Category: Culture/Art

  • International Gallipoli Symposium will be held in İstanbul

    International Gallipoli Symposium will be held in İstanbul

    International Gallipoli Symposium will be held in İstanbul

    canakkale

    Academics, scientists and researchers from Turkey, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Germany and Britain will attend the conference.

    The 3rd International Gallipoli Symposium will be held in İstanbul in April, which many academics, scientists and researchers studying various aspects of the Çanakkale War are scheduled to attend.

    The symposium, sponsored by İstanbul Culture University, the Australian National University (ANU), Çanakkale 18 Mart University and the Çanakkale Health, Education and Culture Foundation, is scheduled to be held on April 20 and 21 in İstanbul. Academics, scientists and researchers from Turkey, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Germany and Britain will attend the conference.

    The experts will make presentations on various subjects such as “Military Strategy and Techniques Used in the Çanakkale War” and “Reflections of the Çanakkale War in the press and cinema.”

    An academic from İstanbul Culture University, associate professor Dr. İbrahim Güran, told Cihan the aim of the symposium is to encourage more scientific studies on the Çanakkale War and to contribute to the economic, social and cultural development of Çanakkale because people will be more inclined to visit Çanakkale, thus contributing to its betterment. Güran added that those giving sessions are experts in their fields and all aspects — social, military and economic — of the Çanakkale War will be handled at the symposium.

    The 1st International Gallipoli Symposium was held in March 2006 in both İstanbul and Çanakkale.

    Cihan

  • Turkey’s 1500-Year-Old, $28M Bible Linked to Gospel of Barnabas?

    Turkey’s 1500-Year-Old, $28M Bible Linked to Gospel of Barnabas?

    By Clara Morris , Christian Post Contributor

    February 23, 2012|3:05 pm

    ancient bible turkey

    The Vatican has made an official request to gain access to a 1500-year-old Bible worth $28 million currently held by the Turkish government in Ankara, Turkey. There is speculation that the Bible may be a copy of the Gospel of Barnabas – a telling of Jesus’ ministry Muslims believe is part of the original Gospels.

    Photocopies of the holy book’s pages are reportedly worth about $1.7 million, but the relic isn’t so extremely valuable just because of its age, but also because of its construction and its contents. The Bible is handwritten in gold lettering on loosely strung together animal hide and written in Syriac. Syriac is a dialect of Aramic – Jesus’ native language. Aramaic itself is rarely present in today’s society, as it is now only spoken in a small village near Damascus.

    There is some speculation that this Bible is a copy of the Gospel of Barnabas – a Gospel version Muslims believe is part of the original Gospels. The Gospel of Barnabas is not included in the New Testament along side Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, and in fact Barnabas opposes the New Testament and rather has clear similarities to the Muslim interpretation of Jesus. Barnabas even contains a story in which Jesus predicts the coming of Prophet Muhammad. Muslims believe this original gospel has been suppressed.

    However, theology professor Ömer Faruk Harman told Today Zaman, “Muslims may be disappointed to see that this copy does not include things they would like to see and it might have no relation with the content of the Gospel of Barnabas.”

    The Turkish government gained possession of the Bible back in 2000 when they caught a band of thieves and smugglers cutting through Turkey with the bible as well as other antiques, illegal excavations, and explosives.

    The tome has been kept at the courthouse until recently, and is set to make its way, under heavy security, to Turkey’s Ankara Ethnography Museum. But before it settles there the Vatican is hoping to get a chance to study and investigate the extremely valuable Bible.

    via Turkey’s 1500-Year-Old, $28M Bible Linked to Gospel of Barnabas?, Christian News.

  • Turkey: Islamic colossal film idolises the fall of Constantinople

    Turkey: Islamic colossal film idolises the fall of Constantinople

    1329756688405 costantinopoli(ANSAmed) – ANKARA, FEBRUARY 20 – The colossal Turkish film ”Fetih 1453” (The Conquest 1453), about Constantinople’s capture by the Ottoman Turks, is drawing in many viewers, but has been criticised over its allegedly excessive Islamic nationalism by one of the most important Turkish artists, pianist and composer Fazil Say.

