UC’s Int’l House Has Fostered Friendships for 75 Years

UC’s International House Has Fostered Friendships for 75 Years
By STEVEN FINACOM

Berkeley Daily Planet, CA
April 3 2005

Special to the Planet (05-03-05)

“The plain fact is that we are members one of another and that we
are not living in accordance with the nature of things-That is, we
are not living in accordance with the facts, if we think only our own
thoughts, and sit nowhere ever except upon the lonesome throne of our
own outlook,” University of California President Benjamin Ide Wheeler,
told Berkeley students in 1907.

“Hatred between men, hatred between classes, hatred between peoples,
represents always this stubborn unwillingness to get over onto the
other hilltop and see how the plain looks from there.” Although he
would not have known it at the time, Wheeler’s remarks now seem most
expressive of a Berkeley institution, International House, founded not
long after his death. International House was one of three programs
at American universities-Columbia, Berkeley, and Chicago-funded by
Rockefeller gifts in the 1920s in an effort to bring American and
foreign students together in the same residences and thus build
international understanding and friendship.

This is the 75th year since the August, 1930, opening of Berkeley’s
“I House” building, which rises in an impressive and eclectically
appropriate mixture of Spanish, Moorish, and Indian architectural
influences at the peak of Bancroft Way, just beyond the southeast
corner of the Berkeley campus. It stands as a substantive secular
temple to human understanding, physically and programmatically
multitudinous and splendid, an institution among institutions.

Today, I House is so much a familiar part of Berkeley’s physical and
cultural landscape that many people take it for granted, perhaps
thinking of it in the same detached way they might regard some
distinguished but only distantly acquainted relative-with a general
sense of approval and goodwill, but with little interest in greater
familiarity.

That is a shame, since International House and its programs were
radical for much of Berkeley in the 1930s and have since been witness
to, or catalyst for, so much of what changed city, nation, and world
in the 20th century. The questioning and removal of legal and social
barriers based on racial prejudice. National and international
conflicts, and their resolutions, whether tragic or inspiring.
Efforts, still only part finished, to create campuses and communities
of durable and harmonious diversity. I House continues to be of vital
necessity in the 21st century.

As part of an effort to make this remarkable Berkeley institution more
understandable to both residents and the general public, I House, in
2004, produced a slim but powerful community memoir. Close Encounters
Of A Cross-Cultural Kind presents both historical sketches of the
founding of I House and key eras in the institution’s history, but
is primarily a set of personal testimonials drawn from decades of
speeches, letters, and statements from former residents staff, and
visitors. Most of the recollections are Reader’s Digest short-the
voices of more than 40 individuals are represented in about 100
pages-but they convey a powerful message. I House changes people for
the better. The experience of living there, or even just visiting,
opens eyes and minds, often in spite of the most daunting backdrops
of age-old national and racial prejudices and stereotypes.

Excerpts from the book provide ample evidence of personal change.
Here, for example, is the account of an Armenian visitor whose parents
were killed by Turks, becoming friends with the Turkish student who
poured coffee in the dining room. A former American G.I. and a student
from Japan, also an ex-soldier, are assigned as roommates immediately
after World War II and learn to re-examine their stereotypes. An
Iranian woman writes that “before September 11, some of my closest
friends and spiritual soul mates were Americans, and after Sept. 11
they turned on me…Because I thought Americans hated me, I hated all
Americans back with passion.” She rethinks these feelings only after
she moves into I House and is assigned an American roommate from the
deep South who proves different from all her negative expectations.

An African-American resident describes how the open-minded attitudes
of a roommate with mixed Caribbean and British ancestry change his
own perspectives on issues “black and white.” “I discovered that when
I refuse intercultural discourse, when I expect the worst from people,
and when I limit myself and expect the same from others…then I become
the racist.” A former student from Israel describes finds himself,
in 1972, eating his first meal at I-House with residents from Saudi
Arabia, Jordan, Kuwait and Egypt, as well as a Palestinian.

