was making Christmas
    visits. Such visits would have been inconceivable just a few years
    ago, when the Christian community in southeastern Turkey was caught
    in the middle of fighting between Turkish security forces and
    autonomy-seeking Kurdish rebels.

    But now a sharp decrease in the fighting, and Turkey's bid to join
    the European Union are giving one of the world's most ancient
    Christian communities more hope that it can preserve its traditions
    in a region long considered its spiritual center.

    Turkey, which faces EU pressure to grant greater rights to
    minorities, is encouraging thousands of Assyrians who left the
    impoverished region to return and rebuild a community that has shrunk
    to just a few thousand. Dozens have returned so far, Assyrians say.

    Gov. Osman Gunes, the top government official in the region, paid a
    Christmas visit to Assyrian towns and monasteries this year and
    welcomed those who had come back.

    "If there hadn't been peace, we wouldn't have returned," said Ninua's
    father, Erden, who spent his first Christmas in Haberli since he and
    his wife left the village to work in Switzerland more than two
    decades ago. "We're here to live in solidarity with the other
    villagers."

    Saliba's wife, Sara, offered guests Swiss angel-shaped Christmas
    cookies as they sat in front of a Christmas tree in their new, stone
    three-story home, which towers over the other houses in the village
    of some 140 people.

    Erden Saliba said the family of five easily secured Turkish
    permission to return, but described other difficulties facing
    Assyrians in the village. Besides such nuisances as frequent power
    cuts and lack of public sewerage facilities, Saliba said there was no
    suitable school for Ninua and her two older brothers, who cannot
    speak Turkish.

    Unlike such officially recognized religious minorities as Jews and
    Greek Orthodox Christians, Assyrians are not permitted to run schools
    in their language, Syriac, a modern version of Aramaic, the language
    of Jesus.

    Government-paid Kurdish militiamen stand guard at the road leading to
    the village. In another reminder of the conflict with Kurdish
    separatists, a sign outside a Turkish paramilitary police outpost at
    the village's entrance proclaims: "The motherland is a whole and
    cannot be divided."

    Saliba said that 30 years ago, around 75 families lived in the
    village, a rural farming community filled with stone houses, ancient
    ruins, and carved churches. Now only 20 or so families remain. Most
    have left for work abroad or to avoid the strife.

    The neighboring village, Sarikoy, suffered more. The military
    evacuated residents from there during the fighting, villagers say.

    Fikri Turan returned from Germany to Sarikoy to find his house
    reduced to rubble and the village occupied by Kurdish militiamen who
    refused to leave until the governor intervened.

    Human rights groups say soldiers forcibly emptied thousands of
    villages throughout the region in a move aimed at depriving Kurdish
    rebels of local support.

    Turan spent Christmas at the 4th century Mor Gabriel monastery, one
    of the world's oldest, where visitors from Europe attended morning
    services.

    For Assyrians, the clashes of the 1980s and 1990s were only the most
    recent in a series of challenges to a community that traces its
    origins to the ancient Assyrian Empire, which peaked between the 9th
    and 7th centuries B.C.

    According to tradition, Assyrians began adopting Christianity in the
    first century A.D., 600 years before the region was conquered by Arab
    Muslim armies. The area remains important for Assyrian Christians,
    and the nearby Deyr-ul Zaferan monastery served as home to the
    Assyrian patriarchate until 1933.

    Assyrians say the community here once numbered hundreds of thousands,
    but that many of them, like Armenians, were victims of mass killings
    during World War I that the two communities have labeled genocide.

    Turkish officials say the killings resulted from civil unrest and
    that the death count - which some Assyrian groups put at hundreds of
    thousands - is inflated.

    Mass migration abroad and, finally, the fighting in the southeast
    reduced the number of Christians in the region to an estimated 2,000
    to 4,000. Many Assyrians left for Europe, North America, or Istanbul,
    and other communities remain in Iraq, Syria and Iran.

    Fighting fell sharply after the 1999 capture of Kurdish guerrilla
    leader Abdullah Ocalan, although rebel attacks against security
    forces have picked up in recent months.

    The EU, too, noted disapprovingly in an October report that "very
    few" Assyrians have returned because of harassment from Kurdish
    militiamen and paramilitary police.
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