    The artist, newspaper Milliyet reports, has released a written statement in which he denies his involvement in the film’s soundtrack, and confirms that he has stepped out of the project due to its megalomania, which oozes from the film in his words.

    The film lacks artistic value, Say continues, and idolises nationalism, potentially creating problems for viewers from different cultures. ”Conquest 1453” describes the conquest of Constantinople (today’s Istanbul) by Sultan Mehmed II. It was screened for the first time on Thursday in more than 130 theatres at exactly the same time, starting at 14:53h. The film has already made history because of its budget, 17 million USD, making it the most expensive production ever in Turkey. There are battle scenes with 15,000 extras and special effects in 3D showing the ancient Byzantium, guaranteeing the film’s success. The media has given much attention to the production and the playbill with the bearded Mehmed II leaning on his sword, while hordes of Ottoman Turks attack the walls of Constantinople, can be seen everywhere. It is only the second time a film is made about the conquest of Constantinople, after the first one in 1951. The event used to be marginalised in history, but has gained importance in the eyes of the new Turkey under Erdogan, which has abandoned the focus on the West of the founder of modern Turkey, Kemal Ataturk, and now looks with pride at the glorious past of the empire that covered three continents. The same continents in fact that are on the maps of the so-called ”neo-Ottoman” diplomacy, a term that Turkey does not appreciate. The film’s trailer starts with a phrase attributed to Mohammed, who prophesies that Mehmed will conquer Constantinople. ”It is sad,” writes an opposition newspaper, ”but millions of Turks will see this film and feel proud of their ancestors, showing ”our greatness” to their children.” Apart from the criticism on the film’s nationalism by composer Say and by a part of the Turkish press, two protests that accompanied the film’s launch have drawn some attention, Turkish websites report. In Germany the Christian association Via Dolorosa from Koln has urged people to boycott the film, because the Turks should be ashamed of what they have done to the Christians instead of glorifying the conquest of Constantinople, the association claims. And in Greece, the weekly To proto Thema has called Fetih 1453 a ”propaganda” film that conceals ”the mass murder of Greeks and the looting of their land by the Turks.” (ANSAmed).

    via Turkey: Islamic colossal film idolises the fall of Constantinople – Turkey – ANSAMed.it.

  • Rich Americans Are Fleeing the Country

    Rich Americans Are Fleeing the Country

    BOB ADELMANN 

    outofdodgeWhen Hollywood film director James Cameron (AvatarTitanicTerminator) announced that he was moving to New Zealand, preppers, fiscal doomsayers, and alarmists had a field day in deciphering his motives for moving, ultimately deciding that Cameron was moving so that he is better able to weather the massive monetary upheaval that is upcoming or he is escaping U.S. taxes and regulations.

    Marc Slavo, as an example, suggested ulterior motives other than those stated by Cameron: “While the move for the Canadian-born Cameron may initially be perceived as a rejection or denouncement of American policies and ideals … [he] may have ulterior motivations as evidenced by where he’s planning on moving and what he’s planning on doing once he gets there.”

    The Associated Press reported that Cameron successfully applied to buy 2,500 acres of farmland and he “intend[s] to reside indefinitely in New Zealand and [is] acquiring the property to reside on and operate as a working farm.” Slavo is skeptical in light of Cameron’s lack of need to be working at all, having made in excess of $250 million last year, according to Salon magazine.

    And Slavo is not persuaded that Cameron’s real reason is to be closer to the New Zealand headquarters of Weta Digital, which won an Oscar for its special effects in the movie Avatar. Nor is he persuaded that Cameron wants to be there solely to direct the sequel to Avatar scheduled to begin later this year. Slavo instead is thinking that Cameron knows that “farmland is one of the only reasonable physical assets to hold in the event of a major crisis,” and that Cameron’s disclosure on his New Zealand application for citizenship was simply cover.