“I had never before met an Arab, only seen them from afar through
the hostile barbed-wire fence of a frontier,” he wrote. “I began
to understand that the hatreds on which we had grown up were left
far behind us, and that here at I House we could see one another
as individuals, as people, as warm and caring human beings.” And a
resident in the late 1980s recalls, “I remember students from round
the world watching as the Berlin Wall came tumbling down. I looked
around me and realized how many of us at I House had taken down the
walls within ourselves…Living there taught me more about politics
than my graduate classes in political science.”

While many of the writers in the Close Encounters anthology describe
important transformations in their lives because of I House, their
stories are rarely preachy or pontificating, and several contain wry
humor. One American from New York writes of his Russian roommate,
“the poetic drama of East and West together was tested at two o’clock
in the morning, when Sergei would snore…” Other writers regretfully
describe tensions with roommates and acquaintances early in their
residency, missed opportunities for friendship, differences that they
only later realized they could have avoided.

But most of the accounts are uplifting. By the simple act of putting
people with different backgrounds together in ordinary daily life,
I House reshapes its residents. The cumulative impact cannot be
inconsiderable. Since 1930, some 60,000 “I House alumni” have gone
out into, or returned to, the world beyond Berkeley. They include
seven Nobel Laureates, a U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, two
former Governors of California and thousands of others who have,
in their individual way, spread I House ideals around the world.

Many of those are Californians and others from the United States,
since International House has, since its beginnings, intentionally
mixed both domestic and foreign students. it’s not simply a residence
and place for “others”, but for all of us.

Close Encounters Of A Cross-Cultural Kind can be purchased through
the International House Development Office for $11.95 plus $2
shipping. Proceeds go to the Annual Scholarship Fund.

Send a check drawn on a U.S. bank payable to International House to
International House Development Office, 2299 Piedmont Ave., Berkeley,
CA 94720, or call 642-5128. If ordering by mail, be sure to include
the address to which the book should be sent.

I-House is in the midst of a series of events to celebrate the
building’s 75th anniversary.

Next up, this Thursday, May 5, is the annual Awards Gala, an evening
event honoring actress Rita Moreno and Sybase CEO John Chen, and
featuring foods selected by local restauranteur Narsai David. For
further information on attending the Gala, call 642-4128.

A 75th anniversary reunion follows in early June, and other events
are planned for the Fall.

For more information on I House and programs there, visit

http://ihouse.berkeley.edu/.

Nanotechnology news in brief: FEI Company

Nanotechnology news in brief

FEI Company

Nanotechweb.org (The World Service for Nanotechnology)
29 April 2005

FEI Company (United States) has reported sales of $121 m for the first
quarter ended 3 April 2005. The figure is 15% higher than for the same
period of 2004. Net income for the first quarter of 2005 was $3.4 m,
compared with $1.9 m for the same period in 2004 and $8.4 m in the
fourth quarter of 2004. “Our first quarter showed reasonable growth
compared with last year, even as it reflected the expected seasonal
decline after our very strong fourth quarter,” said Vahe Sarkissian,
president of FEI. “Nanotechnology research demand continued to be
solid, with bookings from our industry and institute market growing
29% since last year’s first quarter.”

“Defy Eternity – The Scorpion Child,” by Kristina O’Donnelly

PR Leap (press release), CA
May 2 2005

“Defy Eternity – The Scorpion Child,” by Kristina O’Donnelly – known
for her exotic, controversial novels – rocks at Fictionwise.com!

(PRLEAP.COM) American author Kristina O’Donnelly is known for
offering novels that are called “exotic cocktails on the Orient
Express.” Her multi-cultural plots include passionate love affairs,
yes, but also controversial socio/political issues that are current,
as well as ancient philosophies, no-holds barred human emotions, and
far-flung exotic locales.

“Defy Eternity – The Scorpion Child” is a contemporary
suspense/thriller about reincarnation that flows between California,
New York and Istanbul, from Yesterday to a misty Tomorrow that may
never dawn. The heroine, Ariadne, an American expatriate novelist
married to a Turk, lives in a dangerous, exotic world, suspended on
the threshold between life and death. There is also an American stage
and screen star, Daniel Saxon, and Burhan, an advisor to the Turkish
military junta. The plot is a cinemascopic reel of romance,
high-stakes terrorism, sex, intrigue, and subtle undercurrents of
mysticism and reincarnation, the concept of the latter put forward in
a no-nonsense, thought-provoking manner.

