Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Exiles hope to revive Christian area in Turkey

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

  • Exiles hope to revive Christian area in Turkey

    The International Herald Tribune, France
    April 5, 2012 Thursday


    Exiles hope to revive Christian area in Turkey

    by SUSANNE GÜSTEN
    IDIL, Turkey

    ABSTRACT

    Robert Tutus, a Syrian Christian who left Turkey for asylum in
    Germany, is among others who hope to "keep the Syriac language and
    culture alive in Idil, and to remind people that this is the home of
    the Syriacs."

    FULL TEXT

    Clambering over the rubble of what was once his hometown, Robert Tutus
    pointed to a spot just up the road from where his family's house had
    stood.

    ''This is where my father was assassinated,'' he said. ''Two men
    walked up to him as he was returning home one evening, and killed him
    with a bullet to his head.''

    His father, Sukru Tutus, was the last Christian mayor of Azeh, known
    as Idil in Turkish, a town in southeastern Anatolia that traces its
    Christianity back to the time of the Apostles.

    Within a month of his killing, which happened on June 17, 1994, Mr.
    Tutus recalled last month, the remaining Christian population of the
    town, several hundred people at the time, had gathered their
    belongings and fled to asylum in Western Europe.

    The departure marked the end of the Christian era of Azeh, which had
    been a bishop's seat as early as the second century and home to a
    Christian population of several thousand until the late 1970s.

    Only ruins scattered about the hillside remain of their town today,
    while above it shabby concrete buildings rise to form the new town of
    Idil, inhabited by local Kurds and Arabs as well as a few Turkish
    administrators on temporary postings to the east.

    And then there is Mr. Tutus, 42, camped out in an apartment in one of
    those buildings while he tries to reclaim his father's properties and
    rebuild his parental home among the ruins on the hillside.

    ''This is our home, the home of the Syriac people,'' Mr. Tutus said.
    ''We will not give it up.''

    The plateau of Tur Abdin, upon which Idil lies nestled between the
    Syrian plain and the mountain ranges of southeastern Turkey, is the
    historical heartland of the Syriac Orthodox Church, whose patriarchate
    resided here until tensions with the Turkish republic pushed it to
    move to Syria in 1933.

    The region is still dotted with Syriac churches like Mor Gabriel,
    which was founded in the year 397 and is one of the oldest active
    monasteries in the world today. But apart from the monks, very few
    Syriacs remain.

    A century ago, they numbered 200,000 here, according to the European
    Syriac Union, a diaspora organization. Some 50,000 survived the
    massacres of Anatolian Christians during World War I, in which the
    Syriac people shared the fate of the Armenians. Today, no more than
    4,500 Syriac Christians, who speak a local dialect of the Aramaic
    language as well as Arabic, Turkish and Kurdish, remain in Tur Abdin.

    In Azeh, which held out against a siege by surrounding Kurdish
    villages for months in 1915, the final push in the age-old power
    struggle over the town began in 1977, when Mayor Sukru Tutus was
    deposed by the Turkish authorities in what his successor, Abdurrahman
    Abay, today freely acknowledges was a rigged election.
    ''The military commander, the judge, the district governor - they
    encouraged me to run and they helped me'' to win, Mr. Abay, chief of
    the powerful Kurdish Kecan tribe, said last month over a glass of tea
    in Idil. ''After the election, I received a telegram from Egypt, from
    Anwar el-Sadat. It read: 'I congratulate you on the Muslim conquest of
    Idil.'''

    The takeover brought the dramatic shift in the town's demographics
    that was completed in 1994, with Kurds from the surrounding villages
    moving in as Syriac families sold up and joined the rising flow of
    Christian migration from the Tur Abdin to Europe.

    Today, 80,000 Syriacs from the Tur Abdin live in Germany, 60,000 in
    Sweden, and 10,000 each in Belgium, Switzerland and the Netherlands,
    according to estimates from the European Syriac Union.

    Mr. Tutus found political asylum in Germany, together with his mother,
    six sisters and three brothers, all but one of whom have since
    acquired German citizenship and settled there.

    A decade later, he was one of the first exiles to accept the Turkish
    government's public invitation to Syriacs to return home. It was
    issued in 2001 under pressure from the European Union and repeated on
    several occasions.

    Although he carries a German passport, Mr. Tutus spends much of his
    time in Idil, where he has overseen the restoration of the Church of
    St. Mary and last year founded an Association for Syriac Culture.

