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ANKARA: Aramaic Toponyms in Turkey - Demand of the Aramaean Diaspora

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  • ANKARA: Aramaic Toponyms in Turkey - Demand of the Aramaean Diaspora

    American Chronicle
    May 23 2009


    Aramaic Toponyms in Turkey ` A Demand of the Aramaean Diaspora

    Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis

    In this article, I republish an Open Letter to Mr. BeÅ?ir
    Atalay, Interior Minister of Turkey, which was made public by
    J. Messo, President of the Syriac Universal Alliance a few days
    ago. In forthcoming articles, I will focus on the subject extensively.

    Att. Mr. BeÅ?ir Atalay

    Interior Minister

    T.C. İçiÅ?leri BakanlıÄ?ı,
    Bakanl&#xC4 ;±klar

    ankaya, 06640 Ankara

    Turkey

    Subject: Request to reverse Turkification of ancient Aramaic (Syriac)
    place?names

    Stockholm, Monday 18 May, 2009

    Honorable Minister Atalay,

    We appeal to you on behalf of the Syriac Universal Alliance (SUA), the
    worldwide umbrella organization of all the national Federations of the
    Aramean / Syriac people (Turk.: Süryaniler).

    With great enthusiasm, we have welcomed your audacious statements in
    the Turkish media relating to reverting the thousands of Turkish
    place?names to their original languages. You were quoted as saying
    that this issue is currently not on your agenda, to which you added:

    "If there is a local demand, why not?" This demand, in fact, does
    exist among our people.

    Ancient Aramaic place and family names

    Mr. Minister, you may or may not be aware of the ancient history of
    our people in Turkey. Aramaic inscriptions as well as external
    evidence, such as Biblical and Assyrian sources, testify to the
    omnipresence of Semitic Aramean principalities (not to be confused
    with Indo?European Armenians) in southeastern Anatolia from the
    late second millennium BC onwards.

    Modern Diyarbakır, for example, called Ämid since the
    earliest stages of Aramaic, was the capital of the city?state
    BÄ`th ZammÄ?ni, which included the plateau of Mardin (an
    Aramaic plural form). Southeast of Ämid and currently belonging to
    the Mardin province, lies the region of Tur ´Abdin, which again
    is Aramaic for "the mountain of the servants [of God]."

    In his book on the early history of Tur ´Abdin, Dr. Andrew
    Palmer observed about this area:

    "Not only are several of the village names still in use, even these
    types of farming and the same skill in metalwork are characteristic of
    the ancient Aramaic stock of Christians who are the hereditary
    inhabitants of the plateau."

    In addition to the very old tradition of Aramaic toponyms that have
    been preserved to date, the way Aramaic family names/surnames are
    styled by means of B(Ä`) plus a personal name, usually a prominent
    ancestor, demonstrates that the familial identification of the present
    day Arameans is inextricably connected with the typical Aramean
    society in Antiquity.

    Excluded from Lausanne Treaty and subjected to onomatocide
    ("name-murder")

    As you know, in 1923 Turkey signed the Peace Treaty of
    Lausanne. Despite the fact that Articles 37?45 guaranteed the
    (inter)national protection and rights of the non?Muslim and
    non?Turkish nationals, the Arameans were never granted formal
    recognition by Turkey as a "minority" as formulated in this
    Convention.

    Consequently, they have never enjoyed their basic human rights, but
    instead had to suffer in many ways from discrimination. For example,
    in theory the Arameans should have been given "an equal right to
    establish, manage and control at their own expense, any charitable,
    religious and social institutions, any schools and other
    establishments for instruction and education, with the right to use
    their own language and to exercise their own religion freely therein"
    (Art. 40).

    In practice, however, Aramean teachers were imprisoned for teaching
    Aramaic. In more recent times, state officials had even attempted to
    permanently close down the Christian monasteries of Kurkmo / Zafaran
    in Mardin (1978) and Mor Gabriel in Midyat (1997) for teaching
    Aramaic.

