Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Fears 'genocide' memorial could cause split

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

  • Fears 'genocide' memorial could cause split

    Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)
    December 16, 2009 Wednesday
    First Edition

    Fears 'genocide' memorial could cause split

    by Amy Corderoy and Ellie Harvey


    MORE than 200 members of Sydney's Turkish and Assyrian communities,
    separated by riot police, shouted threats and abuse outside the
    Fairfield Council offices last night after the council approved plans
    for a monument commemorating what was called the Assyrian genocide.

    At least 40 riot police stood between the two groups as the council
    considered plans for the first ever Australian memorial to Assyrians
    killed by Turkish forces during World War I and subsequent conflicts.

    A local group, calling itself the Assyrian Universal Alliance, had
    proposed to build a 4.5-metre-high memorial to victims of the Assyrian
    genocides in a reserve under construction opposite Bonnyrigg Park.
    However, the move is bitterly opposed by the local Turkish community,
    which disagrees with the Assyrians' interpretation of the past.

    At least 100 Turkish Australians bearing signs critical of the
    proposal gathered at the front of the council building while at least
    as many Assyrians draped in Assyrian and Armenian flags stood on the
    other side.

    At 7.30pm the council voted to approve the monument, producing a
    spontaneous outburst by the Assyrians. "Winner, winner, winner - thank
    you Australia," one jubilant Assyrian said.

    A Turkish protester Gokhan Tugcu, 25, said the monument was divisive
    and should never have been allowed. "Australia, being a multicultural
    society shouldn't have things like this that divide the different
    cultures that live here. [It's] a statue now, it could be in the
    school curriculum later on," Mr Tugcu said.

    As the crowd left the council emotions grew. One man standing with the
    Turkish group called out "Ottomans" and slid his fingers across his
    throat.

    Hermiz Shahen, the deputy secretary of the Assyrian Alliance, said
    that the monument was never intended as an insult.

    "If you respect the ANZACS, you are not insulting the Turkish people,"
    he said. "We just want to erect a monument to respect the victims of
    genocide". But local resident, Adem Cetinay, who has a Turkish
    background, believes that the memorial is already causing a split.

    "We're dividing the community and that has never happened before," he said.

    Within two days of hearing about the proposed memorial, Mr Cetinay
    obtained more than 800 signatures for a petition opposing it.

    "If it goes ahead, our kids are going to grow up here with this
    monument in their faces," he said. The Local Government Association of
    NSW has formally recognised that genocide was perpetrated against the
    Assyrians since World War I.

    But neither the NSW Government nor the Federal Government have come to
    the same conclusion.
Working...
X