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Forum Messages Posted by Roswitha

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Thread: Press Roundup

141.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 21 Feb 2009 Sat 06:22 am

 
Nursing home residents, old men and women who have young souls, enjoy spending time in the countryside in the southern province of Adana, where the advent of spring has come earlier than in other parts of Turkey.

 

 

 

http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.do?load=detay&link=167520&bolum=130



Thread: How are street dogs dealt with currently in Turkey?

142.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 20 Feb 2009 Fri 02:16 am

cancelled



Edited (2/22/2009) by Roswitha [unnecessary]



Thread: 8 Beheaded in India

143.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 18 Feb 2009 Wed 09:15 pm

Indian boy marries dog to ward off tiger attacks

Dad: ´It will overcome any curse that might fall on the child as well on us´

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29259293/

 



Thread: Gazanfer Özcan passed away

144.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 18 Feb 2009 Wed 05:59 pm

Here you can read it in English:

 

http://www.turkishweekly.net/news/64716/master-actor-gazanfer-ozcan-dies-at-78-.html



Thread: cengiz özkan- ah istanbul(tezeneperde)

145.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 16 Feb 2009 Mon 04:23 pm



Thread: Gobekli Tepe: The World’s First Temple?

146.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 14 Feb 2009 Sat 04:31 pm

Oh, well......si++ - Insallah!



Thread: Gobekli Tepe: The World’s First Temple?

147.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 14 Feb 2009 Sat 12:05 am

Six miles from Urfa, an ancient city in southeastern Turkey, Klaus Schmidt has made one of the most startling archaeological discoveries of our time: massive carved stones about 11,000 years old, crafted and arranged by prehistoric people who had not yet developed metal tools or even pottery. The megaliths predate Stonehenge by some 6,000 years. The place is called Gobekli Tepe, and Schmidt, a German archaeologist who has been working here more than a decade, is convinced it´s the site of the world´s oldest temple.

"Guten Morgen," he says at 5:20 a.m. when his van picks me up at my hotel in Urfa. Thirty minutes later, the van reaches the foot of a grassy hill and parks next to strands of barbed wire. We follow a knot of workmen up the hill to rectangular pits shaded by a corrugated steel roof—the main excavation site. In the pits, standing stones, or pillars, are arranged in circles. Beyond, on the hillside, are four other rings of partially excavated pillars. Each ring has a roughly similar layout: in the center are two large stone T-shaped pillars encircled by slightly smaller stones facing inward. The tallest pillars tower 16 feet and, Schmidt says, weigh between seven and ten tons. As we walk among them, I see that some are blank, while others are elaborately carved: foxes, lions, scorpions and vultures abound, twisting and crawling on the pillars´ broad sides.

Schmidt points to the great stone rings, one of them 65 feet across. "This is the first human-built holy place," he says.

From this perch 1,000 feet above the valley, we can see to the horizon in nearly every direction. Schmidt, 53, asks me to imagine what the landscape would have looked like 11,000 years ago, before centuries of intensive farming and settlement turned it into the nearly featureless brown expanse it is today.

Prehistoric people would have gazed upon herds of gazelle and other wild animals; gently flowing rivers, which attracted migrating geese and ducks; fruit and nut trees; and rippling fields of wild barley and wild wheat varieties such as emmer and einkorn. "This area was like a paradise," says Schmidt, a member of the German Archaeological Institute. Indeed, Gobekli Tepe sits at the northern edge of the Fertile Crescent—an arc of mild climate and arable land from the Persian Gulf to present-day Lebanon, Israel, Jordan and Egypt—and would have attracted hunter-gatherers from Africa and the Levant. And partly because Schmidt has found no evidence that people permanently resided on the summit of Gobekli Tepe itself, he believes this was a place of worship on an unprecedented scale—humanity´s first "cathedral on a hill."

With the sun higher in the sky, Schmidt ties a white scarf around his balding head, turban-style, and deftly picks his way down the hill among the relics. In rapid-fire German he explains that he has mapped the entire summit using ground-penetrating radar and geomagnetic surveys, charting where at least 16 other megalith rings remain buried across 22 acres. The one-acre excavation covers less than 5 percent of the site. He says archaeologists could dig here for another 50 years and barely scratch the surface.

Gobekli Tepe was first examined—and dismissed—by University of Chicago and Istanbul University anthropologists in the 1960s. As part of a sweeping survey of the region, they visited the hill, saw some broken slabs of limestone and assumed the mound was nothing more than an abandoned medieval cemetery. In 1994, Schmidt was working on his own survey of prehistoric sites in the region. After reading a brief mention of the stone-littered hilltop in the University of Chicago researchers´ report, he decided to go there himself. From the moment he first saw it, he knew the place was extraordinary.

