Turkey’s last Armenian village opens cultural museum

AHVAL
Turkey’s last Armenian village opens cultural museum

Descendants of genocide survivors who returned home to Turkey’s last Armenian village have opened a museum to celebrate and preserve their culture, the Guardian reported on Saturday. 

Vakıflı, a village in the southern Turkish province of Hatay bordering Syria, is home to just 100 people, but every summer thousands of visitors arrive in search of a connection to their Armenian past.

Lora Baytar, a journalist and art historian, told the Guardian that she decided a few years ago to create a dedicated exhibition space to celebrate the local Armenian culture.

“Visitors to Vakıflı just come for the day, they take a picture of the church, and they leave again,” she told the Guardian. “I wanted to give people the opportunity to really understand and preserve our heritage.”

After five years of work, Vakıflıköy Museum has just opened its doors.

The Turkish government still refuses to recognise the events of 1915, in which up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed, as a genocide, in spite of the overwhelming historical evidence to suggest otherwise. 

Vakıflı’s community is descended from Armenians who successfully resisted the Ottoman army’s attacks. The area’s 4,200 residents retreated to the nearby Mount Musa, and held out for 53 days before being rescued and evacuated by allied warships to Egypt. Many returned again after the end of World War One.

Baytar applied for funding for the museum in 2015, with the help of the Hrant Dink Foundation, but was unsuccessful. However, a second attempt in 2018, with support from the Hatay Archaeology Museum and the Armenian Patriarchate in Istanbul, gained a government grant.

Vakıflı’s residents have recorded oral history interviews and donated objects including clothes, jewellery and photographs to create what Baytar calls a “story-driven” experience for visitors to the museum.

The COVID-19 coronavirus has delayed the official opening until the end of the year, or possible eve until next summer, but Baytar is still keen to welcome visitors in the meantime.

“Vakıflıköy Museum shows the visitor how villagers speak, our beliefs, how we celebrate holidays, what we eat, how we succeed in agriculture and architecture, marriage traditions, music, photos, human and migration stories,” Baytar told the Guardian.

Expert: Unemployment will reach 40% if state of emergency continues in public food sector of Armenia

News.am, Armenia

15:36, 12.07.2020
                  

Lebanese-Armenian TV host to stand trial for “insulting” Turkey’s Erdogan

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Lebanese freedoms not immune to Ankara’s encroachment

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July 10 2020

Azerbaijan reports third death

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His Holiness Aram I reminds about confiscation of Armenian Churches by Turkey after the genocide

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Greek political party calls for Ataturk’s house in Thessaloniki to become a genocide memorial museum

Public Radio of Armenia

A Greek political party has called for the birth home of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in Thessaloniki to become a museum commemorating the Greek Genocide in the Pontus region on the Black Sea, Greek City Times reports.

The Greek Solution (Ελληνική Λύση) suggested to convert Ataturk’s house into a genocide memorial museum.

“No Turkish court can desecrate the over-chronic character of the Hagia Sophia,” the party said in a statement just one day before Turkey decided to turn it into a mosque.

“On the contrary, Greece can and must turn Kemal’s house into a museum of memory and honor of the victims of the [Greek] Pontian genocide,” Greek Solution said.

Although Turks think of Ataturk fondly as the founder of the modern Turkish Republic, Greeks, Armenians and Assyrians remember him as one of the main perpetrators of genocide against Christian minorities in the Ottoman Empire, that led to the systematic extermination of around 3.5 million people.

With about a million Greeks exterminated on policies made by Ataturk and his predecessors, more than 1.2 million Greeks were forcibly removed from Turkey in 1923-1924 as a result of the the Treaty of Lausanne, decimating thousands of years of Greek life in Asia Minor, Pontus and Eastern Thrace.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan signed a decree on Friday opening Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia as a mosque after a Turkish court annulled a 1934 government decree that had turned it into a museum

On Friday, Erdogan also announced that Hagia Sophia mosque will be open for prayer on July 24.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/12/2020

                                        Sunday, 

Deadly Fighting Reported On Armenian-Azeri Border (UPDATED)


Armenia -- Soldiers pictured during a military exercise in Tavush, March 26, 
2019.

