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Topic: Crimean Tatar diaspora


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In the News (Sun 29 Nov 09)

  
 Brian Williams:The Book   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
The Crimean Tatars in the Aftermath of the Migration of 1860.
This chapter proves that the republic was indeed established in recognition of the Crimean Tatars as the autonomy’s officially recognized native population (korennoi narod) and that all the state institutions of this republic recognized the Crimean Tatars’ unique status in the Crimea and claim to this republic.
The Post-Soviet Migrations of the Crimean Tatars from Central Asia to the Crimea.
www.stetson.edu /~gwilliam/bgwilliams/book_summary.html   (2748 words)

  
 Diaspora at Caribbean Topfunwebsites   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Originally, the term '''''Diaspora''''' (capitalized) was used to refer specifically to the populations of Jews exiled from Judea in 586 BC by the Babylonians, and Jerusalem in 135 by the Roman Empire.
This term is used interchangeably to refer to the historical movements of the dispersed ethnic population of Israel, the cultural development of that population, or the population itself.
The academic field of diaspora studies was established in the late twentieth century in regard to the expanded meaning of diaspora.
www.topfunwebsites.com /haiti/diaspora.html   (989 words)

  
 Crimean Tatars - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Crimean Tatars were known for frequent devastating raids into Ukraine and Russia.
A constant threat from Crimean Tatars supported the appearance of cossackdom.
This event is called Sürgün in the Crimean Tatar language.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Crimean_Tatars   (1354 words)

  
 The Crimean Turk-Tatars: Crimean Tatar Diaspora Nationalism in Turkey
Crimean Tatars are a Turko-Muslim nation, who are descendants of the Crimean Khanate (one of the states of the disintegrated Golden Horde), which ruled the Crimean peninsula and the surrounding areas until the Russian annexation of the Crimea in 1783.
Crimean Tatars were dispersed from their original homeland Crimea to many parts of the world as a result of cruel policies of the Russian Empire following the annexation of the Crimea.
The Crimean Tatars organized social organizations in the countries where they live, and they are aware of the threats of assimilation in time, and actively seek ways to continue preserve their identity.
www.iccrimea.org /scholarly/aydin.html   (5393 words)

  
 Commemorate of the 60th anniversary of Crimean Tatars deportation was denied in Uzbekistan - Ferghana.Ru Information ...
The authorities of Uzbekistan denied the Crimean Tatars the permission to commemorate the 60th anniversary of deportation to Central Asia.
Acting on behalf of the Crimean Tatar diaspora, A. Khamzina (representative of the Crimean Tatar mejlis for Central Asia) and L. hemileva (chairman of Avdet, a national cultural center) sent a cable to the president of Uzbekistan in the morning on April 12.
Crimean Tatars, deported from the Crimea on May 18, 1944, were not an exception.
enews.ferghana.ru /article.php?id=419   (628 words)

  
 Center of Information and Documentation of Crimean Tatars
But in spite of total repressions, Crimean Tatars during that period were gathering in places of exile at cemeteries, where were buried tens of thousands of innocent persons, who died in a foreign country.
However, thousands of Crimean Tatars still remain in places of deportation, who are not able to return to their own lands without assistance, and they wait for assistance.
Crimean Tatar “people”,  came as occupant in Crimea, and may be it suffered, as one says from sword.
www.cidct.org.ua /en/studii/3-4(2004)/3.html   (8416 words)

  
 Center of Information and Documentation of Crimean Tatars
Columns of Crimean Tatars paid their debt to victims, who died in exile, and proceeded to the center of cities and settlements, where they attempted to hold meetings.
The Crimean Tatar people enter the XXI century in conditions of a continued struggle for the full return of all Crimean Tatars to their own historical homeland from the places of deportation, including the restoration of their political, economic and cultural rights.
The leaders of the Communist Party of Ukraine, particularly its Crimean organization, are aiming to hinder the restoration of the rights of the Crimean Tatar people and are striving to renew past practices of discriminating against people according to their nationality.
www.cidct.org.ua /en/studii/4(2000)/9.html   (1419 words)

  
 Crimea Facts and History
7,000-8,000 Crimean Tatars migrated to the Taman peninsula (Caucasus) in 1783
However, those Crimean Tatars remaining in their homeland were also to be subjected to another type of ideological struggle as well --the struggle between kadim (old) and jadid (new).
Those Crimean Tatars who followed this movement and in all spheres of life advocated adapting to the age of science and were known as the Jadidists.
www.geocities.com /ai320/facts.htm   (7033 words)

  
 The Head Heeb: Diaspora month
The Jewish diaspora, which is often regarded as a prototype, was without a political homeland for a period of 19 centuries, but maintained a deeply held ideological and theological attachment to the land of Israel.
Another example, somewhat closer to home, is the prenational Palestinian Christian diaspora, in which emigrants from certain towns and cities tended to settle in the same country and retain family, business and cultural connections to their hometowns.
In fact, many Pacific cultures have diasporas that are larger than the home island population, which raises the question of what happens when diasporas (which in the Pacific tend to be richer and less traditional than the home culture) become the dominant part of the diaspora-homeland relationship.
headheeb.blogmosis.com /archives/032017.html   (5266 words)

  
 e-Tatars: Virtual Community of the Crimean Tatar Diaspora
The Crimean Khanate, a successor state to the Golden Horde, ruled in Crimea and beyond from the mid fifteenth to the late eighteenth centuries.
It was estimated that between 1783 and 1920, some 1.800.000 Crimean Tatars were forced to emigrate to the Ottoman Empire and thus became a "minority" in their ancestral homeland.
Most of the members of the Crimean Tatar diaspora, who left Crimea more than a hundred years ago, are not aware of the history of their ancestral land and the current situation in Crimea.
www.iccrimea.org /scholarly/e-tatars.html   (4053 words)