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/gobekli-tepe.html

 



Thread: Anthropologist´s war death reverberates

148.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 12 Feb 2009 Thu 03:53 pm

In a hostile corner of southern Afghanistan, an American platoon fanned out around a market, forming a protective circle around a petite woman with a notebook. Paula Loyd, a Wellesley-educated researcher, began interviewing villagers about the price of cooking fuel - a key indicator of whether insurgents had hijacked supply lines.

As part of a new military program that uses social scientists to improve the troops´ understanding of the local population, Loyd began interviewing a gregarious stranger who approached her with a jug of cooking fuel in his hands. He talked for 15 minutes, thanking her profusely in English. But just as her guards motioned it was time to leave, he lit his jug on fire and engulfed the 36-year-old Loyd in flames.

Minutes later, her fellow researcher shot and killed the man, adding a violent coda to a case that has already increased debate about the worsening conditions in Afghanistan and the military´s attempt to use social science to cure insurgency.

The attack on Loyd, who died in a Texas hospital on Jan. 7 after a two-month struggle for her life, has reverberated from the Wellesley campus, where people grieve for the energetic scholar who seemed to be a natural peacemaker, to national academic circles, where anthropologists carry on a heated debate over whether social scientists should be working for the military, to the Afghan mountains, where soldiers vow to give meaning to her death by fighting on.

"There are bad people out there who didn´t want Paula to succeed," said Steve Fondacaro, a retired colonel who runs the Human Terrain Systems program, a $250 million Pentagon initiative that has dispersed six teams of researchers - with two social scientists per team - to work with military units across Afghanistan.

Loyd´s death - the third among the researchers - "just highlights the need for us to continue the mission," he said.

But elsewhere, the attack has revived a bitter debate about whether anthropologists should ply their trade for the military.

In 2007, just months after the Human Terrain program was launched, the American Anthropological Association declared that it violates the group´s code of ethics, which stipulates that subjects of study must not feel forced to participate and must never be harmed. On Feb. 15, the association will vote on a new resolution that would prohibit research that is not made public, a move targeting research for both military and industrial purposes.

"You can´t really do anthropology in a group of people with guns," said Sally Engle Merry, Loyd´s senior thesis adviser at Wellesley, who has served on the board of the American Anthropological Association.

"This has been a very painful thing to me," Merry added. "On the one hand, I think Paula was absolutely right to give the military a way to understand the lives of Afghans better. On the other hand, what happens to the information you gather? Who owns it? How is it being used?"

Adding to the controversy has been the fate of Loyd´s attacker, identified in court documents as Abdul Salam, who tried to flee on foot. Don Ayala - the leader of Loyd´s Human Terrain team - knocked him down and handcuffed him. Minutes later, when Ayala learned how seriously Loyd had been hurt, he put a pistol to the man´s head and fired, according to an affidavit filed in a Virginia court where Ayala pleaded guilty last Tuesday to manslaughter.

To Loyd´s Army buddies, the story of death and vengeance serves as proof of the need to continue fighting until the enemy is defeated.

"Immediate justice was served," Thad Santon, a self-described Army friend of Loyd´s, wrote on her prayer website.

But others point to the incident as evidence that the Human Terrain program and the US military mission in Afghanistan itself have gone awry.

"Salam got murdered in his own country by foreign occupiers," Maximilian C. Forte, assistant professor of anthropology at Concordia University in Quebec, wrote on his website, Open Anthropology. "Try, just as an experiment, to see things from that angle for a moment."

This is how Paula Loyd´s friends at Wellesley remember her: Chugging wine from the bottle in a Somerville apartment. Dressed as GI Jane for Halloween. Some years her blond hair flowed down her back. Other years it was short as a boy´s. She was hard-core at everything she did. She read "Don Quixote" in Spanish. She rose at 4 a.m. to row the Charles River.

"She was a true anthropologist," said Gretchen Wiker, a friend of Loyd´s since the fifth grade. "You would go to a restaurant, and she was the one who knew the bartender and the waitress. You´d go to the beach, and she´d know the bus driver. She was such an open person, and approached people with such an open heart."

Raised in San Antonio, Loyd moved to the island of St. Thomas at age 12 with her mother. She was curious about living in a foreign culture, said her mother, Patricia Ward.

Concerned that an island education would prevent her from getting into a good college, her parents sent her to boarding school at Choate Rosemary Hall. Later, she joined Wellesley´s class of 1995.

Her freshman year, she took an anthropology class that sent students to do ethnographies of Boston neighborhoods. Some balked at the idea of talking to strangers, but Loyd loved it.

"She really stood out in the class as an amazingly poised student and sophisticated thinker," said Merry, now professor of anthropology at New York University.

