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Istanbul: 'I Wish I Wasn'T Armenian'

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  • Istanbul: 'I Wish I Wasn'T Armenian'

    'I wish I wasn't Armenian'

    http://www.todayszaman.com/columnistDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=305387
    28 January 2013, Monday

    ORHAN KEMAL CENGİZ
    [email protected]

    On Monday when I was turning the pages of the Taraf daily, I came
    across this very striking headline, "I wish I wasn't Armenian." These
    are the words of an old Armenian lady whom the Taraf correspondent
    called Aunt Seta. Ms. Seta is a close friend of the four Armenian
    women who were attacked in the Samatya neighborhood of İstanbul
    recently. One of the ladies died while the others were seriously
    injured. No suspect has been caught yet. Some argue that these ladies,
    all of whom were over 80 and living alone, were attacked by thieves
    whose only intentions were to steal their valuables.

    Well, as I discussed in my earlier column, even if the intent of the
    attackers was robbery, this does not change the fact that there is an
    obvious racial hatred behind these assaults. If their only purpose was
    to steal a few items from these old ladies they could easily
    incapacitate the women without the brutality. But instead they
    brutally beat and stabbed these women. And we have additional
    information provided by the neighbors, including Ms. Seta, who said
    that the assaulted Armenian women were actually quite poor. There are
    of course other theories circulating currently. One of them claims
    that the attackers intend to scare Armenians away from Samatya in
    order to seize their properties. Whatever financial or material gains
    may appear to be behind these attacks, I do not think they eradicate
    the racial hatred apparent in their execution.

    And it seems to me that these attacks have already achieved a lot. As
    you can see from the words of Ms. Seta, they have managed to plant
    profound hopelessness in Armenians and open up some old wounds which
    might not have healed completely.

    Maybe we need to look at the broader picture to gain a wider
    perspective on these recent attacks against Armenians in İstanbul.

    Very recently a Greek church in İstanbul was stoned by "unknown"
    people. Then, the police revealed an extremely detailed assassination
    plan against one of the pastors of the İzmit Protestant Church. The
    police announced that they caught a dozen suspects who appear to have
    been preparing for this attack for months. They are from different
    cities. Amongst them are women and some of them penetrated the church
    disguised as newly converted Christians. This assassination plan seems
    very professional and organized to me.

    There was another concerning development in İstanbul very recently as
    well. An Armenian intellectual, who does not want to reveal his
    identity, told me that he barely managed to escape unscathed from a
    planned attack by two youngsters who were sent by an ultranationalist
    who was angry with some of the words that this Armenian intellectual
    had made on TV.

    Well, in a country like Turkey, if several things as I mentioned
    happens in a matter of weeks, we should have every reason to believe
    that they are organized and somehow connected to each other.

    Apparently, some circles are frantically trying to create an
    atmosphere of terror for non-Muslims in Turkey. When there was a
    comparable level of activities against non-Muslims in 2006 and 2007,
    they ended up in disaster with a string of murders of Christians:
    Father Andrea Santoro in Trabzon, Hrant Dink in İstanbul and three
    Christians in Malatya were killed.

    Since the beginning of the Ergenekon investigation in 2007, we have
    not witnessed such kinds of attacks against non-Muslims. Some cells
    seemed to have been reactivated to give Christians a hard time once
    again. I really hope that officials will grasp the severity and
    gravity of the situation soon and act quickly in order to bring the
    attackers and the people behind them to justice. This situation is
    quite serious and alarming!




    From: A. Papazian
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