Kurdish Mayor Places Flowers at Armenian Genocide Memorial in Providence
PROVIDENCE (Armenian Weekly)—Mayor of Dikranagerd (Diyarbakir Sur Municipality) Abdullah Demirbaş placed flowers at the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Providence on Oct. 10.
Speaking at the memorial, Demirbaş said, “We bow in memory of all those who lost their lives.”
Kurds had a role in the massacres of 1915, Demirbaş noted. He stressed the importance of confronting the past. He called on the Turkish state to apologize and make amends. “Asking for forgiveness is a sign of maturity,” he concluded.
The mayor was accompanied by members of the Kurdish and Armenian communities of New England.
Last month, Demirbaş apologized in the name of Kurds for the Armenian and Assyrian “massacre and deportations” during the official inauguration of the Monument of Common Conscience. “We will continue our struggle to secure atonement and compensation for them,” he added.
Demirbaş and the Metropolitan Mayor of Dikranagerd (Diyarbakir) Osman Baydemir have adopted a policy of reviving the multiculturalism of the city in recent years, embarking on a series of initiatives that include the renovation of the Sourp Giragos Church, the offering of Armenian and Assyrian language courses, the return of confiscated Armenian property, and the opening of the memorial. Dikranagerd is also the only city in Turkey with a sign greeting visitors in Turkish, Kurdish, and Armenian.
“Today, we are not simply asking for forgiveness in a dry fashion,” Demirbaş noted in an interview with the Weekly editor Khatchig Mouradian in Dikranagerd in 2011. “I am a Kurd. And I want for Armenians what I want for the Kurds.”