But instead of pursuing a graduate degree in anthropology, Loyd enlisted in the Army - a rare decision for a Wellesley grad. Military recruiters pushed her to go into the officer corps, but she refused. She didn´t want to sit behind a desk.

"She wanted to understand the Army from the ground up," said Dr. Alexis Meshi, a Wellesley classmate. "It was just her wanting to understand how things work in a very basic level, not being treated in any special way."

Loyd became a tank mechanic, working for four years in South Korea and at Fort Bragg, N.C. She enrolled in a master´s degree program at Georgetown University, but joined the Reserves, serving with the 450th Civil Affairs Battalion. In 2002, she was thrilled when they were called to Afghanistan.

"She was always up for a new adventure," her mother said. "And there was so much hope for the country then."

In Kandahar, Loyd led a team that tried to dig wells and build roads in isolated villages. She sought to understand cultural norms, even as she defied them. She wore her blond hair tucked up in a helmet, not under a burqa, as local women do. Serving in a mostly male Army and a country dominated by men, she often stood out as a female in charge.

"Sometimes I´ll be talking to the men in a village and they´ll turn to the interpreter and say, "Is that a man or a woman?´ " Loyd was quoted as saying in Pennsylvania´s Morning Call newspaper in 2003.

She spent hours drinking tea with tribal elders, according to her Afghan interpreter at the time, who asked to be identified only as Farid because of security reasons.

"Paula was very popular," he said in a telephone interview. "People were really optimistic and they had hopes that these teams would help them."

When Loyd´s unit went home, she stayed on in Afghanistan as a civilian, taking jobs with the International Organization for Migration and the United Nations. In 2004, she joined the Provincial Reconstruction Team in Zabul as a USAID worker, arriving during a terrible winter. As snow blocked roads and people died of disease, Loyd´s swift acquisition of food, hats, boots, and socks to distribute among the freezing population earned her a USAID award.

But by 2006, the situation in Afghanistan was deteriorating. Corruption was rife, and some Afghans began to see NATO troops as occupiers rather than liberators. US casualties climbed, as did Afghan deaths from both insurgent attacks and US bombings and raids. NATO soldiers could not be defeated, but neither could they decisively win.

When seven contractors working for an American organization were killed in Zabul, Loyd helped ship their bodies home.

That summer, she told a panel in Washington that bringing stability to Afghanistan would require a long-term commitment. "The current wisdom is 15 to 20 years," she said.

Desperate to turn the tide in Afghanistan, the military launched the Human Terrain program in February 2007. General David Petraeus, the new commander who specialized in innovative counterinsurgency tactics, became convinced that the military needed a deeper understanding of the country, from tribal rivalries to village economics. After the first batch of anthropologists arrived in February 2007, US commanders reported that the new program had helped them reduce their combat operations by 60 percent.

But others were skeptical that useful research could be done in such a hostile environment, or that the population would see the scientists as noncombatants.

"This is a country where during the day they speak like they are great friends and at night they become the Taliban movement," said a European diplomat who asked not to be named. "Even if you are an expert, it´s difficult."

Afghanistan had taken a toll on Loyd. She bought a house in North Carolina and told friends she was recovering from post-traumatic stress syndrome there, according to Stefanie Johnson, a classmate from Choate and Wellesley.

"She was looking to settle down, lead a normal life," Johnson said, adding that she hoped to marry Lieutenant Colonel Frank Muggeo, a former special forces commander she had met in Afghanistan who is now in charge of the Army Marksmanship Unit at Fort Benning in Georgia.

But, last year, Loyd decided to take "one last tour," Johnson said.

She joined the Human Terrain initiative, helping to develop some of its protocols. She was well aware of the controversy surrounding it, but she "believed in the program," said Wiker, her childhood friend. "She would not have gone there if she did not believe that she was doing something useful and positive for the people there."

She trained for four months with her research team, which included Don Alaya, a former bodyguard for Afghan president Hamid Karzai, and Clint Cooper, a Marine who had served in Iraq. The three became close friends, Fondacaro said.

In fall 2008, they made their way to a US military outpost in Maiwand, a strategically important transit point on the route between Kandahar and Helmand, an insurgent stronghold.

Fondacaro said that Loyd´s job was to perform rapid "ethnographic studies" for her military unit, writing brief sketches describing the local population. He insists that she was acting as a social scientist, not a soldier, and that her reports were research, not intelligence, even though none has ever been made public.

"This is about social science, field research capacity," he said. "You could eventually teach a soldier to do it, but it would take years."