“Passion, passion and more passion, but what else are you to expect
from a Scorpio?!….its sting is nearly fatal! ‘The Scorpion Child’
will make you wish to run away to exoticism, Constantinople and
romance. This Scorpio heroine keeps her head cool among a maze of
love, political and karmic intrigues, while everybody else is thrown
into turmoil under her intense gaze and velvety touch. Like a real
Scorpio, ‘The Scorpion Child’ is fascinated by life and death issues,
spirituality and passionately interested in sex, of course. One more
time Kristina O’Donnelly masters the plot and romance while bringing
us some invaluable insights, in this case about the Armenian-Turkish
conflict. ‘The Scorpion Child’ will give you an inlook at what a
terrorist mind can be made of as well. Pascale Blue, Reviewer, USA.”

“…transmits a rich texture of flavors, images and suspense. Kristina
O’Donnelly drew on her personal intercultural life to be able to
write “The Scorpion Child”, a multi-level novel that screams to be
transformed into a feature film. Already as a novel the book
transmits a rich texture of flavors, images and suspense – spiked
with eroticism and questions we all ask ourselves. The author painted
with words, invoking a convincing story and unlike some books in the
New Age category Kristina O’Donnelly treats themes such as
reincarnation as well as the general cultural research with great
depth and substance. This is a book for all those who dare to walk
the bridges between cultures and time. Rashid Al-Taliq – writer &
fusion artist – Europe.”

Link to FictionWise:

Link to purchase its Turkish edition from Epsilon: ?fr_recid=61300

http://www.fictionwise.com/eBooks/KristinaODonnellyeBooks.htm
http://www.epsilonyayinevi.com/pgs/prd/prd_det.asp

The Turkish Gambit

The Turkish Gambit

Hayots Ashkharh, Yerevan
29 Apr 05

by Sarkis Gevorkyan

The delicate game of chess that has started between the Turkish and
Armenian leadership is still continuing with both sides exchanging
letters which indicates serious changes that might happen in
Armenian-Turkish relations.

US President George Bush’s message of 24 April and Council of Europe
Secretary General Terry Davis’s statement also proves that. They
proved the predictions about an inevitable change in Turkey’s
political behaviour. Turkey’s externally strange and illogical step to
publish Talat Pasa’s “Black Notebook” should also be seen within the
same context of developments. In fact, this is a demonstration of
“readiness” to discuss history freely and a kind of bait to kick-start
this process at the bilateral level.

The reason is evident: Turkey needs to get rid of the brand of a
country that carried out genocide by shedding crocodile tears about a
common Armenian-Turkish “tragedy” and to create a veneer of
repentance. And this should be done as soon as possible, i.e. by
October 2005 when the European Union and Turkey will start
negotiations where a demand for the recognition of the Armenian
genocide will be put forward.

Turkey wants to act on the basis of the formula “first history, then
policy” because it needs only two things: to avoid being branded as a
country that carried out the genocide and de jure confirm its control
over the territories it occupied in 1921 with the help of the
Lenin-Ataturk deal. It is obvious that at present, Turkey is ready to
make compromises on all the other problems, even on the Karabakh
issue, except for these two. But there is a strong rule in diplomacy:
first take, then give. For this reason, Turkey made an attack by means
of Prime Minister Erdogan’s letter and Armenia, through President
Robert Kocharyan’s reply, adopted the role of a player who defends
himself with the help of a certain counterattack.

Such chess-like moves showed that the Turkish gambit is entering its
critical phase when every step may be fateful for the parties.

How will the events develop? We think that after Kocharyan’s reply,
the Turkish party will make a fuss throughout the world about its
readiness to discuss the “painful pages” of history, but Armenia is
trying to re-direct the pressure that a third party is putting on
Turkey, in the belief that bilateral relations will allegedly improve
as a result of this. This means that the problem of the genocide
hinders improvements in these relations and Armenia has territorial
claims to Turkey.

