Posted on 03/29/2007 4:46:41 AM PDT by Jedi Master Pikachu
A senior Armenian delegation is in eastern Turkey for the reopening of a 1,100-year-old Armenian church restored by the Turkish government. The move is being seen as a positive gesture by Ankara to help overcome the animosity following the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915. The two countries have no formal diplomatic ties. Located on the small island of Akdamar in Lake Van, the pink sandstone church has undergone 18 months of renovation.
New projects The building, which has now reopened as a museum, had long been left empty and neglected, its intricate wall carvings crumbling.
In a move described by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan as a positive step, the government spent $1.5m (£763,000) on its restoration. The 20-strong Armenian delegation of architects, engineers and archaeologists is headed by Deputy Culture Minister Gagik Gyurjyan. Mr Gyurjyan said they were not in Turkey just to witness the renovation of the church, which was built between 915-921. "We think we can discuss new projects regarding the future," he said, according to Turkey's Anatolia news agency. "Our experts can co-operate in many areas including archaeology, architecture and industry."
Border closed But relations between the two countries remain tense. Turkey closed its border with Armenia in the 1990s to support Azerbaijan in its dispute with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh. To get to Akdamar, Armenian officials have had to travel via Istanbul or Georgia. Armenians say 1.5 million of their people were killed in a genocide by Ottoman Turks during World War I, either through systematic massacres or through starvation. More than a dozen countries, various international bodies and many Western historians agree that it was genocide. Turkey says there was no genocide. It acknowledges that many Armenians died, but says the figure was below one million.
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Whoo! whoo! They 'reopened' a church as a museum.
A really positive sign will be when the reopen churches as churches, let Haliki reopen as a seminary and let the Patriarch of Antioch use his proper cathedral rather than keeping the see in exile in Damascus. Then Turkey will prove it's ready to join Europe.
Let me amend my previous post,
. . .and stop prosecuting their citizens who express views like these for 'insulting Turkishness'.
When Hitler asked who would remember the Turkish massacre of the Armenian people, he was right. No non-Armenians I've met have heard of it, and it's relatively unknown even here in Armenian-rich Fresno!
Well, those who have benefited from the ministries of either or both of the two most influential Armenian Christians in the last fifty years know the story.
Demos Shakarian started the Full Gospel Business Man's Fellowship, a major player in the charisamatic movement that shaped my life during the 70s. His family's miraculous exodus from Turkey just before the holocaust is known to all who've orbited in those circles.
Rousas John Rushdoony, the ArmEnian calvinist (proof positive that even God enjoys the occasional pun!) and I got acquainted in 1980. For 1500 years, there's been a Rushdoony in the pulpit, each bringing a son or nephew into the ministry of the Word. Both of his grandfathers were martyrs. RJR was carried out of Turkey in his mother's womb, a terrifying journey that was marked by the drowning death of his big brother.
The denomination I belong to now, Every Nation, is both charismatic and calvinist.
Kyrie Eleison! Even in Fresno folks in general aren't aware of the Armenian genocide?
Well us 'Greeks' (ecclesiastically speaking) still remember it, too, along with the Rape of Smyrna.
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