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Returning Churches, Restoring Rights: An Interview With Aram Hampari

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  • Returning Churches, Restoring Rights: An Interview With Aram Hampari

    RETURNING CHURCHES, RESTORING RIGHTS: AN INTERVIEW WITH ARAM HAMPARIAN

    By:Armenian Weekly
    Wed, Jun 15 2011

    The Armenian Weekly conducted an interview today with the ANCA
    executive director Aram Hamparian. The interview focuses on H.Res
    306, the Return of Churches resolution, introduced today. Below is
    the interview.

    Aram Hamparian Alongside the Armenian Genocide Resolution, there was
    a new resolution recently introduced in the House of Representatives
    calling upon Turkey to respect the rights of Christians and to return
    their stolen churches. Can you tell us more about it?

    Well, to begin with, we're very encouraged by the introduction H.Res.

    306-the Return of Churches resolution-by two of the most senior members
    of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Ed Royce and Howard Berman,
    and gratified by the broad, bipartisan support it has garnered.

    This religious freedom measure was launched with several dozen
    original cosponsors, including the co-chairs of the Human Rights,
    Hellenic, and Armenian caucuses, and, notably, Congresswoman Ileana
    Ros-Lehtinen, the chairwoman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

    A reading of the resolution's text shows that it calls, very simply,
    upon the government of Turkey to honor its international obligations
    to return confiscated Christian church properties and fully respect
    the rights of all Christians, among them, of course, Armenians,
    Greeks, Assyrians, Pontians, and Arameans (Syriacs) who have lived
    for thousands of years in what is present-day Turkey.

    This legislation speaks to us powerfully as Americans-committed,
    as we are, to the principle of religious liberty; as Christians-who
    seek for ourselves and all people the right to worship in freedom;
    and as Armenians-who are working for a truthful and just resolution
    of the Armenian Genocide that morally and materially makes whole the
    victim of this horrific crime. There's no better place to start this
    long overdue process than with Turkey returning stolen churches.

    Why this resolution now?

    This measure is urgently needed to confront-and eventually
    reverse-the vast destruction visited upon religious sites during
    the Armenian Genocide as well as Turkey's official and ongoing,
    post-genocide destruction of church properties, desecration of holy
    sites, discrimination against Christian communities, and denial of
    rights to Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Chaldeans, Pontians, Arameans
    (Syriacs), and others.

    It's adoption would add the powerful voice of the U.S. Congress-and
    the full moral authority of the American people-to the international
    defense of religious freedom for the Christian nations residing within
    the borders of present-day Turkey.

    Can you briefly describe the communities and churches this legislation
    seeks to protect?

    Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Pontians, and Arameans (Syriacs) have
    long lived in what is present-day Turkey. Many thousands of years
    before the establishment of the Ottoman Empire, these nations gave
    birth to great civilizations and established a rich civic, religious
    and cultural heritage. They were, upon these biblical lands, among
    the first Christians, dating back to the time of the travels through
    Anatolia by the Apostles Thaddeus and Bartholomew. Armenia, in 301
    A.D., as is well known, became the first nation to adopt Christianity
    as a state religion.

    As students of religion worldwide know, the territory of
    present-day Turkey is home to many of the most important centers
    of early Christianity-most notably Nicaea, Ephesus, Chalcedon,
    and Constantinople. These lands contain a remarkably rich legacy of
    Christian heritage, including thousands of religious sites.

    And, of course, the Armenian Genocide nearly wiped out these Christian
    nations.

    It's true. The Armenian Genocide of 1915 and, more broadly, Ottoman
    Turkey's genocidal drive to eliminate its entire Christian population,
    represents a terrible watershed in the histories of the Christians of
    these lands, marking, as it does, a genocidal shift from the Turkish
    leadership's ongoing policy of violence and oppression to one of an
    outright, systematic, intentional and state-implemented campaign of
    race extermination.

    And so, during the World War I-era, after centuries of growing
    intolerance and persecution, Ottoman Turkey perpetrated a
    government-sponsored campaign of genocide against its Armenian and
    other Christians subjects, resulting in the murder of over 2,000,000
    Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Pontians, Arameans (Syriacs), and
    the exile of hundreds of thousands others from their homelands of
    thousands of years.

    The Republic of Turkey, heir to the Ottomans, continued these
    genocidal policies against the remaining Christian population, through
    ethnic-cleansing, organized massacres, destruction of churches and
    religious sites, illegal expropriation of properties, discriminatory
    policies, restrictions on worship, and other means. As a result only
    a small fraction of the vast Christian population that once populated
    Anatolia remains today in modern Turkey.

    What is the situation today of remaining Christians within Turkey?

