Lodi News-Sentinel

Colorado restaurant owner raises funds for his family, quake victims in Turkey

- Annika Schmidt COLORADO SPRINGS GAZETTE

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — After the deadliest earthquake in more than a decade struck Turkey and Syria earlier this month, tragedy runs deep more than 6,600 miles away in Colorado Springs.

Turkish native Erdal Bengogulla­ri said 18 members of his extended family have died in the catastroph­e that struck on Feb. 6. Eleven of those cousins, nieces, nephews and in-laws on his mother’s side were in the same apartment building in Adana, Bengogulla­ri’s hometown and a city that was hard hit by the disaster.

He said his mother and sister are grieving and displaced from home, driving up to six hours a day, back and forth between a safe place to sleep and the ruins of their home city to help other survivors and bury loved ones. Members of the Bengogulla­ri family are among thousands who have perished. The death toll has surpassed 45,000 as rescue efforts pivot to recoveries.

Bengogulla­ri has lived in Colorado Springs since 1993 and is the owner of Purple Onion Grill in east Colorado Springs where he works with his brother, Mehmet. The Purple Onion features Turkish cuisine with some Greek influence on a menu of Bengogulla­ri’s own creation.

Bengogulla­ri will cook a Turkish meal for a fundraiser at the restaurant on March 5, with 100% of proceeds going to his family in Turkey. The Purple Onion Grill is anticipati­ng a big turnout for the event, which will feature performanc­es starting at 2 p.m. from two volunteer bands sponsored by Chucker & Company. Attendees are asked to contribute a minimum $20 cash donation for a Turkish meal of either Chicken Tava or Turkish Arabic Tava with rice and a Greek salad.

March 5 also happens to be Bengogulla­ri’s 56th birthday. He called the fundraiser a “bitterswee­t” gathering. Despite a birthday celebratio­n with family planned for the night before, he will cook at home overnight for members of the community supporting his loved ones at the fundraiser.

“This isn’t about my family here. This is about my family in Turkey,” he said.

Bengogulla­ri has been scrambling to send money across the Atlantic, especially cash as card payments are not possible in most areas devastated by the disaster. A GoFundMe set up for the Bengogulla­ri family has surpassed $9,000; the goal is $50,000 after the fundraiser. Bengogulla­ri has sent $2,000 so far and plans to share photos with donors of his family using the proceeds in Turkey.

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