Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05ANKARA3191
2005-06-08 10:53:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Ankara
Cable title:  

TURKEY'S SYRIACS SKEPTICAL ABOUT PROSPECTS FOR

Tags:  PGOV PHUM PREL TU OSCE 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ANKARA 003191 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/08/2015
TAGS: PGOV PHUM PREL TU OSCE
SUBJECT: TURKEY'S SYRIACS SKEPTICAL ABOUT PROSPECTS FOR
GREATER FREEDOM.

(U) CLASSIFIED BY POLCOUNSELOR JOHN KUNSTADTER; REASONS; E.O.
12958 1.4 (b,d).

(U) THIS CABLE IS FROM AMCONSUL ADANA.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ANKARA 003191

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/08/2015
TAGS: PGOV PHUM PREL TU OSCE
SUBJECT: TURKEY'S SYRIACS SKEPTICAL ABOUT PROSPECTS FOR
GREATER FREEDOM.

(U) CLASSIFIED BY POLCOUNSELOR JOHN KUNSTADTER; REASONS; E.O.
12958 1.4 (b,d).

(U) THIS CABLE IS FROM AMCONSUL ADANA.

1.(SBU) Summary: Turkey,s Syriac community leadership in
Mardin province remains skeptical of the prospect of greater
religious freedom in the foreseeable future. Contacts report
tentative interest among diaspora families in returning to
Mardin, but note that the perception of flagging Turkish
reforms and at least one incident at a recent returnee
village are dampening enthusiasm. The Syriacs are organizing
their community, including through diaspora contacts in
northern Europe, to advocate retention of property rights in
rural areas where Syriac diaspora and internal migrant
communities face potential loss of property as the GoT
embarks on a rural land survey process in parts of the Tur
Abdin, the traditional Syriac area in Mardin and nearby
Sirnak province. These provinces were the center of Turkey's
Syriac community from early Christian times until Turkish
authorities' pressure in the 1970's and the pressures of the
PKK insurgency in the 1980's and 1990's prompted the
community's members to flee to safety elsewhere in Turkey,
Western Europe, and the Americas. End Summary.

2.(C) In a 6/1 meeting with AMCON Adana PO at the Mor Gabriel
monastery in Midyat, Syriac community bishop Samuel Aktas
displayed continued skepticism about the prospect of
"meaningful change among the Turkish authorities toward the
(Syriac) Church." He said that he had been pleased that
Syriac new year had been celebrated, including attendance by
GoT authorities, but there had been "no changes" on issues
which mattered to the church, such as official recognition
from the government of the church's status, the ability to
teach clergy in Turkey, the ability to teach Aramaic to
Syriac children in state schools, religious property
ownership, and protection of community property rights in the
Syriac area in eastern Mardin and western Sirnak.

3.(C) Aktas seemed most disappointed by Swedish Syriac
diaspora approaches to FM Gul on the margins of a May 2005
Partnership for Peace meeting in Sweden. Gul reportedly had

agreed to a short interview on the Swedish diaspora
television network, which is also seen via satellite in
Turkey. In the interview, Aktas said that Gul had been
"talking happy, but offering no specifics. He just made
general promises and avoided any of the important details."
Reportedly asked off-camera about some of these important
details by diaspora representatives, Gul was similarly
non-committal, Aktas said.

4.(C) Aktas said that a Diyarbakir sub-governor "recently"
also had visited the Mor Gabriel monastery in a private
capacity, but while there had engaged the bishop in a
discussion of GoT perspectives on the church. Reportedly the
sub-governor had told the bishop that GoT authorities
realized that they had "done injustices to the (Syriac)
Church in past years, and maybe things would change for the
better in 5-10 years," but answering Syriac calls for the
ability to teach clergy and teach their children in Aramaic
was caught up in wider issues. "We can't do it for you
before we do it for others. I am sorry. You will just have
to wait," the sub-governor reportedly said.

5(C) After this meeting, seeing "no recent changes," and
wondering aloud about the outcome for enlargement after the
French "non" to the EU constitutional referendum, Aktas
expressed continuing skepticism that meaningful change soon
would be forthcoming.

6.(SBU) Aktas said that a late April, early May 2005
incident at the Sari village, in which what he described as a
bomb was found in an orchard tree where new village returnees
were planning to restart cultivation, had cooled some
diaspora interest in near-term return to parts of Mardin.

7.(C) Aktas said that Syriac community members had
approached the local Jandarma sergeant about the origins of
the bomb and an inquiry into how it could have been placed in
the tree. The Jandarma sergeant said it was unlikely the
bomb was of PKK origin and looked like material from GoT
inventory. He did not offer much prospect of a GoT
investigation into the incident, although Aktas said that
subsequent higher level attention to the issue from
additional Syriac community contacts with province level
authorities may reverse the local sub-district sergeant's
initial disinclination to investigate. Aktas said that
Syriac community members suspected disgruntled village guards
had placed the bomb in the tree to retaliate for being
evicted from the village last year and that the Jandarma were
embarrassed by the incident, but did not want to see the
village guard's conduct brought to light.

8.(SBU) Aktas and several visiting Syriac Diaspora members
said that they are organizing their community, including
through diaspora contacts in northern Europe, to advocate
retention of property rights in rural areas where Syriac
diaspora and internal migrant communities face potential loss
of property as the GoT embarks on a rural land survey process
in parts of Mardin and nearby Sirnak province (with even a
few hamlets as far east at Uludere). The Syriacs said that
they were attempting to organize six-member committees to
document prior land ownership in many villages where detailed
property titles and surveys had yet to be made and, since the
diaspora's departure, Kurdish and Turkish-ethnic villager
squatting was common, including conversion of some Syriac
parish churches to mosques. Aktas said that there is, as
yet, no broad community consensus about how to proceed with
what is widely perceived as a process which will confirm a
loss of property rights and reduced Syriac influence in many
formerly Syriac-dominated locales in Mardin. Aktas said that
community representatives have expressed their concerns to
the Mardin governor's office, who reportedly asked for an
investigation, but Aktas expects little change to the
existing bureaucratic momentum.

9.(C) Aktas said that the monastery's staff is responding to
German MFA inquiries on the land survey process and that
Swiss and Swedish diplomats have shown similar interest.


10. (C) Comment: Aside from occasional Potemkin Village-like
displays by Turkish authorities in the Tur Abdin region,
Ankara has been conspicuously indifferent to the slow death
of a Christian community with almost two millenia's presence
in this corner of modern-day Turkey. Indeed, FonMin Gul's
attitude is closer to complicity. End comment.
MOORE