Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

'Ergenekon Avenue' Should Be 'Hrant Dink Street'

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

  • 'Ergenekon Avenue' Should Be 'Hrant Dink Street'

    'ERGENEKON AVENUE' SHOULD BE 'HRANT DINK STREET'

    Hurriyet
    Feb 25 2010
    Turkey

    When it comes to Turks and Armenians, the list of problems to be
    resolved, confidence-building steps to be taken and gestures to be made
    and received is long. The name of a street should not be among them.

    As readers know, the Hurriyet Daily News has long supported
    Turkish-Armenian reconciliation. We support the government's initiative
    to normalize relations with Armenia and hope it is not derailed by
    either the nationalist-influenced Constitutional Court of Armenia or
    the American Congress.

    We support the steps the government has taken to enable the study of
    the Armenian language in Turkish universities and broadcast in the
    Armenian language on state radio. We applaud the news, reported in our
    culture pages today, that state broadcaster TRT has made history with
    the broadcast of a concert in the Armenian language. We have and do
    support the many initiatives to restore Armenian churches in Turkey
    and to find ways to educate the children of undocumented Armenian
    workers in Turkey

    We have also joined the criticism of the slow pace with which the
    trial of those charged with the murder of our colleague, Hrant Dink,
    has proceeded. Justice delayed is justice denied. Justice must prevail
    in this and other cases of journalists and intellectuals who have
    paid for their principles with their lives in Turkey.

    We also realize that all of this is part and parcel of deep and
    dramatic transformation in Turkish and Armenian societies. The
    challenges are many and include the dichotomy between the pace of
    changing positions in Turkey and Armenia and the pace with which
    attitudes are changing in the diasporas of both peoples. There is much
    that is complicated. Progress on all of these fronts will take time.

    But changing the name of "Ergenekon Avenue" which transects the
    district of KurtuluÅ~_ where many Turkish Armenians live, to "Hrant
    Dink Street" should be quick and easy. The name, of course, preceded
    the alleged gang now on trial and refers to a legendary mountain
    in Central Asia that is part of Turkic history. So it is not as if
    this involves a retreat from an honor bestowed on another important
    individual.

    But, as we reported yesterday, requests for this name change have
    twice been rejected by municipal officials. An online petition seeking
    the name change, at www.hrantdinkcaddesi.org, has already collected
    nearly 2,000 signatures. We believe the city should reconsider. This
    would be a small but important monument to the memory of a man who did
    so much to foster understanding. And it is a small step that would
    certainly ease and enable the much larger diplomatic, political and
    social leaps that we hope will follow.

    It is time that "Ergenekon Avenue" be made an avenue or street
    commemorating the life and work of journalist Hrant Dink. The
    Å~^iÅ~_li municipality should embrace this project and get to work
    on the new signs.
Working...
X