Heather Ibbotson
A proposal to erect a plaque at Mount Hope cemetery is in limbo after it unleashed a storm of unexpected international controversy, says Mayor Chris Friel.
"There are so many aggressive and very angry
groups, and accusations and absolute misunderstandings of the
situation," that the plan is now "officially on hold," Friel said
Thursday.
"We're backing away" until a response is received
from the federal government and city council has an opportunity to
review and discuss it, he said.
Friel said the plan had stirred up negative commentary "on an international level, far beyond what a municipality can handle."
The initial intent had been to mark an early
Ontario Muslim burial plot while also telling the story of a 1914
roundup of about 100 so-called "enemy aliens" during the First World
War.
However, the linking of the two became the subject
of sharp criticism among Armenian communities in Canada and abroad as
being misleading, inaccurate and kowtowing to the political agenda of
Turkish government officials.
Friel said Thursday he was surprised by the
reaction and that the proposal was "being used by some to try to promote
issues that are valid but have zero relationship to what is happening
here."
"I don't know what the real history is any more," Friel said.
Brant MP Phil McColeman said he is aware of the
"very unusual situation" and has brought it to the attention of his
federal counterparts.
"It's a complicated issue. There is a lot to sort
out," he said, adding government ministers are currently swamped trying
to get acquainted with many files and issues relating to new portfolios.
At issue is a small plot created in 1912 in the
northeast section of Mount Hope cemetery. For years it was referred to
as the Turkish Plot, although the majority of the 16 people buried there
appear to be Alevi and not ethnic Turks, according to local researcher
Bill Darfler.
McColeman said it was important not to
misrepresent someone as being something they were not. However, he also
said the decision on marking the plot does not seem to be a federal
government decision, but rather the city's decision.
The story is complicated by a November 1914
incident that occurred days after the declaration of war between Great
Britain and Turkey. City police, acting on orders from Ottawa, detained
all local "Turks." Some 100 men were rounded up, briefly held at the
jail, then at the armories and then transported by train out of the
city, eventually ending up at an internment camp in Kapuskasing.
It cannot be proven that any of the 16 people
buried in the Brantford plot were among those detained during the First
World War. In fact, seven of the men are certain to have no connection
as they died prior to the 1914 incident. It is also believed that many,
if not most, of the "Turks" rounded up were actually Alevi.
Concerns were aroused after it became known that
Turkish consul general Ali Riza Guney had toured the cemetery site,
called on Friel and expressed interest in the erection of a monument.
Guney was in Brantford again for recent
celebrations at the end of Ramadan at the local mosque, as were
McColeman and Friel. McColeman said the Turkish official appeared "eager
to proceed" with the proposed plan for a plaque.
Friel said Thursday that Guney indicated he would back away from the issue if it was causing difficulty.
During the summer, the proposal to erect a plaque
caught the attention of overseas media and has been the subject of
commentary in Turkey.
It also raised the ire of the Canadian Armenian
community as well as those further abroad who view the Turkish
government's interest in a quiet corner of a Brantford cemetery as being
a politically motivated gesture with ulterior motives.
A plaque or monument "identifying (those buried in
the plot) with Turkey and the Turkish government would be an
injustice," said Toronto resident Sam Manougian, a member of the
Armenian National Committee of southern Ontario.
The idea of a monument endorsed by the Turkish
government that incorrectly labels Alevi as though they were Turks is a
"real injustice," he said.
The website Keghart.com has been monitoring the situation, and any articles relating to it. An online petition to "Stop the Fake Monument" had collected 342 signatures by Thursday [August 29, 2013].
"Brantford Expositor," 29 August 2013
Turkey doesn't care one whit about the Turks who died in Canada and are buried in that cemetery, if indeed they are even ethnic Turks, which is doubtful.
ReplyDeleteTurkey is just trying to portray itself as a victim, to counter the Armenian Genocide issue.
If Turkey thought it could get away with it, it would just as soon claim that the dead Turks were victims of a Canadian campaign of genocide and hate.