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And Those Who Continued Living in Turkey after 1915

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  • And Those Who Continued Living in Turkey after 1915

    The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute
    Tsitsernakaberd memorial complex
    RA, Armenia Yerevan 0028
    Contact: Arevik Avetisyan
    Tel.: (+374 10) 39 09 81
    Fax: (+374 10) 39 10 41
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.genocide-museum.am/

    "And Those Who Continued Living in Turkey after 1915"
    18.04.08

    The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute presents the book titled "And
    Those Who Continued Living in Turkey after 1915" by Rubina Peroomian,
    which issued under the auspices of the AGMI publishing-house.
    The book is about people, who continued living in Turkey after the
    Armenian Genocide.
    In the atmosphere of the precariousness of minority rights in Turkey and
    government's persistence in denying the existence of the Armenian issue
    as well as its continuing policy of pressure and selective approach to
    history, a prescribed national identity covering all ethnic groups in
    Republican Turkey was enforced and the Armenian collective suffering of
    the past was buried in silence.
    With the recent political developments in the world, the wall of silence
    is breached. The events of 1915 and the plight of the Armenian survivors
    in Turkey, be they Christian, Islamized, or hidden, are espoused and
    fictionalized in literature produced in Turkey. Artistic expressions
    echo the continuing trauma in the life of these "rejects of the sword,"
    a Turkish moniker for Armenians, having "undeservedly" escaped from
    death. The stories that Turkish writers unearth and the daring memoirs
    of Turkish citizens with an Armenian in their ancestry, as well as
    obscured references to these same stories and events in Turkish-Armenian
    literature, have unveiled the full picture of survival, with an
    everlasting memory of the lost ones, but also of forced conversions, of
    nurturing the "enemy" in the bosom, and of the dehumanization and sexual
    torture of men and women. A multifaceted image, an identity, of what is
    broadly generalized as Turkish-Armenian, thus emerges, a phenomenon that
    contradicts the long-researched and explored concept of the
    Diasporan-Armenian post-Genocide ethnic identity. Nevertheless, the
    sociopolitical and religious impositions and the hegemony of Muslim
    identity have not been fully challenged yet. Outside pressures may
    influence the metamorphosis of Turkish state of mind, but the change
    should come from within the Turkish society. The change may be underway.

    This annotation was taken from the book "And Those Who Continued Living
    in Turkey after 1915" by Rubina Peroomian.
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