    Paul Joseph Watson and Alex Jones at Inforwars.com are of the same mind as Slavo:

    If you think that Hollywood director James Cameron’s decision to leave America and move his entire family to a farm in New Zealand is simply to provide his kids with a “strong work ethic,” as Cameron claims, think again….

    Cameron’s decision fits the trend of wealthy Americans pulling their money out of the country and reinvesting it to buy land in the southern hemisphere, escaping spiraling tax rates and protecting themselves against the potential for widespread social dislocation.

    When John Malone, chairman of the board of Liberty Media with a personal net worth of $4.5 billion, reported that he had purchased a significant piece of property along the Quebec border, he explained in an interview with the Wall Street Journal his real motivation:

    WSJ: What are the biggest risks for Liberty Media right now?

    Malone: The concerns really tend to be much more macro: Is America going to make it, rather than are we going to make it? It’s pretty hard. If the country doesn’t make it, do any of us make it?

    WSJ: What are you doing to protect against the weak American economy?

    Malone: Well, my wife, who is very concerned about these things, moved all her personal cash to Australia and Canada. She wants to have a place to go if things blow up here….

    We have a retreat that’s right on the Quebec border. We own 18 miles on the border, so we can cross. Anytime we want to we can get away.

    As Slavo explained, Malone is not a tin-foil hat weirdo believing in things that go bump in the night: “He may not look like a doom and gloomer, but it sounds like he’s considered the possibility of a complete collapse in the United States of America. Otherwise, why suggest that if something were to happen, he could get away?”

    Two years ago Brian Knowlton, writing in the Wall Street Journal, noted the paradigm change taking place even then among wealthy Americans increasingly frightened about the economic and social situation in the country. He quoted Jackie Bugnion, director of American Citizens Abroad (ACA): “What we have seen is a substantial change in mentality among the overseas community in the past two years. Before, no one would dare mention to other Americans that they were even thinking of renouncing their U.S. nationality. Now, it is an openly discussed issue.”

    One of the reasons given for considering renunciation is the increasingly onerous rules invading privacy and personal finances. The Patriot Act has made it more difficult for Americans living abroad to keep accounts with international banks. If those banks cannot verify an American address, the accounts are closed. Daniel Flynn, an American citizen who lives in Belgium, wrote a letter to the ACA:

    It seems the new anti-terrorist rules are having unintended effects. I was born in San Francisco in 1939, served my country as an army officer from 1961 to 1963, have been paying U.S. income taxes for 57 years, since 1952, have continually maintained [my] federal voting residence, and hold a valid American passport. [And yet my bank] said that the new anti-terrorism rules required them to close our account because of our address outside the U.S.

    Another American living in Canada had the same problem. Kathleen Rittenhouse said, “I did not know that the Patriot Act placed me in the same category as terrorists, arms dealers and money launderers.”

    The United States is the only industrialized country that requires citizens to pay income taxes on earnings abroad that are also being taxed by the country where they live. Some are calling this, properly, double taxation and are sick of it. And the IRS began investigations into foreign accounts, calling it a “voluntary offshore disclosure program,” that threatens the privacy and financial security of those with legitimate offshore accounts. Joe Field, a partner in a law firm in Hong Kong that caters to American citizens seeking to renounce their U.S. citizenship, says his firm is experiencing an “exponential increase” in the number of American citizens wanting to get out. He said:

    Many people who looked to America as the protector now see America is bent on coming after them. We’re getting a whole new class of client who is someone who says, “I want to go into the [IRS] disclosure program and as soon as I complete it, expatriate.”

    Their numbers are likely to increase as a loophole allowing wealthy Americans to move their monies and wealth offshore closes at the end of the year. Americans with a net worth of at least $2 million will have to buy their way out of the country by paying hefty exit fees and taxes, even on assets that have unrealized gains. The loophole allows them until the end of the year to give away up to $5 million without the fee being applied, saving enough in taxes to pay the fee that is levied.

    And then there are those who are just disappearing altogether without a fare thee well. John Gaver, editor of Action America, wrote that there is a “vast and increasing number of wealthy US citizens who are just ‘dropping out’ — taking all of their wealth and leaving the US without renouncing. They just disappear off the US tax rolls and appear on some other country’s tax rolls.”

