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Ghost In The Hrant Dink Anniversary

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  • Ghost In The Hrant Dink Anniversary

    GHOST IN THE HRANT DINK ANNIVERSARY

    Get Religion
    http://www.getreligion.org/?p=3125
    Jan 29 2008
    DC

    I was going through some email from last week and found a note from
    a reader about coverage of the one-year anniversary of the death of
    the Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was killed after he
    challenged Turkey's official teachings on the early 20th-century mass
    killings - or genocide - of Armenians.

    Do you want to read a story that strives to ignore the religion
    angle of an international event? Check out the crucial part of the
    Associated Press report, as it appeared in the Boston Globe:

    Hrant Dink, who was the editor of the minority Agos newspaper, was
    shot outside his office allegedly by a hardline nationalist teenager.

    His killing led to international condemnation and debate within Turkey
    about free speech. A murder trial . . . is taking place behind closed
    doors because the alleged gunman is a minor. A total of 19 suspects
    are on trial. . . .

    Hrant Dink had sought to encourage reconciliation between Turkey and
    Armenia, but several years before his death he was prosecuted under
    Turkish law for describing the early 20th-century mass killings of
    Armenians as genocide.

    Historians estimate up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman
    Turks around the time of World War I, an event widely viewed by
    genocide scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey,
    however, denies the deaths constituted genocide, saying that the
    toll has been inflated and that those killed were victims of civil
    war and unrest.

    Turkey's top politicians, including the prime minister, have vowed
    a thorough investigation into Dink's killing. An Istanbul court is
    looking into allegations of official negligence or even collusion,
    but lawyers for Dink's family have said the investigation is flawed.

    That's most of the story. Notice anything missing in that?

    Now flash back one year to the International Herald Tribune report
    about the Dink funeral. This passage appears right after the lede:

    The Armenian patriarch, Mesrob II, spoke out during Dink's funeral
    service against curbs on freedom of expression and urged an expansion
    of the potentially thawing relations between Armenia and Turkey that
    have become evident since the slaying.

    "It is unacceptable to judge and imprison someone because of his
    thoughts, let alone to kill him," Mesrob said during the hourlong
    service at the Holy Mother of God Armenian Patriarchal Church. "It
    is mystical that his funeral turned into an occasion where Armenian
    and Turkish officials gathered together."

    More than 600 people squeezed into the 175-year-old church, and
    hundreds more followed the service from loudspeakers in the side
    rooms, while still more waited in the nearby alleys of the diversified
    neighborhood. Inside, white flowers in the shape of a cross lay on
    Dink's coffin, as three close friends stood on each side holding
    candles tied with black ribbons.

    Now, it is true that funerals take place inside churches - as a rule.

    Of course, Turkey is not your usual place, with its rigid attempts
    to maintain its unique status as a "secular Muslim" country.

    So the status of the Armenian church - or any other church,
    for that matter - is at the very heart of this story. Dink was
    a Turkish-Armenian. Both sides of that troubled equation carry
    religious content.

    All of this looms over one of the most important stories today
    in Western culture, which is the attempt to bring Turkey into the
    European Union. Turkey is, of course, the historic door between East
    and West and, today, between Europe and the Islamic world.

    This fits into several other stories, such as the recent visit to
    Istanbul by Greek Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis. Also, the current
    state of Christianity in that region may be impacted by the death -
    of cancer at the age of 69 - of the dynamic leader of the Orthodox
    Church in Greece, Archbishop Christodoulos.

    So what do you think is the most symbolic issue facing Turkey, in
    its contacts with Greece at the moment? Here is a key passage near
    the end of the Times report, with a quote from Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan:

    Turkey, predominantly Muslim and less determinedly secular than in
    the past, will not recognize the patriarch of the Eastern Orthodox
    Church as a religious leader of global standing. It contends that
    doing so would encourage separatism among religious minorities in
    Turkey. Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I is the spiritual leader
    of the world's nearly 200 million Eastern Orthodox Christians. . . .

    Mr. Erdogan brushed off the issue of Turkey's recognition of the
    church's international standing but hinted that progress was possible
    toward reopening the last Eastern Orthodox seminary in Turkey, on
    the island of Heybeliada, which was closed by Turkish courts in 1972.

    Now do the math. Bishops in Turkey - as well as the ecumenical
    patriarch - must be Turkish citizens. Yet the state closed the last
    seminary and monastery 35 years ago. How do you have a patriarch in
    the Phanar (the besieged headquarters of Eastern Orthodoxy in Turkey)
    if you have few, if any, bishops? How can you have bishops, in Eastern
    Orthodoxy, if you have no monks? How can you have Turkish priests if
    you have no seminary?

    This issue has been dragging on and on and on, as I discovered during
    a visit to Istanbul a few years ago.

    And what about that second photo with this post? Here is how I
    described this historic gate, after visiting the Phanar in 2004:

    Visitors enter through a door secured by a guardhouse, locks and
    a metal-screening device. They cannot enter the Phanar's main gate
    because it was welded shut in 1821 after the Ottoman Turks hanged
    Patriarch Gregory V from its lintel. The black doors have remained
    sealed ever since.

    A decade ago, bombers who tried to open this gate left a note: "We
    will fight until the Chief Devil and all the occupiers are chased off;
    until this place, which for years has contrived Byzantine intrigues
    against the Muslim people of the East is exterminated. . . . Patriarch
    you will perish!"

    I think there are religious ghosts - a few of them - in these
    stories. I hope the Associated Press and other news organizations
    will note them from time to time, such as follow-up stories on the
    anniversaries of highly symbolic murders.
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