    ''Our aim is to keep the Syriac language and culture alive in Idil,
    and to remind people that this is the home of the Syriacs,'' Mr. Tutus
    said.
    Although the association's office was fire-bombed this year, Mr. Tutus
    remains undeterred.

    ''We want the world to see that Syriacs still live here,'' he said.

    It is a desire he shares with hundreds of pioneering Syriacs across
    the Tur Abdin, who have returned from exile in Europe in recent years
    in an attempt to reclaim their heritage and pave the way for a
    Christian resettlement of the region.

    In the village of Kafro, 50 kilometers, or 30 miles, west of Idil,
    villagers out for a stroll in the spring sunshine on their neatly
    stone-flagged street last month gathered around a baby carriage to coo
    over its occupant. They were admiring Nahir Demir, 1 year old, the
    first offspring of his family to be born in Kafro since the Syriac
    village was abandoned by order of the Turkish Army in 1994.

    ''My father was the last to go,'' said Aziz Demir, 45, mayor of the
    newly rebuilt village. The order to evacuate, he recalled, came at the
    height of fighting between the army and Kurdish rebels in this region.

    But when permission to return was issued in a brief bureaucratic
    directive by the Turkish government in 2001, the Syriacs of Kafro
    rushed back from Europe to rebuild their village and to resettle their
    children in an ancient land they had never seen.

    A dozen modern limestone villas now rise up over the ruins of the old
    village of Kafro, complete with walled gardens and pink-tiled
    bathrooms, built with the lifetime savings of Syriacs returning from
    decades in the factories of Germany, Switzerland and Sweden.

    Six years after the first moving trucks arrived, Kafro's population is
    around 50 and rising, despite the hazards. Both schooling and
    employment prospects are poor in this impoverished region, where
    neighboring Kurds herd sheep and ride donkeys to market.

    ''We knew it would not be easy, and we knew the risks,'' said Israel
    Demir, 46, builder of the villas and father of little Nahir as well as
    of three teenage daughters transplanted from Goppingen, Germany, in
    2006. ''But we also know our duty.''

    That duty, Mr. Demir said, lies in ensuring the future of the Syriac people.

    ''I feel a great responsibility, toward my children and toward my
    people, for safeguarding our homeland for future generations,'' Mr.
    Demir said in an interview in Kafro last month. ''Because I know that
    when a people leaves its land, its home, it has no choice but to
    assimilate. We can see it happening to our families in Europe and in
    America. There is a danger that in a few decades the Syriacs will
    cease to exist.''

    Mr. Demir paid a personal price for his mission last year when he
    barely survived after being shot by Kurdish shepherds while trying to
    prevent them from grazing their flocks on village land.

    But neither the hostility of the locals nor a perceived lack of
    support from the Turkish authorities will deter him, he said.

    ''I am trying to open the door to the return of our people,'' he said.
    ''I have pushed the door open. Now others must decide whether they
    will follow me and step through it.''
    In the neighboring village of Enhil, Fehmi Isler, 50, took a more
    sober view of the future as he gazed out from the slim bell tower of
    the village church over dozens of newly restored houses, one of them
    his own.

    ''Only the older people come back, the ones who were born and raised
    here,'' he said.

    Dormant in the winter, Enhil comes alive at Easter with the arrival of
    300 to 400 Syriacs exiles from Western Europe who have restored their
    family homes in the past few years for use as summer houses.

    ''But the young people won't come, and who can blame them,'' Mr. Isler
    said. ''There's nothing for them to do here but gaze at the cattle and
    collect cow patties.''
    Mr. Isler, who was in Enhil to bury an aunt, who died in a retirement
    home in Augsburg, Germany, in keeping with her last wish, said his own
    five children had made the trip from Germany only once.

    ''No Internet, no mobile phones, no swimming pool - forget it,'' he
    said. ''And the Kurdish women yelled at the girls to show some modesty
    and cover up.''

    In Idil, Mr. Tutus is similarly skeptical of his chances of success in
    attempting to persuade the Syriac diaspora to resettle in Idil. With
    the war raging on between Kurdish rebels and the Turkish Army, it is
    an uphill struggle, he said.

    ''Everyone talks about returning, but it's just talk,'' he said. ''I'm
    here fighting for our return, but they're sitting tight over there.''

    Even Mr. Tutus's wife, a Syriac herself, and his children, aged 11 and
    7, will not come, preferring to stay in Frankfurt after being badly
    frightened during a visit to Idil.
    ''There was a power cut and gunfire in the street at night,'' Mr.
    Tutus said. ''After that, they refused to come back.''

Working...
X