In order to predict Turkey’s next steps, Armenia itself should take
certain progressive steps that would stem from the spirit and contents
of President Kocharyan’s letter to Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan.
They may include:

A) An official offer to establish diplomatic relations between the two
countries;

B) An invitation to an Armenian-Turkish business forum in Yerevan;

C) A suggestion that all the disputable problems be put on the agenda
of an Armenian-Turkish high level meeting

D) To raise the problem of Armenia’s blockade more actively and
consistently.

It is obvious that Turkey is in a peculiar situation and launches
attacks by looking at the schedule all the time. Along with defending
itself, Armenia should also use its opportunities for counterattack by
October and try to neutralize Turkey’s attempts at promoting itself as
a constructive party in assessing history by putting forward positive
initiatives directed at improving relations.

Trial of Editor of Agos Turkish-Armenian Newspaper Resumed

TRIAL OF EDITOR OF AGOS TURKISH-ARMENIAN NEWSPAPER RESUMED

YEREVAN, APRIL 29. ARMINFO. The trial of the editor of the
Turkish-Armenian newspaper “Agos” Grant Dink has been resumed today,
reports AP>

Dink is accused of insulting the Turkish national anthem especially
concerning the part mentioning “pride for belonging to heroic race.”
In 2002 in Sanliurfa Dink criticized the Turkey authorities for
anti-Armenian propaganda in schools. He says that the anthem Turkish
schoolchildren sing every morning says that it is happiness to be
Turk. This is discrimination against other ethnic minorities, says
Dink noting that all non-Turks are instructed to conceal their
nationality and to say that they are just citizens of Turkey. This is
an example of Turkey’s bad treatment of its ethnic minorities and this
a bad road towards the EU, notes Dink. Meanwhile Turkey keeps denying
the Armenian Genocide of 1915 when 1.5 mln of Armenians were
massacred, reports AP.

Coming to America was a ‘culture shock’ to a few Cats

CollegeSports.com, NY
April 29 2005

Coming to America was a ‘culture shock’ to a few Cats

By Jennifer Jones Kentucky Kernel
Lexington, KY (U-WIRE) — Word definitely travels far.

Over the years, UK tennis players have carried the school’s
reputation across the world. And it is paying off now.

Diversity has become a major contribution to the men’s and women’s
tennis teams’ recent success, as there are now five international
players on the tennis team from all over the world.

UK men’s tennis head coach Dennis Emery said past tennis players
recommended the international players to him.

“I heard about them through word of mouth, followed them up, and
pursued them,” he said.

And he managed to persuade many to come to Lexington.

“They have filled some holes and made the team deeper,” he said.

Tigran Martirosyan is a senior from Yereven, Armenia, who transferred
from Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. He came to UK
because of the competitiveness of the Southeastern Conference and
because UK provides a good level of athletics.

“I wanted a successful career and to better my tennis skills,” he
said.

Martirosyan almost went to USC, but his coach from Loyola suggested
UK because of our facilities, academics and coaches.

“Moving to Kentucky was a culture shock for me. There was an Armenian
culture in Los Angeles, so I felt comfortable there,” he said.

Martirosyan also said that the move was nothing too big to overcome,
and he is glad he came for the experience.

This season, Martirosyan has teamed with doubles partner Jesse
Witten, and the two have been ranked as high as No. 6 in the nation
by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association. He and Witten knocked off
three top-10 opponents in the same week earlier this season.

Marcus Sundh, a freshman from Stockholm, Sweden, came to UK because
it is a good school for athletics and academics. He was offered other
scholarships to Utah and to Southern Methodist University in Dallas,
but Emery talked him into coming to Lexington.”The transition was not
too difficult because I left my family when I was sixteen to go to
tennis school, and I do get to go home for the summer,” Sundh said.

Aibika Kalsarieva, a senior from Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, led the UK
women’s tennis team to its first SEC Championship this season. She
has also been named the school’s first SEC Player of the Year.

She said it was UK head coach Mark Guilbeau that drew her to campus.
He stayed interested in her while others turned away, and it got her
attention.

When she finally cleared all the academic hurdles to enroll in a
Division I school, he still wanted her, and she listened.

Kalsarieva said Guilbeau has been a positive influence, as he has
pushed her more than any other she has had in the past.

She has not been back to Kyrgyzstan since she came to America in
2000, and she said she still misses it.

