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ARPA Lecture: `And Those Who Continued Living in Turkey after 1915'

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  • ARPA Lecture: `And Those Who Continued Living in Turkey after 1915'

    Organization: ARPA INSTITUTE
    Address: 18106 Miranda St., Tarzana CA 91356 . PHONE/FAX (818) 881-0010
    Subject: Lecture/Seminar
    Title: `And Those Who Continued Living in Turkey after 1915'
    Lecturer: Dr. Rubina Peroomian
    Date/Time: Thursday, January 22, 2009 @ 7:30PM
    Merdinian Auditorium,13330 Riverside Dr. Sherman Oaks, CA 91403
    Directions: On the 101 FY Exit on Woodman, Go North and Turn Right on
    Riverside Dr.

    Abstract: The recent political developments in the world has created a
    new atmosphere whereby the events of 1915 and the plight of the
    Armenian survivors in Turkey, be they Christian, Islamized, or hidden,
    have been espoused and fictionalized in the literature of 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. External pressures may influence the
    metamorphosis of the Turkish state, but the real change should come
    from within the Turkish society. That change may be underway. The
    recent book And Those Who Continued Living in Turkey After 1915
    addresses the issues of the psychology of the survivors of the
    Armenian Genocide who remained in Turkey, their lifestyle after the
    tragedy, and the struggle to preserve their identity. Dr. Rubina
    Peroomian will focus on: What happened to the women and the children
    who were kidnapped during the massacre? What happened to those
    Armenians who were forced to adopt Islam? How does the Armenian
    community of Istanbul live, and what does it do to preserve its
    Armenian identity?

    Rubina Peroomian, Ph.D., a lecturer of Armenian language and
    literature, is currently a Research Associate at UCLA. She is the
    author of several books, textbooks, chapters in books, and research
    articles in scholarly journals on Armenian Question and the Armenian
    Genocide. Her major publications include Literary Responses to
    Catastrophe: A Comparison of the Armenian and the Jewish Experience
    (1993), Armenia in the Sphere of Relations between the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation and the Bolsheviks, 1917-1921 (1997) in the
    Armenian language (translated and published in Russian), The Armenian
    Question, a series of textbooks in Armenian for grades 10-12
    (1990-1999), and a comprehensive textbook of the History of the
    Armenian Question for high schools in Armenia (2000). And Those Who
    Continued Living in Turkey after 1915 (2008) is her most recent
    publication. She has lectured widely, participated in international
    symposia. She has received Lifetime Achievement Award by the Armenian
    Educational Foundation and the Mesrob Mashtots Medal with an
    encyclical by His Holiness Aram I Catholicos of Cilicia.
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