Home Interviews A family struggle

A family struggle

Spotlight / Interviews
33794Last year, right around this time, Ragip Zarakolu was in Armenia at the invitation of European Armenian Federation.  He came to Civilitas and met with fellow writers, publishers and students to speak about his work as a publisher, and a human rights activist. For him, the two have been inseparable. The books that his Belge Publishing House have produced over the last two decades are books which describe the abrogation of human rights for various groups – Armenians, Assyrians, Kurds, and others, who continue to suffer from the Turkish government’s inability to enter the modern era.

Turks suffer too. The Zarakolu family is a prime example. Ragip’s wife Ayse died nearly a decade ago, as a result of deteriorating health in Turkey’s prisons. Ragip himself looks older than his xx years, probably for the same reason. Now, their son Deniz, a professor of political thought, is in prison with a few dozen others. Their struggle with the Turkish government is for their own sake, not ours. But Armenians will only receive the necessary satisfaction from the Turkish authorities when those same authorities find ways to respect the thoughts, deeds and convictions of Turkey’s human rights and freedoms defenders. CivilNet.TV is speaking to several of those engaged in this struggle, and is committed to making their voices heard.
 
Civilitas Polls
With the support of Norwegian and German governments, a few months ago the Civilitas Foundation began to conduct polls throughout Armenia. The results of the polls will be made available to the media and will serve as the topic of public discussions.

read more

Facts for Thought
Share of population who reported having an account at a financial institution* - 2011
Armenia 17%
Azerbaijan 15%
Georgia 33%
Russia 48%
Sweden 99%
USA 88%
*financial organizations are: banks, credit unions, cooperatives, post offices or microfinance institutions
Comments & Sources
 
Our Projects
The project aims to enhance the visibility and increase the resource mobilization possibilities of civil society organizations (CSOs) operating in Armenia by designing, developing and maintaining a publicly accessible database of all active NGOs, foundations, associations, and international NGOs and organizations working in Armenia.

Civilitas Library
The Civilitas Foundation Library -- a collection of political, historic and philosophical works -- open to all who need it. Do you want to donate a volume?
See the Civilitas Amazon wish list.
Podcasts
Public Discussion
The Civilitas Foundation
cordially invites you
to public forum on

Conflicts and History Textbooks

The talk will be moderated by
Civiltas Foundation Director
Salpi Ghazarian

The discussion will take place at the
Golden Tulip Yerevan Hotel, Rossini Hall,
on May 22 at 2 p.m.

To confirm your participation,

please call 010 500-119.
Seats are limited.

Civilitas Blog

The Civilitas Community shares stories about daily challenges and successes. Today: Lost in Istanbul

Read the blog

Civilitas Spotlight
civilnet-logo-1
Screen-Shot-2012-03-13-at-3.38
Civil.am
Civil.am - your guide to civil society activity in Armenia - is a project of the Civilitas Foundation. Take a closer look to better understand what is already being done. Identify potential partners and cooperation possibilities. Support existing programs to increase efficiency. Encourage new programs to foster development.
 
Newsletter Sign Up
* Email
First Name
Last Name
Country
* = Required Field

Civilitas Around the Web
facebook twitter linkedin flickr Civilitas on Scribd livestream youtube