Two other international players on the women’s team are Liis Sober, a
sophomore from Tallinn, Estonia, and Kim Coventry, a sophomore from
Melbourne, Australia.

Coventry came to UK because of the coaching staff, and because she
wanted to play on a team that had the potential to be in the top 10
in the nation.

“It was a difficult transition moving here, but I have great support
from my teammates and coaches, and I’m really enjoying it now,”
Coventry said.

US State Department: Armenia actively fights terror

Pan Armenian News

US STATE DEPARTMENT: ARMENIA ACTIVELY FIGHTS TERROR

28.04.2005 04:43

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ «Armenia was a full and active participant of the fight
against terror in 2004 as before,» the US State Department Threat of
Terrorism in Foreign States Annual Report says. «In December 2004 the
National Assembly of Armenia passed a law against money laundering and
financing terrorism, as well as carried out work to make the Armenian
legislation comply international standards,» the document says. According to
the report, Armenian frontier guards discovered 42 grams of radioactive
substances, which were not suitable for using in the production of arms. In
spite of these substances were not meant for terrorist activities to all
appearance, by that Armenian frontier guards showed their capacity to find
and neutralize nuclear substances,» the document says. The report also notes
that the Central Bank of Armenia has fully cooperated in detection and
freezing of bank accounts of terrorists, however, no such accounts were
found in Armenia in 2004.

90 Thousand Trees on Occasion of 90th Anniv. of Armenian Genocide

AZG Armenian Daily #076, 28/04/2005

Ecology

90 THOUSAND TREES ON OCCASION OF 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Faithful to the tradition, this year “Armenia. Tree-Planting” program
celebrates the Day of the Earth by organizing a public tree planting.

Last year, in Dzoravanq, one of the remote villages of Gegharqunik, a park
of 0,8 hectares was established. This year, on the Day of the Earth’s
Protection, John Evans, US ambassador to Armenia, RA ministers, USAID and
the Peace Corps officials participated in the tree-planting activities in
Karin village, Aragatsotn marz.

“Armenia. Tree-Planting” program was initiated by the donations of the
Diaspora Armenians. 600 thousand trees were restored in 500 dwelling places
of Armenia, including the territory stretching from Gyumri to Goris. The
office of the program decided to plant 90 thousand trees in commemoration of
90th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

By Karine Danielian

ANCA: Kansas Becomes 38th State to Recognize Armenian Genocide

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE
April 27, 2005
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

KANSAS BECOMES 38th STATE TO RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

— ANCA Welcomes Proclamation by Gov. Sebelius

WASHINGTON, DC – Governor Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas has issued a
proclamation marking the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
making the Sunflower State the 38th U.S. state to go on record
commemorating this crime against humanity, reported the Armenian
National Committee of America (ANCA).

“Armenian Americans very much appreciate Governor Sebelius’
leadership in adding Kansas to the list of U.S. states that have
formally recognized the Armenian Genocide,” said Aram Hamparian,
Executive Director of the ANCA. “We are hopeful that the growing
pressure on the White House – from state governments and U.S.
legislators – will impress upon the President that he should not
stand in the way of Congressional legislation marking this crime
against humanity.”

In the proclamation, issued on April 20th, Gov. Sebelius proclaims
April 24th, 2005, “Armenian Remembrance Day.” She notes that April
24th marks “the ninetieth anniversary of the genocide and
deportations of countless Armenians in Ottoman Turkey; this great
sorrow continues to haunt not only Armenians but also their
neighbors in Turkey.”

Governor Sebelius goes on to “salute the modern nation of Armenia,
and Armenians everywhere,” noting that “Kansas is grateful for the
contributions of Armenian Americans who have chosen Kansas as their
adopted home. They have employed wisdom, courage and centuries old
traditions to enrich the character of our state through their
leadership in business, agriculture, academia, government and the
arts”

In 2004, Governor Sebelius had issued a proclamation marking June
18th, 2004 as “Kansas-Armenia Partnership Day.” The measure called
attention to the special relationship between the Kansas National
Guard and Armenia, which began in 2003 as part of the State’s
Partnership Program. That program pairs developing nations in
Europe, South America and Asia with the National Guard in states
and territories to foster mutual interests and establish long-term
relationships.

