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Article published Jan 25, 2003
Sanford apologizes for praise of Turkish
leader
The Associated Press
Sharp
criticism has prompted Gov. Mark Sanford to apologize for his praise of Mustafa
Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern-day Turkey who some say was responsible for
the deaths of millions of Christians in the early 20th century.
In
Sanford's first State of the State address Wednesday, the governor mentioned
Ataturk, saying he was a leader who transformed his country.
Ataturk,
however, is reviled by those who hold him responsible for the killing or forced
relocation of millions of Greeks and Armenians from 1915 to
1917.
"Different people are going to read history in a lot of different
ways and in a lot of cases, it depends on who is writing that history,"
Sanford's spokesman Will Folks said.
But Sanford apologized Friday after
leaders in the Armenian and Greek communities criticized the governor after his
speech.
Rev. Aris Metrakos, pastor of Columbia's Holy Trinity Greek
Orthodox Church, said Sanford called him personally Friday morning to
apologize.
"I not only accept it, but appreciate his apology," Metrakos
said. "It was not an intentional offense. It was a mistake. A lesser man would
have said nothing. It shows he's a big man. He's a man of character."
In
a letter to the editor of The (Columbia) State newspaper that will appear
Sunday, Sanford wrote: "In the whirlwind of setting up a new office and
inauguration, I tried to think of examples of structural change for my State of
the State speech and thought of Ataturk. Some have taken offense for genuine
reasons, others I suspect for political reasons. Let me simply say this. I
apologize to anyone I may have offended."
In his letter, Sanford urged
critics to focus on the point he was trying to make in his address.
"We
need to change South Carolina's government structure," he said, calling it the
key "to changing all our lives."
The Turkish government has long denied
there was genocide of Greek and Armenian Christians as the Ottoman Empire fell
and leaders such as Ataturk came to power.
"It's not unusual, but it is a
little overreaching for Greeks to criticize Ataturk," said Cem Saydam, a
professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte who is of Turkish
descent.
It was not the first time Sanford had to make amends with an
ethnic community.
During last year's gubernatorial campaign, he
apologized for offending Jews after he referred to his time working on the
family farm as a "concentration camp for boys."
State Democratic Party
chairman Dick Harpootlian, who is of Armenian descent, said Friday that Sanford
"obviously isn't ready for prime time."
"Is this administration going to
be a series of apologies? Who's he going to offend next?"
Information
from: The State