Erdoğan says 'not a single mosque left in Athens'
ANKARA-Anadolu Agency
There is not a single mosque in Athens right now as all of them have been destroyed, the Turkish president said on May 31.
"Not a single mosque of ours still stands in Athens. They were all razed to the ground. But we did not resort to such ways in a city like Istanbul," said President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, referring to the 567th anniversary of the conquest of city, which was marked on May 29.
"Our mosques and symbolic monuments in places where we had to leave a century ago were destroyed in a short time."
Speaking during the opening ceremony for Hadımköy Dr. İsmail Niyazi Kurtulmuş Hospital in Istanbul, Erdoğan said that when Sultan Mehmet Han -- also known as Mehmet the Conqueror -- conquered Istanbul, he was not welcomed as an enemy but like an "expected savior.”
"Our ancestors regarded conquest as not merely taking more lands but winning over hearts," he said.
Erdoğan said his ancestors took care of all that is good, beneficial and favorable for humanity not only during the conquest of Istanbul but also during the conquests of all other places.
"Hagia Sophia was opened to the service of Muslims as their right of conquest by making it even more beautiful instead of razing it to the ground because of a religious animosity," he said, adding other places of worship were not touched and were maintained to meet the needs of the community.
“Only this picture is sufficient to demonstrate the magnanimity of our ancestors,” he added.
Erdoğan underlined that in the past century, the country has not been "successful enough" in keeping alive the relics of its ancestors.
He stressed that during the past 18 years, Turkey has protected all the heritage of its geography and not only the heritage of own ancestors.
"When we came to power, we saw that only 460 buildings had been restored. In the last 18 years, we have restored 5,060 buildings and presented them to the service of our nation and humanity."
Turkey on May 30 shot back at an objection from Greece on the reading of passages from the Muslim holy book, the Quran, in the Ayasofya (Hagia Sophia), a landmark mosque-converted museum in Istanbul.
Accusing Athens of making "futile and ineffective statements" on the event, which marked the 567th anniversary of the Ottoman conquest of the former Byzantine capital, Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Hami Aksoy said Greece's displeasure illustrated its "intolerant psychology."
"The fact that Greece, the only remaining European country without a mosque in its capital, is disturbed by the recital of the Holy Quran in Hagia Sophia is a case in point illustrating the intolerant psychology of this country, especially at a time when calls to prayer can be heard from minarets in Europe and the importance of the principle of mutual respect is increasingly valued," said the online statement.
Aksoy's statement came after earlier remarks from the Greek Foreign Ministry saying the move did not comply with the UNESCO Convention Concerning the Protection of World Cultural and Natural Heritage.