During a June 18, 2004 special ceremony held at the State Defense
Building in Topeka, State Adjutant General, Maj. Gen. (KS) Tod
Bunting noted that, “Our Constitution starts ‘We, the People of the
United States…’ Through this program, it is ‘We the People’ of
Kansas who are reaching out in a spirit of cooperation to the
people of Armenia to show them who we are and how we live and to
learn from them who they are and how they live.”

The complete text of the 2005 Kansas Genocide proclamation is
provided below.

#####

Proclamation by Kansas State Governor Kathleen Sebelius

TO THE PEOPLE OF KANSAS, GREETINGS:

WHEREAS, today is a day for Kansas to join in remembrance of a
human tragedy that stands as a reminder for us to strive for a
future of peace, prosperity and freedom for all; and

WHEREAS, today marks the ninetieth anniversary of the genocide and
deportations of countless Armenians in Ottoman Turkey; this great
sorrow continues to haunt not only Armenians but also their
neighbors in Turkey; and

WHEREAS, we are reminded that the suffering of the Armenian people
from 1915-1923 was a tragedy which the world should not forget and
applauds efforts of Armenia and Turkey to come together to consider
these events and their significance; and

WHEREAS, Kansas also wishes these countries success as they build
on their recent achievements and encourages them to continue to
work together in a spirit of hope and understanding; and

WHEREAS, Kansas remembers those who perished and suffered, we also
salute the modern nation of Armenia, and Armenians everywhere.
Kansas is grateful for the contributions of Armenian Americans who
have chosen Kansas as their adopted home. They have employed
wisdom, courage and centuries old traditions to enrich the
character of our state through their leadership in business,
agriculture, academia, government and the arts; and

NOW, THEREFORE, I, KATHLEEN SEBELIUS, GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF
KANSAS, on behalf of the people of Kansas, send solemn wishes to
the Armenian people on this day of remembrance, and do hereby
proclaim April 24, 2005, as

Armenian Remembrance Day

in Kansas, and urge all citizens to join in this observance. Our
state and the Armenian nation stand together, with our partnership
of peace, prosperity and freedom.

DONE: At the Capitol in Topeka
under the Great Seal of the
State this 20th day of April, A.D. 2005

BY THE GOVERNOR:

www.anca.org

ANKARA: Positive moves from USA will ease “disappointment” in Turkey

Positive moves from USA will ease “disappointment” in Turkey – premier

Anatolia news agency, Ankara
27 Apr 05

ANKARA

[Passage omitted] Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on
Wednesday [27 April] that relations with the United States continued
to be one of the main pillars of Turkish foreign policy.

“We should be alert against the efforts of various groups and lobbies
who are uneasy about the development of Turkish-US relations and we
shouldn’t permit them,” told Erdogan an AKP [ruling Justice and
Development Party] meeting held in the parliament.

Referring to the many different comments and news made about Turkey-US
relations, Erdogan said that they were either wrong or exaggerated.

Pointing to the sound basis in Turkey-US alliance which continued for
50 years, Erdogan said that further improvement of the relations with
the USA in line with common interests and mutual benefits was one of
the main priorities of the Turkish government.

Erdogan stressed that the communication channels at all levels should
be open in that regard.

Erdogan said that the high-ranking visits between the two countries
would continue, stressing that Turkey-US cooperation should continue
as regards to Iraq, solution of Arab-Israeli conflict, Caucasus,
stability in Central Asia, reform efforts in the Middle East,
reconstruction of Afghanistan, fight with terrorism and energy
security. Erdogan stressed that finding a lasting and fair solution in
Cyprus, fight with PKK [Kurdistan Workers’ Party] terrorism and
Armenian claims constituted an important place in Turkey-US relations.

Referring to the recent claims brought to agenda saying that there was
a widespread anti-Americanism in Turkey, Erdogan said: “The Turkish
nation, who has never forgotten the support US extended to Turkey in
many issues, is also aware of the fact that the two countries need
each other today and tomorrow.”

“However, I should clearly state that the positive responses of not
only the USA, but of all our allies and partners to our right
expectations will contribute significantly to overcoming the
disappointment that appears in the Turkish public opinion from time to
time,” said Erdogan.