When Paula Loyd was set on fire on Nov 4, 2008, Cooper, her teammate, rushed to submerge her in water and stayed by her side during the long flight home to a hospital in Texas. Loyd kept her sense of humor. When she was told she would be transported to an emergency plastic surgeon, she joked, "I´ve always wanted to get a few little things done," according to an account published on the Human Terrain website.

For two months, as Loyd struggled for her life with burns covering 60 percent of her body, an eclectic band of Army buddies, Wellesley classmates, and Afghan friends consoled one another.

"I am associated with you in this moment of sorrow, and want great penalties for the enemies of Paula," Delbar Jan Arman, the governor of Zabul, wrote to Loyd´s mother in Texas.

"Paula, thank you for being my friend," wrote a fellow reservist on a prayer website. He wrote that he had once believed that women were unfit for combat - but then he met Loyd.

"I was blessed to serve with this female soldier in the combat theater of Afghanistan and here in the US," he wrote. "She was one of the finest individual persons I have ever known."

On the same website, Farid wrote: "You are in my prayers five times a day."

When she died, people from all walks of life traveled to her funeral, including Ayala, who was embraced by Loyd´s Wellesley friends.

"It´s a complicated situation - he shot a person and killed him, but for us, we felt that this person was looking out for her," said Ophelia Navarro, a former classmate. "We are hurting and grieving, and he also was hurting and grieving. He said that they were the best team because Paula was so professional, had this complete brilliant understanding and interaction with people."

Loyd´s mourners have also had to deal with controversy over the program she served in. Some blogs that announced her death featured debates about whether she was a legitimate military target.

"These aren´t just social scientists," wrote a commenter named Eric O on Wired magazine´s blog, Danger Room. "They are employed by the US military to conduct research with a goal of helping the military more effectively carry out the occupation."

For Loyd´s loved ones, such comments make her death more painful.

"We are very upset that people were using her for political gain," said Meshi, a Wellesley classmate. "They portrayed her as this really naive woman who did not know what she was doing, or used it as a way to criticize the Human Terrain program."

But Loyd´s friends and relatives don´t have time to dwell on anger. They are too busy trying to figure out how to carry out her last wishes. In her will, Loyd asked that a fund be set up to send Afghan girls to Wellesley. Loyd´s mother isn´t sure how to do that, but she is planning to travel to Afghanistan .

By Farah Stockman, Globe Staff  |  February 12, 2009  THE BOSTON GLOBE

 



Thread: Turkey’s Crisis and Future

149.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 12 Feb 2009 Thu 03:26 pm

 

 

T

 

 

he two trials that have been occupying the Turkish national

agenda today are likely to be the milestones of Turkey’s ability

to rid itself of an opaque regime shaped under bureaucratic tutelary.

One of the trials concerned the closure of the incumbent Justice and Development Party

(AK Party) and has finally been concluded, with a narrow victory for the ruling party

and democratic governance. The other is the Ergenekon case, which may unravel the

illegal nationalist organization intent on overthrowing the government and bringing an

isolationist dictatorial regime under the guise of national sovereignty.

The attempt to close the AK Party—deemed the center of anti-secular activities threatening

the state—began with a Constitutional Court verdict annulling a newly enacted

law that lifted a headscarf ban at universities. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s

reply was to accuse the Court of overriding Parliament and threatening national stability—

its headscarf policy is part of democratic reforms to advance free speech and minority

rights and has the support of the EU, which Turkey seeks to join. This is true, however

much the party lost enthusiasm for liberalizing and democratizing Turkey’s system

as part of its EU bid.

In its late July decision, the judiciary narrowly allowed the AK Party to survive—and,

with other political and civic organizations, to broaden the base of political participation

and public discourse. This is all to the good, though the fact that the case was brought

to begin with remain troubling.

The question is whether or not Turkey will be able to expose its alternative history,

bludgeoned by human rights violations, thousands of unsolved assassinations, restrictions

put on liberties, and military interventions in the political process and start a new

age marked with liberal ideals.

The Long Night of the Generals

The Ergenekon indictment has been formulated and a case has been initiated into

this putschist organization, labeled by the prosecutor as a terrorist outfit at the High

Criminal Court, which sees crimes against the state. The document is a summation of

a hundred thousand pages of evidence and supporting material. The indictment itself

Dogu Ergil

Ankara University

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 http://web.mit.edu/cis/pdf/Audit_08_08_Ergil.pdf



Edited (2/12/2009) by Roswitha
Edited (2/12/2009) by Roswitha
Edited (2/12/2009) by Roswitha
Edited (2/16/2009) by Roswitha



Thread: Hasan Yükselir - Hiroko Nakano - Dadaloðlu

150.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 11 Feb 2009 Wed 03:46 am

a brilliant voice!

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ORE7TR0FmD4



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