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Book About Armenians In Turkey Published In Ankara

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  • Book About Armenians In Turkey Published In Ankara

    BOOK ABOUT ARMENIANS IN TURKEY PUBLISHED IN ANKARA

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    10.10.2009 13:37 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ A new book released Friday by the Turkish Economic
    and Social Studies Foundation (TESEV) focuses on the Armenians of
    Turkey and explains various issues, from their historical roots in
    Anatolia to the meaning of being an Armenian in Turkey today.

    The 600-page "Armenians in Turkey - Congregation, Individual, Citizen"
    also explores the depths of Armenians' relations with the state.

    TESEV's democratization program director, editor-in-chief of Akos
    newspaper Etyen Mahcupyan, said the state policy has long been to
    ignore the Armenian community in Turkey and that therefore there
    is a need to educate the people who do not really know much about
    this community.

    The book's four authors, Gunay Goksu Ozdogan, Fusun Ustel, Karin
    Karakasli and Ferhat Kentel, said they wanted to go beyond prejudices
    against Armenians or overprotecting Armenians. They said that they
    aimed at prompting a "rediscovery" process in the Turkish public in
    order to better know those who shared mutual values for centuries in
    the same land.

    Ustel said that in 2000, when they started the book project,
    there had been more reactions in the community against Armenians
    but that society has been opened up since then with the help of the
    democratization process together with Turkey's accession negotiations
    with the European Union.

    One perspective that the authors adopted to dissect the Armenian
    community in Turkey was to look at how Armenians position themselves
    in society as members of a congregation or religious community. The
    authors also studied how prejudices against Armenians are fed. In
    addition to historical background about Armenians in Anatolia,
    the authors also focused on their social lives, including their
    associations, marriages, publications and involvement in sports and
    the arts.

    The researchers conducted in-depth interviews with 40 well-known
    members of the Armenian community in Turkey. They also had 12 focus
    groups, comprising six to . To understand the religious rituals of
    the Armenians, the researchers observed the community in Antakya's
    Vakifli village, Today's Zaman reported.
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