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Hrant Dink's Book "Two Close People, Two Far Neighbors" Released In

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  • Hrant Dink's Book "Two Close People, Two Far Neighbors" Released In

    HRANT DINK'S BOOK "TWO CLOSE PEOPLE, TWO FAR NEIGHBORS" RELEASED IN ARMENIAN

    Noyan Tapan
    Dec 23, 2009

    YEREVAN, DECEMBER 23, NOYAN TAPAN. "Two Close People, Two Far
    Neighbors" book by Hrant Dink, the assassinated editor-in-chief
    of Agos daily, has been released in Armenian with the support of
    Hrant Dink International Foundation. Its presentation took place
    at the Institute of Oriental Studies of the RA National Academy of
    Sciences on December 23. The book contains the author's contemplation
    on relations between Armenia and Turkey and displays an entirely new
    approach to building the common furture of the two countries.

    The book was published in Turkish in 2008, 18 months after Hrant
    Dink's murder. In the words of Mkrtich Somundjian who had translated
    the book, he had difficulty finding the Turkish version. H. Dink's
    brother Yervand Dink helped him in this issue.

    M. Somundjian said that this book provides the Armenian public with
    an opportunity to learn more about H. Dink. "It is necessary to speak
    more about his legacy rather than about his tragic death. The book is
    quite interesting and it is well worth reading", the translator stated.

    The Armenian Minister of Diaspora Ms. Hranush Hakobian said
    that the primary wish of Hrant Dink as a Turkish citizen was the
    Armenian-Turkish normalization and the opening of borders. "When I
    took an unpublished version of the book in my hand, I read it without
    a moment's respite as it was just impossible to leave it unfinished.

    Each footnote contains deep thoughts. Dink wished that there would be
    peace in our region," she said, adding that Dink's pain regarding the
    genocide was evident, and he used to say that "if a person is displaced
    from his native land in a gilt plane, all the same it is genocide".

    According to the political scientist Alexander Iskandarian, Hrant Dink
    did consider Western Armenia an ordinary place where Armenians used to
    live at one time, nor was it a grief over a lost homeland. "To him,
    Armenia was a viable native land. His Armenia was neither dead nor
    deplorable: it was breathing. And geography has no relation in this
    issue," he said.

    1,000 copies of the book were printed. It is already available in
    bookstores.
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