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I am a stone

I am a stone

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EVR014
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  • Müge Tuzcuoğlu: My birth year on my ID card is 1983; The September 12 military coup leaves its deep scars on my family and my hometown even today, as it does on all young people born in the 1980s. I finished my entire school life in Ankara with Anthropology education at the Faculty of Languages, History and Geography. One of the periods that affected my life was working as a journalist at Evrensel newspaper between 2002 and 2007. Another turning point was another event that made him leave Ankara, school and journalism as meaningless: the murder of Uğur Kaymaz. Reporting on him was no longer enough for me, and thus the basis for the bus ticket I bought to Diyarbakır in 2008 was laid. I have been in Diyarbakır for nearly 3 years. As a Hopa-Laz young woman, I work with children in Diyarbakır. I am currently a manager at the Sarmaşık Association, which carries out studies on poverty. Besides all this; my past and future; The stories he tells about people and his philanthropy are shaped by my father and my "child" brother, with whom I spent my entire life and who grew up next to me... "I am a stone!" said a father. "I did not let my children's hands touch the ground because I could not bear it. One day, I lost both of them. If I can bear this, then I am a stone!"... Their mothers and fathers and politicians have talked about this war until today. In this book, this time, the children and siblings of those killed in unsolved murders, the families evacuated in thousands of villages, the Kurds whose thousands are in prison, the children and siblings of the guerrillas who lost their lives in the mountains, that is, the third generation of this war, took the floor. As they explained, they showed that the Kurdish problem is much more than the numbers we calculated and that the consequences of this war, which is an incalculable reality, are clear as day. They explained that not only their language, culture and identity were denied to the Kurds, but also their childhood, that is, today's children. When they told each other what they had experienced, the children could not believe it: "Did I experience it all?" saying. And yes, unfortunately they had experienced it all...
Publisher : Evrensel Publishing
The heart : Turkish
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Kürtler için yapılmış güzel şeylerden bir tanesi
M... A... | 16/04/2025
siparişler hızlıca ulaşıyor, kategori çok. beğendim.
A... U... | 05/04/2025
Sizlerden gayet memnunum emeğinize sağlık
M... A... | 12/03/2025
Harikaydı
Serdar KÖMÜRCÜ | 22/01/2025
Gayet pratik ve hoş
Muzaffer Bora | 12/01/2025
Hızlı teslimat sağlandı .çok iyi bir şekilde bantlanmış teşekkürler. Gayet memnunum. Xwedê we bihêle .
A... Y... | 11/01/2025
&ddjmsd
RODEM ÇAÇAN | 06/01/2025
Sizi seviyorum Pırtukakurdi
Birsen KORKMAZ | 11/12/2024
Berbat
Sema Koç Soğancı | 29/11/2024
İsim yazılı kupa istedim kupada isim yok
F... D... | 09/11/2024
I am a stone Müge Tuzcuoğlu: My birth year on my ID card is 1983; The September 12 military coup leaves its deep scars on my family and my hometown even today, as it does on all young people born in the 1980s. I finished my entire school life in Ankara with Anthropology education at the Faculty of Languages, History and Geography. One of the periods that affected my life was working as a journalist at Evrensel newspaper between 2002 and 2007. Another turning point was another event that made him leave Ankara, school and journalism as meaningless: the murder of Uğur Kaymaz. Reporting on him was no longer enough for me, and thus the basis for the bus ticket I bought to Diyarbakır in 2008 was laid. I have been in Diyarbakır for nearly 3 years. As a Hopa-Laz young woman, I work with children in Diyarbakır. I am currently a manager at the Sarmaşık Association, which carries out studies on poverty. Besides all this; my past and future; The stories he tells about people and his philanthropy are shaped by my father and my "child" brother, with whom I spent my entire life and who grew up next to me... "I am a stone!" said a father. ''I didn't let my children's hands touch the ground because I couldn't bear it. One day, I lost both of them. If I can bear this; So I am a stone!''... Their mothers, fathers and politicians have talked about this war until today. In this book, this time, the children and siblings of those killed in unsolved murders, the families evacuated in thousands of villages, the Kurds whose thousands are in prison, the children and siblings of the guerrillas who lost their lives in the mountains, that is, the third generation of this war, took the floor. As they explained, they showed that the Kurdish problem is much more than the numbers we calculated and that the consequences of this war, which is an incalculable reality, are clear as day. They explained that not only their language, culture and identity were denied to the Kurds, but also their childhood, that is, today's children. When they told each other what they had experienced, the children couldn't believe it either: "Did I experience it all?" And yes, unfortunately they had experienced it all... EVR014
I am a stone

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