01896cam0 2200337 4500003003000000005001700030010002700047010001800074100004100092101001500133102000700148105001800155106000600173181002500179181002000204182002100224182001100245200006000256210003600316214003600352215002600388320002700414330091200441606004301353606002601396607003301422700004701455801002601502801001501528801001501543http://www.sudoc.fr/17761406420260605143459.0 a978-1-903656-28-0bbr. a1-903656-28-1 a20140415d2012 k y0frey50 ba0 aeng2639-2 aGB ay a 000yy ar 6z01ctxt2rdacontent 16z01ai#bxxxe## 6z01cn2rdamedia 16z01an1 aMy ethnic questeminorities in TurkeyfAgop J. Hacikyan aLondrescGomidas institutd2012 0aLondrescGomidas institutd2012 a1 vol. (186p.)d23 cm aBibliogr. p. [169]-183 aMy Ethnic Quest delves into conflicts that stem from issues of national identity, religious intolerance and social prejudice againts Turkey's minorities. The book presents a mosaic of ethnicities: of Jews, Greeks, Armenians, Syriacs, Kurds, Yezidis and others. However, it also describes the silence imposed by the state to reduce the centuries-old mosaic into a drab mural. Much of this reflection has been sustained with unique personal narratives reflecting on a range of issues from everyday pressures on minorities to assimilate to such extraordinary episodes as discriminatory conscription into labour battalions (1941), confiscatory taxation with the imposition of the Capital Levy Tax (1942-43), anti-Jewish measures in Thrace (June-July 1934) and organized pogroms againts Greek communities (September, 1955). It is against such a background that the author had to leave his native land for good.  3027858383aEthnologieyTurquie2rameau aEthnologyyTurkey2lc aTurkeyxEthnic relations2lc 13059769777aHacikyanbAgop Jackf1931-4070 3bAbesc20260521gAFNOR 0bDLCgAACR2 2bCGLgAACR2