Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Showing appreciation

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

  • Showing appreciation

    Burbank Leader, CA
    Jan 26 2008


    Showing appreciation

    Hundreds gather together at Burbank Armenian church honoring
    journalist killed a year ago in Turkey.

    By Chris Wiebe

    Several hundred people filled the Nazareth and Sima Kalaydjian Hall
    on Friday at the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church to
    commemorate the first anniversary of the assassination of journalist
    and editor Hrant Dink.

    Dink, 53, was fatally shot in Istanbul on Jan. 19, 2007, outside the
    bilingual Armenian and Turkish newspaper Agos, where he served as
    editor. Agos is considered one of the foremost voices for Turkey's
    Armenian population.

    The program Friday opened with a slide presentation showing snapshots
    of Dink's life, including several trips to the United States and a
    shot of him cradling the Henri Nannen Prize for the Freedom of the
    Press.

    In some of the photos, Dink was posing in the same room where
    mourners celebrated his memory Friday.

    Pulitzer Prize-winning Boston Globe reporter Stephen Kurkjian, who
    traveled to Turkey for Dink's funeral in January 2007, painted a
    picture of the scene in Istanbul after the editor's death, where
    Armenians and non-Armenians alike `came out of nowhere' to celebrate
    his memory. advertisement


    `The blood was still evident on the ground outside his office,'
    Kurkjian said.

    `And they were crying out in their tears and their grief, `We're all
    Hrant; we're all Armenian.''

    Nancy Kolligian, president of the National Assn. for Armenian Studies
    and Research, called Dink a man who understood the power of the
    written word, harnessing `brilliant jewels of thought' continue to
    affect Turkey.

    `His courage to express his words for Turkey to advance true
    democracy ultimately cost him his life,' she said.

    `However, his accomplishments outweigh his defeats.'

    During his life, Dink faced constant threats and intimidation in his
    home in Turkey.

    He advocated protecting human rights and fostering dialogue and
    reconciliation between Turks and Armenians.

    Dink's assassination came two and a half 2 1/2 months after visiting
    Glendale in November 2006, during a nationwide speaking tour.

    Glendale city officials - including Police Chief Randy Adams, Officer
    John Balian, Mayor Ara Najarian and former Councilman Rafi Manoukian
    - met with Dink during his visit, discussing crime and politics as
    Senior Assistant City Atty. Lucy Varpetian served as a translator.

    Dink said he was interested in the life of Armenians in America and
    that Armenians in Glendale, which has the largest population of
    Armenians in the United States, is an often-discussed topic abroad.

    Dink first rose to the international stage in October 2005, when the
    Turkish government convicted him on charges of inciting racial hatred
    and insulting Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey, in an
    article about the Armenian genocide.

    A court sentenced him to six months in jail but postponed the
    sentence, ordering him to serve the time only if he was found guilty
    on the charge a second time.

    Dink was awaiting a second trial at the time of his death.

    Turkish police say nationalist militant Yasin Hayal confessed to
    helping coordinate Dink's murder and recruited the alleged gunman,
    Ogun Samast, 17, according to reports.
Working...
X