At least three Azerbaijani soldiers were reportedly killed and several others 
wounded in heavy fighting that broke out at a section of the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border on Sunday.

The spokeswoman for Armenia’s Defense Ministry, Shushan Stepanian, said 
Azerbaijani forces shelled an Armenian army outpost in the northern Tavush 
province during a failed attempt to seize it. Stepanian said they suffered 
casualties while being repelled by Armenian soldiers stationed there.

“There are no casualties on the Armenian side,” she wrote on Facebook.

According to Stepanian, earlier in the afternoon a military vehicle carrying 
Azerbaijani soldiers tried to cross into Tavush “for reasons unclear to us.” The 
soldiers fled and left the vehicle behind after warning shots fired from the 
Armenian side, said the official.

For its part, the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said that Armenian forces backed 
by artillery fire attacked its border posts in Azerbaijan’s western Tovuz 
district bordering Tavush. It said two Azerbaijani servicemen died and five 
others were wounded as a result.

The ministry reported a third Azerbaijani combat death later on Sunday.

The fighting reportedly continued into the early hours of Monday. The Defense 
Ministry in Yerevan said Azerbaijani troops are using a battle tank and mortars 
to continue shelling the same Armenian army post.

“Gunfire is periodically continuing with various intensity,” Stepanian, the 
ministry spokeswoman, said shortly after midnight. No Armenian soldier has been 
killed or wounded, she added.

The Azerbaijani military claimed, meanwhile, that Armenian forces are firing 
mortars on not only at Azerbaijani border positions but also a nearby 
Azerbaijani village.

Stepanian insisted in another overnight Facebook post that Armenian army units 
are targeting only Azerbaijani military facilities.


Armenia -- A view of the Tavush province bordering Azerbaijan, November 6, 2018.

Each side blamed the other for the escalation. Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry 
accused Yerevan of heightening tensions in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone 
and seeking to “seize more territory.”

The Armenian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Anna Naghdalian, insisted that the 
fighting was sparked by the Azerbaijani “attempts to infiltrate into Armenian 
positions.”

Naghdalian also tweeted that Armenia’s foreign and defense ministers are “in 
constant contact” with the U.S., Russian and French mediators co-heading the 
OSCE Minsk Group over the latest escalation.

The mediators urged the conflicting parties to strengthen the ceasefire regime 
during a June 30 video conference with the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign 
ministers. In a joint statement, they reiterated that “there is no military 
solution to the conflict.”

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev rejected that assertion and lambasted the 
Minsk Group co-chairs last week. He also threatened to pull out of “pointless 
negotiations” with Yerevan.

Both conflicting parties had reported deadly ceasefire violations in the same 
border area early this year. In March, the Armenian military claimed to have 
thwarted two incursions attempted by troops from Azerbaijan’s State Border Guard 
Service. No major incidents were reported there in the following months.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


Armenia ex-President Sargsyan follows via video link restoration at Amaras Monastery of Karabakh

News.am, Armenia

15:38, 10.07.2020

YEREVAN. – Serzh Sargsyan, the third President of Armenia and Chairman of the Board of the Luys Foundation, followed—via video link—the ongoing restoration at the Amaras Monastery in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), with the help of the fund. The Facebook page of the third president informs about this.

Sargsyan thanked those in charge of this restoration that the work has not stopped even for a minute. “The Amaras monastic complex is of great importance and meaning for all of us. Amaras is the best example of how the Armenian language and faith together have become an impregnable fortress for the preservation of the Armenian identity for hundreds of years,” said the third President of Armenia.

He added: "[Azerbaijan’s] Aliyevs and the thugs before them, who have regularly been tempted to invade the Armenian world, including Artsakh, to take over our millennial spiritual, cultural treasures, to distort history, in response, they must see our rising cultural and spiritual monuments, and if needed, they will receive an equivalent response from the Armenian army, beg for a ceasefire—as they did in the not-distant past."