  
 Crimean Tatar Agenda
The restoration of national integrity of Crimean Tatar Peoples by means of returning of their main part to Crimea remained in the places of the deportation.2.
The actions of civil protest, that were started by Crimean Tatars, are conducted not only for the interests of Crimean Tatar Peoples but also for the interests of all the population of the peninsular and Ukraine.
The general meetings of Crimean Tatars and other nationalities claiming the equity during the sharing of the land were the vivid displays of it.
geocities.com /ai320/agenda.htm   (2043 words)

  
 Crimean Tatars Campaign for the Protection of Their Rights
The main purpose of the march is meeting with the compatriots and by the example of the court arbitrariness victims to show the real situation of Crimean Tatars on their homeland.
She is known for active participation in all activities on defense of convicted Crimean Tatars during the last year and in frame of “Azatliq” campaign.
During the campaign the Mejlis of Crimean Tatar people made the Statement, the Head of the Mejlis of Crimean Tatar people carried on negotiations with the new Head of the Council of Ministers of Crimea A. Matvienko and completed as agreement on a range of issues infringing on interests of Crimean Tatar people.
www.unpo.org /article.php?id=2509   (1301 words)

  
 Amazon.com: "Crimean Turks": Key Phrase page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
132 THE CRIMEAN TURKS Liquidation of the Crimean ASSR The Crimean ASSR was dissolved by decision of the Supreme Soviet of the former USSR...
Crimean Tatar battalions were created after Crimean Turks from Turkey intervened on behalf of the Tatars they knew to have been interned in German camps.
Tsar Ivan III even allied himself with the Crimean Turks to attack his neighbour Lithuania at the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century.
www.amazon.com /phrase/Crimean-Turks   (520 words)

  
 Crimeans will help to the Crimean Tatar Diaspora in Poland to recollect the language and national culture   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Crimeans will help to the Crimean Tatar Diaspora in Poland to recollect the language and national culture
In the current year a number of the Crimean Tatar arts collectives will visit the Podlyasky region in Republic of Poland, where, except the concerts, they also will carry out meetings with the Crimean Tatar Diaspora.
As S. Raskin informed, the ARC Republican committee on affairs of nationalities and deported citizens has transferred for the Crimean Tatars of Poland Crimean Tatar phrase books, Korans, words and notes of the Crimean Tatar songs.
www.qurultay.org /eng/ayrinti.asp?HaberNo=2005040701   (493 words)

  
 Resources on the Tatar
The Crimean Tatars: The Diaspora Experience and the Forging of a...
The status of the Crimean Tatar language and problems of...
The indigenous population of Crimea, the Crimean Tatars...
www.mongabay.com /indigenous_ethnicities/asian/Tatar.html   (631 words)

  
 Northern Black Sea Links - Crimean Tatars of Crimea Ukraine, Gagauz of Moldova
Han Saray (The Palace of the Crimean Khans in Bakhchisaray)
Crimean Tatars in Uzbekistan: Problems and Developments - essay by Semyon Gitlin
Crimea and Crimean Tatars (Krym i krymskie tatary), Moscow
www.khazaria.com /turkic/blacksea-north.html   (223 words)

  
 Tatar.Net - Crimean Tatar Internet Resources
Crimean Tatars: The Diaspora Experience and the Forging of a Nation - Brian Glyn Williams
The Crimean Tatars: Studies of the Nationalities in the U.S.S.R.: Number 166 - Alan W. Fisher
Architecture: The Bagcasaray Palace of the Crimean Khans
www.tatar.net   (178 words)

  
 Central-Eurasia-L Archive - Program Information - Page 12
The occasion is the 11th annual meeting of the Internet Society, a group of more than 8,000 individuals dedicated to the open development and use of the Internet for the benefit of all people worldwide.
The presentation will be made on June 7 in a session titled "Indigenous and Diaspora Groups and the Internet." The other authors of the paper "e-Tatars" are Fevzi Alimoglu, Boston University, Boston, MA; Kursat Cagiltay, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, Mubeyyin Batu Altan, Institute of Oriental Studies, Kiev, Ukraine; and Kemal Seitveliev, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA.
Abstract The Crimean Tatars are Turkic people who have inhabited the Crimean peninsula for more than seven centuries.
cesww.fas.harvard.edu /cel/cel_prog12.html   (4391 words)

  
 Brian Williams:Conference Papers and Talks   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
The Crimean Tatar Exile in Central Asia."Sixth Annual Association for the Study of Nationalities Convention.
The Case of the Crimean Tatars."London School of Economics, University of London.
Ethno-political Mobilization of the Crimean Tatar Diaspora in the Republic of Turkey."Fifth Annual Association for the Study of Nationalities Convention.
www.stetson.edu /~gwilliam/bgwilliams/conference.html   (428 words)

  
 Kemal's CV   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Turkish to Crimean Tatar Machine Translation System Using Xerox Tools
Research Work on the Usage of the Internet by Diaspora Groups
(Crimean Tatar Organization - Youth branch Executive Board Member)
www.ics.uci.edu /~kemal/CV_Kemal.html   (363 words)

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