    In the decades following Turkey´s ratification of the Lausanne
    Treaty, several state policies and methods were implemented in order
    to Turkify all the ´minorities´ in Turkey, irrespective
    of their ethno?religious and linguistic backgrounds. A case in
    point concerns the Turkification of indigenous names, which had begun
    as early as 1915. But the most notable years are in:

    1. 1934, when the "Surname Law" was adopted by the Turkish
    Government. This law prohibits the use of non?Turkish sounds,
    letters and full names.


    2. 1957, when the "Expert Commission for Name Change" was created. In
    the next 21 years, the names of no less than 28,000 villages were
    changed. Between 1983 and 2000, this committee continued its work and
    renamed another 200 villages.

    Turkey´s systematic efforts to destroy existing geographical
    and personal names have been described as onomatocide
    ("name?murder"; Prof. Jan Sanders) and as toponymical engineering,
    owing to its conceptual proximity to the more familiar and similarly
    destructive phenomenon of demographic engineering (Dr. Kerem
    Ã-ktem).

    Request of the indigenous Aramean people

    Among all the Aramaic?speaking Christians in the world, SUA is the
    only NGO with a Special Consultative Status at the Economic and Social
    Council of the UN.

    As the recognized voice of the Aramean (Syriac) people, SUA requests
    that your Government not neglect the Arameans, but treats them with
    equality and dignity in a truly democratic Turkish Republic.

    In 2009, we expect a modern and democratic Government that knows how
    to appreciate its minorities as a cultural enrichment to the unique
    mosaic that prides the Republic of Turkey.

    Thus, against the backdrop of the aforementioned facts and statements,
    we request you to

    officially recognize the Arameans, just like the Greeks, Armenians and
    Jews, as a non? Muslim and non?Turkish minority according to the
    Lausanne Treaty and the existing international treaties on minority
    rights that are guaranteed by the UN and the EU.

    revert the Turkified ancient Aramaic toponyms and to provide new
    constructions in southeast Turkey´s Aramaic plateaus with
    native geographical names, by which the original and indigenous
    identity of the landscape will be safeguarded.

    grant the Arameans the right to change their Turkish surnames into
    their old Aramaic family names, which is a basic human right in the
    European democratic societies.

    The restoration of the meaningless Turkified names to their meaningful
    original languages, such as Greek, Armenian, Arabic and Aramaic, is
    significant for multiple reasons.

    Above all, it will re?establish Turkey´s disconnected
    continuity with and local memories of its rich multi?religious,
    ?ethnic and ?linguistic past. In so doing, it will help to
    preserve Turkey´s ancient cultural heritages, which can also be
    regarded as world heritages, and thus improve the tourism industry in
    various historical regions in its southeastern countryside.

    For the Turkified names have proven to be unattractive and a major
    source of confusion, whereas the indigenous names of cities, towns,
    villages, mountains and rivers carry meaning, importance and
    appeal. This not only applies to tourists, but also to repatriates who
    already have returned or can be stimulated by the state to return to
    their ancestral homeland.

    Like the toponyms, the surnames are also an essential part of an
    individual or group identity. In the case of the Arameans, who
    struggle against assimilation in their diasporic reality, it helps to
    preserve the unity among family members who are scattered in different
    countries. In the Arab world, they have not experienced such enforced
    name?change and thus have retained their old Aramaic family
    names. In Europe, however, many Arameans who originate from Turkey
    have already made use of the liberty to change their Turkified
    surnames.

    We believe this is the right moment for your Government to show the
    world that Turkey sincerely wishes to abide by EU standards on
    democracy, human rights and minority rights.

    One of the first steps to achieve this, is by granting the hitherto
    ill?treated and neglected Arameans official minority status,
    whereby they can safeguard their endangered cultural heritage, and by
    reversing the Turkified Aramaic place?names and surnames.

    As stressed last week in an open letter to His Excellency, Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an, whose response we are still
    awaiting, we reiterate that SUA wishes to work on a democratic basis
    with your Government. We look forward to receiving your reply and note
    that we would be most delighted to discuss any of these matters
    personally with you.

    Yours sincerely,

    J. Messo
    President
    Syriac Universal Alliance
    johny.messo@sua?ngo.org

    http://www.ameri canchronicle.com/articles/view/103515
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