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Tag Archives: David Kilgour

Dropped Hat Results in Trip to Greece

19 Thursday Jul 2018

Posted by davidkitz in News Reports, Ottawa Christian Writers

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Athens, David Kilgour, Erdogan, refugees, turkey, Turkish refugees

The steps of a good man are ordered by the LORD, and He delights in his way (Psalm 37:23).

It’s not often that accidentally dropping your hat at a public event leads to a trip to Athens, Greece. But that’s exactly what happened to award-winning  author David Kitz.

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David Kitz in front of the Parthenon in Athens

Kitz was attending Ottawa Member of Parliament, Andrew Leslie’s 2017 New Year’s levee, when he dropped his hat near the coat check.

“Suddenly, I felt a light tap on my back as a gentleman handed me my hat,” Kitz recounts.

“You dropped this,” the gentleman offered.

“A discussion followed and I discovered that this man, Omer Livvarcin, had a few months earlier fled Turkey following the coup attempt.”

Livvarcin explained, “I was a high-ranking officer in the Turkish navy, but following the coup everyone in the military was under suspicion. My wife’s private school in Ankara was shut down and all the teachers were dismissed. Life was becoming very difficult for us. Many of our friends were arrested. We were sure we would be next. That’s why we fled to Canada.”

After that chance meeting, Kitz and Livvarcin kept in touch. “I was troubled by the news coming out of Turkey,” Kitz explained.

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Human rights advocate — David Kilgour

In early June of this year that interest in Turkish refugees led to a call from former MP and cabinet minister, David Kilgour. Two months earlier Kilgour had been on a fact-finding mission to Athens with US members of Congress. Kilgour described the human rights abuses of the Turkish Erdogan regime as “absolutely deplorable.”

Kilgour was asked to make a return trip to Athens to advocate for the Turkish refugees stranded there, but prior commitments made that trip impossible. That’s when he called on David Kitz to go in his place.

“The four-day trip was a real eye-opener,” Kitz states.

He explains, “The Turkish refugees fell into three broad categories: journalists, teachers and intellectuals.”

“The first interview was with a senior level journalist with Zaman, the biggest daily newspaper in Turkey. In 2013, Zamon reported that truckloads of armaments were crossing from Turkey into Syria in support of ISIS fighters. The Erdogan government’s response was swift. The newspaper’s assets were seized and the journalists were arrested.

“The next day we met with a university professor and engineer, Yunus Karaca. Karaca patented an award-winning system for separating glass, metal and plastics for municipal recycling. Yet despite numerous accolades including from NASA, his career has been stifled. His passport was cancelled by the Turkish authorities, and fearing arrest, he fled with his young daughter to Greece.”

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Teachers’ faces hidden for the safety of family members still in Turkey

But the most gripping interviews were with teachers, some of whom were imprisoned for a year or more with as many as 28 men crammed into a cell.

The leader of a teachers’ union told Kitz that the 30,000 members of his union lost their jobs, and then they were systematically arrested and imprisoned for being members of a terrorist group.

Families have been wrenched apart. They live in dread of police arriving at their door. Many are in hiding. To escape they make a dangerous night-time crossing by river into Greece.

Kitz states, “Their stories affected me deeply. I returned to Ottawa with a determination to raise awareness here and across Canada.”

20170407110917_Omer-Livvarcin

Omer Livvarcin

As for Omer Livvarcin, he is a poster child for what an asylum-seeking refugee can bring to this country. After escaping with his family and little else, he now is a part-time professor at the University of Ottawa’s Telfer School of Management. He heads up two projects doing research on artificial intelligence (AI).

“Canada opened its doors to me. Now I want to give back. By using AI in military procurement I believe we can design a process that can save taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars.”

His second research project involves using AI to benefit the charitable and non-profit sector.

“Again,” Livvarcin states, “for me this is about gratitude—about giving back.”

You never can tell where unexpected events—like a failed coup or a dropped hat—might take you.

Life after politics—Retired or Inspired?