    The number disgusted with how America treats its successful citizens continues to grow. As Bugnion of ACA notes, “It is a sad outcome, but I personally feel that we are now seeing only the tip of the iceberg.”

    www.thenewamerican.com,  03 FEBRUARY 2012

  • Turkey: With New Film About Conquest of Constantinople, It’s like 1453 All Over Again

    Turkey: With New Film About Conquest of Constantinople, It’s like 1453 All Over Again

    Turkey: With New Film About Conquest of Constantinople, It’s like 1453 All Over Again

    February 16, 2012 – 4:25pm, by Yigal Schleifer

    Considering it took place some 500 years ago, the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople in 1453 feels like it happened only yesterday — at least in Istanbul. In recent years, an Ottoman history magazine titled “1453” has been introduced, a municipal museum called “Panorama 1453” has opened, and increasingly lavish commemorations and reenactments of the Ottomans’ victory over the Byzantines are being put on.

    But now the mother of all tributes is here, with the premier today of a $17 million big-screen Turkish production (actually, the country’s most expensive film ever) that tells the story of the conquest. Perhaps not surprisingly in a place where 500 years is just a blip in time, the movie, simply called “Conquest 1453,” is already leading to some controversy. From the Wall Street Journal’s report on 1453 (the film):

    With directors promising a two-and-half hour spectacle of blood, action and tub-thumping Ottoman triumph, it’s also shaping up to be one of Turkey’s more controversial cinematic offerings.

    Even before the film’s release, the trailer, screened in January, appeared to enrage some Greeks. The preview was met with consternation by Greek weekly To Proto Thema, which reported that “Turkish invaders are presented as the masters of the world… (The director) Faruk Aksoy fails to show important historical events such as looting and mass slaughter of Greeks.”

    The film’s potential to cause further controversy is difficult to ascertain. The production company has been secretive about the movie, refusing to show previews to critics ahead of general release. But social media platforms have been abuzz with heated comments from Turkish and Greek users attempting to laud or decry the movie’s portrayal or events.

    Spokeswoman of the film’s production company, Aksoy Film, insisted the movie is “historically accurate” and that the portrayal of events and the movie setting was reviewed by an advisory team of Turkish historians.

    While the film’s producers have refused to preview the movie, they have released a pulse-raising trailer (below) that makes it fairly clear that the film, with its mix of battle field action and Ottoman triumphalism, is very likely to conquer Turkish box offices.

    via Turkey: With New Film About Conquest of Constantinople, It’s like 1453 All Over Again | EurasiaNet.org.

  • Pretoria teen deceived into sex slave scam

    Pretoria teen deceived into sex slave scam

    Johannesburg – A Pretoria teenager said she was deceived into becoming a sex slave by a dance company which offered her a job in Istanbul, Turkey, according to a report on Friday.

    DSC5632

    Imogen Adams, 19, was allegedly offered the opportunity by a Germiston-based dance company RT Concerts, The Star newspaper reported.

    “We were told that we were going to dance in several shows and that it would be at hotels where we would work on six-month contracts.”

    That was not the case once she arrived in Istanbul, Adams told the newspaper.

    “Within days we were given a new contract which we had to sign. We were told that we had to do ‘hosting’ at the hotels after the shows and that it had to be with men who came to the shows.”

    The hosting involved “entertaining” the men.

    The men would watch the show and choose who they wanted to be with.

    “We had to dress up and make the men want us,” Adams said.

    Adams told the newspaper that when she wanted to leave, she was threatened. After making contact with her mother through the South African embassy, Adams returned to South Africa.

    RT Concerts managing director Tanya van Rie denied the allegations, The Star reported.

    “Never in a million years would we do something like this. We have a name and reputation to protect,” Van Rie said.

    “Those complaining are complaining because they were fired, which happened because they have problems with authority.”

    – SAPA

    via Pretoria teen deceived into sex slave scam | News24.