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    ABRAHAM BODURGIL LIBRARY OF ...

    The Washington Post
    August 13, 2006 Sunday
    Final Edition

    Abraham Bodurgil, 94, a retired Turkish area specialist at the Library
    of Congress, died Aug. 7 of pneumonia at his home in Bethesda.

    Mr. Bodurgil, of Armenian descent, was born Abraham Bodurian in
    Istanbul. (Turkish authorities changed his Armenian surname to make
    it sound more Turkish.)

    He grew up in the village of Rumeli Hisar, near Istanbul, at a time of
    great difficulty for the Armenian minority in Turkey. During World War
    I, several hundred thousand Armenians perished in what most historians
    consider state-sponsored genocide. With his father serving in the
    Turkish army, Mr. Bodurgil and his mother survived with help from a
    Turkish family that took them in and sheltered them.

    After the war, his father became a gardener at Robert College in
    Istanbul, a private American college founded in 1863. Mr. Bodurgil
    was admitted, despite being a poor villager, and distinguished himself
    as a champion javelin and discus thrower. He received his bachelor's
    degree in economics, with honors, in 1935.

    He served with the Turkish army during World War II and then worked
    for 20 years at the American Consulate in Istanbul as a press attache.

    In 1959, he immigrated to the United States and joined the Library
    of Congress, where he was responsible for the Armenian Collection
    in the Near East Section of the African and Middle Eastern Division
    of the library. He made two acquisition survey trips to Turkey and
    built up the collection substantially.

    Mr. Bodurgil produced several bibliographic guides to material on
    modern Turkey, including "Turkey: Politics and Government, 1938-1975"
    and "Kemal Ataturk: A Centennial Bibliography, 1881-1981." He also
    served as an occasional Turkish interpreter for the White House and
    federal agencies. He retired in 1984.

    He was a senior member of St. Mary's Armenian Apostolic Church in
    the District, and he served as parish council chairman and diocesan
    delegate. He also was a member of the Knights of Vartan Brotherhood.

    Survivors include his wife of 60 years, Eliza Bodurgil of Bethesda;
    a son, Edward Bodurian of Bethesda; and three grandsons.
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