02 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by davidkitz in News Reports, Psalms

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Tags

David Kilgour, human rights, Jack Murta, persecution, politicians, politics

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David Kilgour (right) stands with colleagues in front of the Swiss Parliament after a presentation on how the Chinese Government is killing members of Falun Gong to harvest their organs. Screenshot from http://www.david-kilgour.com

David Kitz
Spur Ottawa Correspondent

Have you ever wondered how former politicians spend their time? The media often portrays retired politicians as simply living the good life on a gold-plated government pension.

Some retired politicians, however, put their time and energy into serving the Lord. David Kilgour and Jack Murta are examples of two retired members of parliament who are actively engaged in a higher calling. In one form or another they are working in the service of the King.

Both men have occupied seats at the cabinet table, but now once a week at noon you can find them waiting on tables, serving the homeless at the Union Mission.

“It’s one thing I always look forward to,” Kilgour states with obvious enthusiasm. “It keeps me grounded.”

“I have made this my prayer,” Murta adds, “Lord, help me to love you more, because if I love you more, I will love others more. I need to live out that prayer wherever I go.”

Murta served as the Progressive Conservative Member of Parliament for the Manitoba riding of Lisgar from 1970 to 1988. In the Mulroney government of the mid 1980’s, he served first as Minister of State for Multiculturism and later as Minister of State for Tourism.

“Security waves us through saying ‘Ah, it’s the Happy Gang!’”

“I admit I was quite disillusioned with politics by the end. It’s not an easy life—the constant travel and pressures of office.”

After leaving politics, Murta did not return to Ottawa until 2003. It was a man from across the aisle, David Kilgour, who welcomed Murta back. “For the first few weeks I stayed with David and Laura.”

What drew Murta back to Ottawa was his involvement in the Parliamentary Prayer Breakfast. For many years he has been the guiding hand behind the weekly prayer meetings among members of parliament.

“I see this as my vocation now,” he states with calm conviction.

But in his modest way Murta disagrees with the term “guiding hand.”

“It’s really the Lord who does the guiding.”

The group meets on Parliament Hill at 7:00 on Wednesday mornings. Every week, Murta picks up Kilgour and two or three current members of parliament on the way there.

“When we arrive on the Hill, security looks through the window of the car and waves us through. ‘Ah, it’s the Happy Gang!’ they always say.

“Most mornings we have from 20 to 25 MPs in the room—across all party lines. In addition to that we have a prayer meeting for parliamentary staffers at noon. That’s usually a younger set—in their twenties or thirties.”

“An estimated 80 percent of the persecution of faith communities around the world today is done to Christians. That’s a good part of what motivates me to speak out.”

Though David Kilgour actively participates with Murta, his primary area of service and expertise is in a different field.

He was first elected to the House of Commons in 1979 for an Edmonton riding and continued to serve in that role through seven elections, until 2006. In the Chretien government from 1997-2002, he served as Secretary of State for Latin America and Africa. Then from 2002-2003 he served as the Secretary of State for Asia-Pacific.

It’s this broad international experience that Kilgour draws on as he presses for human rights around the world.

“An estimated 80 percent of the persecution of faith communities around the world today is done to Christians. That’s a good part of what motivates me to speak out, but we all need to do it on a united, interfaith front. The cause is any persecuted religious or cultural group.”

Kilgour is active in a number of international organizations which promote democracy and human rights. For him this means a good deal of travel as he speaks on these topics in various world capitals. In January his advocacy work took him to Tbilisi, Georgia.

Earlier this month he spoke at Queens University at a conference organized by the Christian Legal Fellowship. His topic was “Should Christians Speak out on Human Rights?”

But Kilgour does more than give speeches and chair committees. He also has written a number of books. In 2009, along with lawyer and human rights advocate David Matas, he wrote Bloody Harvest: The Killing of Falun Gong for their Organs. For their work Kilgour and Matas won the 2009 Human Rights Prize from the International Society for Human Rights, in Switzerland.

On April 2, David Kilgour will be the plenary speaker at the Ottawa Christian Writers Conference.

“C. S. Lewis called himself God’s terrier. I like to think of myself that way too,” Kilgour says with a grin. “If freedom of religion exists in a country, other freedoms, such as freedom of speech and association will usually exist too.”

Perhaps the examples of Kilgour, Murta, and others like them can help restore the public’s perception of the retired political class.

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