Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Taliban, Pakistani forces trade heavy fire along Afghanistan border
  • Has another Nakba been averted?
  • El-Sisi and Trump to chair Gaza summit in Egypt on Monday
  • Portugal beat Ireland in injury-time in World Cup qualifier
  • Oscar-winning actress Diane Keaton dies aged 79
  • Zelenskyy urges Trump to broker end to Ukraine war after Gaza deal agreed
  • No survivors found after Tennessee explosives plant blast
  • Madagascar soldiers join antigovernment protesters assembled in capital
  • Activists renew calls for football ban on Israel despite Gaza ceasefire
  • ‘Another Nakba’: UN expert says Gaza recovery will take generations
  • Relief, scepticism over Gaza ceasefire at pro-Palestine rally in London
  • Biden undergoing radiation treatment for prostate cancer
  • Portugal vs Ireland 1-0: UEFA World Cup qualifier – as it happened
  • Vacherot stuns Djokovic, faces cousin Rinderknech in Shanghai Masters final
  • India vs Australia – Women’s Cricket World Cup 2025: Teams, tickets, venue
  • Global Warning: Our future in a warmer world
  • UK, US, NATO flew 12-hour patrol on Russian border amid Ukraine war
  • Bari Weiss and the Israel narrative in the US
  • North Korea shows off new intercontinental ballistic missile
  • Why Gaza still looks to the sea for true peace
  • Israeli strikes kill at least one, injure several people in south Lebanon
  • RSF drone strike kills dozens in Sudan’s war-ravaged el-Fasher
  • France lose Mbappe for Iceland after injury in Azerbaijan World Cup win
  • Intensive Israeli air strikes kill one, injure seven in southern Lebanon
  • Al Jazeera reporters follow Palestinians’ return to northern Gaza

Flowers, tears, tree planting in Adiyaman to remember Turkey’s earthquake

By Al Jazeera Published 2024-02-07 00:58 Updated 2024-02-07 00:58 Source: Al Jazeera

Adiyaman, Turkiye – The clock tower standing above the rubble and debris, frozen in time with its watch hands stopped at 4:17am, had become a symbol of Adiyaman’s destruction. But a year later, it is finally ticking again as usual.

On the first anniversary of a double-fold earthquake that killed more than 50,000 people and left three million people displaced in Syria and Turkey, hundreds have gathered beneath Adiyaman’s clock tower – a point of reference for the city – just a few minutes before 4am.

Survivors left flowers and observed a few moments of silence to mourn Adiyaman’s 8,387 victims, making it the third most affected province in Turkey after Hatay and Kahramanmaras.

After an early morning spent sitting around fires warming up this cold day and recalling their traumatic memories from last year, at 7am attendees headed together to plant 100 trees, a symbol of rebirth after so much death and destruction. “We thought it was important to honour our dead, but also celebrate all those who’ve given their helping hands over the past year,” says Berfin Kilic, a native of Sanliurfa, another province of the earthquake zone.

Kilic decided to move to Adiyaman a year ago to help. As her city was spared major destruction, unlike elsewhere in the region, she started volunteering for Dayanisma Insanlari, a civil society organisation coordinating humanitarian aid cooperation in the disaster area, including food distribution to survivors in tented settlements.

She and a few other volunteers helped organise this commemoration, followed by a distribution of warm meals to survivors across the city, just like they did a year ago today.

“Even though we have lived through a year that included pain, loss and solidarity, we have seen that we grow stronger together and give hope to each other,” says Mehmet Yilmaz, another volunteer, as he helps distribute the meals.

Nejla Arslan, 30, a geography teacher and one of Adiyaman’s survivors, explains she immediately escaped the city on the morning of February 6 and found refuge at her brother’s apartment in Ankara, the capital.

“I still try to be far from my city as much as possible,” she says, adding that she only returned for a few days just in time for the memorial function.

Kilic says that the tragedy sparked widespread solidarity across Adiyaman, where rescue and aid came slower than in other areas, pushing locals to support each other as they could through grassroots citizen initiatives like Dayanisma Insanlari.

“That gives me hope,” Kilic says smiling, as still a year later thousands of people in this Kurdish-majority city are living in temporary shelters, making them reliant on the kindness of others.