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ISTANBUL: Istanbul literary figure receives final send-off

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  • ISTANBUL: Istanbul literary figure receives final send-off

    Istanbul literary figure receives final send-off
    VERCIHAN ZIFLIOGLU

    ISTANBUL - Hurriyet Daily News

    Tuesday, December 21, 2010Writer Yervant Gobelyan died last week at
    the age of 87, leaving behind an impressive literary career that
    included eight books, one of which was devoted to poetry. Born in
    Istanbul, Gobelyan was known for emphasizing his profound love of the
    city in his literary works. The writer also spent his last 14 years at
    Agos, a weekly of Turkey's Armenian community

    Prominent Istanbul literary figure and weekly Agos writer Yervant
    Gobelyan will

    be buried Wednesday after succumbing to illness last week. The
    87-year-old writer was best known for his poetic and literary works
    that reflected an overwhelming love of Istanbul.

    Gobelyan died Thursday at Yedikule Surp Pırgic Armenian Hospital
    after a long treatment process. He will be buried at the Balıklı
    Cemetery in Zeytinburnu after a funeral service starting at 1 p.m. at
    Beyoglu's Uc Horan Armenian Church.

    Gobelyan was born in Rumelihisarı in the Istanbul district of
    Sarıyer, a neighborhood known for is beauty next to the
    Bosphorus. Like many other Armenian writers from his generation,
    Gobelyan enjoyed close relations with members of the Turkish literary
    world, including one of the country's most famous poets, Orhan Veli
    Kanık, as well as many others. Gobelyan and others, such as Kanık,
    used to come together at Eptalafos, an old Greek-style tavern in
    Taksim.

    Writing was a passion for him Writing was Gobelyan's main interest in
    life, but financial difficulties often prevented him from earning a
    living solely from his literary pursuits. Like many other leading
    figures in Turkish-Armenian literature, Gobelyan graduated from Esayan
    Armenian School in Taksim. After finishing school, however, Gobelyan
    had difficulty in making ends meet as a writer, leading him to work as
    an apprentice, auto mechanic, carpenter and in other
    professions. Despite the hardships, Gobelyan never ceased his literary
    pursuits.

    His first book of poetry was published in 1948, after which he found a
    job writing for the local Armenian community's weekly `Luys' (Light)
    paper. Financial difficulties, however, soon forced Luys to close,
    after which Gobelyan was again forced to find other employment. Within
    time, Gobelyan would work for all of the major Armenian community's
    papers in Istanbul, working the final 14 years of his life at Agos.

    Gobelyan had spent many years away from Armenian newspapers until he
    was hired for the Agos job in 1996 by Editor-in-Chief Hrant Dink, the
    prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist assassinated in 2007.

    Remained inaccessible to non-Armenian readers Despite his close
    relations with Turkish writers and poets, most of Gobelyan's works,
    including one book of poetry among a total of eight books, remained
    only in Armenian for many years and were thus inaccessible to the
    wider Turkish society.

    Eager to bring the writer's work to the Turkish public, Aras
    Publishing House, which began publishing in the 1990s, released a
    number of Gobelyan's stories in `Memleketini Ozleyen Yengec' (The
    Crab Missing His Country) in 1998.

    The book, which featured stories from Gobelyan telling of the daily
    routines of Turks, Greeks and Armenians in Istanbul, quickly drew
    interest from Turkish readers.

    © 2009 Hurriyet Daily News







    From: A. Papazian
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