Sevil Erkuş / Hurriyet Daily News
ANKARA
Crown Prince Charles and Prince William of Great Britain, as well as Australian actor Russell Crowe, are scheduled to attend the centennial of the Battle of Gallipoli in Çanakkale in late April.
The Turkish government, meanwhile, is considering decorating Crowe for his recent film “The Water Diviner,” which is set four years after the Gallipoli campaign in World War I and follows the journey of an Australian farmer who travels to Turkey to discover the fate of his three sons.
Ankara has extended invitations for the gathering, at which high-profile participation is expected from a number of Commonwealth countries.
The prime ministers of New Zealand and Australia are expected to attend, along with a minister from Canada.
In response to a campaign by Armenians to attain greater recognition on the 100th anniversary of what many in the world term the Armenian Genocide, Turkey plans to commemorate the centennial of the Çanakkale campaign on April 23-24-25 this year, in a bid to counter the adverse effects of Armenian efforts.
Traditionally, Turkey marks the Anniversary of the Battle of Gallipoli on March 18, which is declared Martyrs’ Day. Armenians, meanwhile, commemorate their killed ancestors on April 24.
Gallipoli is a venue that traditionally hosts thousands of Australians and New Zealanders on April 25, the day of remembrance, known as ANZAC Day after Australian and New Zealand Army Corps soldiers who lost their lives.
By merging the two occasions, Ankara is hoping to increase the visibility of the commemoration of the Battle of Gallipoli in the eye of the international community at a time when attention will likely be on the centennial anniversary of the mass killings of Anatolian Armenians during the Ottoman era.
Speaking during parliamentary budget talks about the Foreign Ministry on Dec. 14, 2014, Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said a “meaningful commemoration” of the Battle of Gallipoli was being organized.
“We are organizing the [commemoration] of the Battle of Gallipoli in a meaningful and positive way. We are also inviting the countries that were involved in World War I or were affected by it to take part,” said Çavuşoğlu.
He also referred to the 100th anniversary of the forced migration of Ottoman Armenians, which led to hundreds of thousands of deaths, saying Turkey “will deliver messages of peace and tolerance to the world in Çanakkale on April 24, 2015.”
Gallipoli is a district of Çanakkale province, which is also home to the Dardanelles. The heroic resistance in Gallipoli from 1915-1916 by the Ottoman army during World War I is known in Turkey as the “Çanakkale Wars.”