    The endangered Christian communities within Turkey's present-day
    borders, in addition to all the crimes visited upon them and their
    holy sites throughout their histories, continue, to this day, to
    endure oppressive restrictions imposed by the government of Turkey
    on their right to practice their faith in their historic places
    of worship. These endangered sites are, nearly all, still today in
    Turkish hands as a direct result of genocide.

    What does the U.S. government-Turkey's ally-have to say about religious
    freedom in Turkey?

    The State Department, which often goes to great and frequently
    unreasonable lengths to excuse Turkey's conduct, has criticized
    the persecution of Christians in Turkey, including the improper
    confiscation of their properties.

    The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, established by
    Congress, recently designated Turkey as one of a handful of countries
    on its watch list for a third consecutive year.

    All this reflects the sad reality faced by the remaining Christians
    in Turkey. They are, all too often, prevented from praying in their
    historic churches, which have been desecrated, sometimes used as
    storage sheds-and in some cases, even turned into barns. In very rare
    instances-such as the Akhtamar Church-Turkey has undertaken repairs,
    but refused to these return religious properties to their rightful
    church owners, instead converting them into museums, where prayer,
    as a rule, is prohibited.

    Has Congress taken action on these types of religious freedom issues
    in the past?

    The United States, as a nation that was, quite literally, founded
    upon a belief in religious liberty, has a long and proud tradition
    of actively promoting and defending freedom of faith around the world.

    Our own Bill of Rights safeguards religious freedom for Americans, and
    our longstanding leadership in championing the Universal Declaration
    of Human Rights and other international covenants has helped protect
    freedom of faith across the globe.

    America's enduring commitment to religious freedom was powerfully
    reaffirmed in the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998, and
    has been underscored in countless pieces of specific legislation. Here
    are a few examples:

    Just last year, the U.S. House passed H.Res.1631, which called for
    the protection of minority religious communities and places of worship
    in the illegally-occupied portion of Cyprus.

    S.Res.705, adopted by the U.S. Senate during the 110th Congress,
    reaffirmed U.S. support for the preservation of religious and cultural
    sites, and, in particular, called upon the government of Lithuania to
    halt and, if necessary, reverse the desecration of a Jewish cemetery
    located in the Snipiskes area of Vilnius.

    H.Res.562, passed by the House during the 105th Congress, cited
    the confiscation of property by foreign governments as a means of
    victimizing minority populations, and, specifically, urged foreign
    governments to return wrongfully expropriated properties to religious
    communities.

    H.Res.191, which was adopted by the U.S. House during the 109th
    Congress, called upon the government of Romania to provide fair,
    prompt, and equitable restitution to all religious communities for
    church properties that had been previously stolen by the government.

    H.R.3096 from the 110th Congress, put the U.S. House on record pressing
    the government of Vietnam to respect freedom of religion and to return
    properties confiscated from churches.

    H.Con.Res.371, passed by the House during the 110th Congress, called
    on foreign governments to return looted and confiscated properties
    to their rightful owners or, where restitution was not possible, to
    pay equitable compensation, in accordance with principles of justice
    and in an expeditious manner that is just, transparent, and fair.

    What type of opposition do you expect to this resolution?

    Sadly, if history is any guide, we can look to the Turkish government
    to stridently oppose this effort to end faith-based discrimination,
    promote religious tolerance, and secure the rightful return of
    Christian churches.

    This bipartisan measure speaks openly and honestly about the real
    situation in Turkey today, which inevitably runs up against the many
    Ottoman and Kemalist myths about Turkey as a model of tolerance and
    pluralism. So, we're likely to hear that this measure is unnecessary or
    even counter-productive given all the great strides that the Turkish
    government is supposedly making. I wouldn't be surprised to hear the
    Turkish Embassy trying to spin that its adoption would somehow upset
    the fragile Turkey-Armenia Protocols process.

    What can our readers do to help move this legislation forward?

    The quickest and easiest first step is for folks to send a free ANCA
    WebMail asking their U.S. Representatives to support the Return of
    Churches resolution (H.Res.306) and work for its adoption.

    Another great way to help is to spread the word to friends,
    family, work colleagues, and people you know who attend churches,
    mosques, synagogues, and other places of worship - basically anyone
    concerned about religious freedom and human rights. Send them the
    link www.anca.org/return or just explain in your own words what this
    effort is all about.

    There are so many ways to engage, from getting involved with your local
    ANCA chapter and visiting with your local legislators to meeting with
    the editors of your community newspapers, volunteering for supportive
    candidates, and building coalitions with friendly groups.

    There are as many ways to help as there are people who want to be
    helpful. If people need a hand, we're here for you. Just send us an
    email, call, or post a note to our Facebook page.

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