![]() He continued to work on Crimean Tatar and other Turkic issues by publishing the journal Birlik in the early 1970s. Considering the silence of the entire world, including the Turkic world, about the brutal deportation of Crimean Tatars by Soviet Union authorities during World War II, Hablemitoglu's articles written during the sensitive "Cold War" era, were indeed a daring attempt to draw world's attention to this politically "hot" issue. These articles were later issued as a book with the same title. ![]() He first introduced himself to the Turkish public with a series of articles titled " Yuzbinlerin Surgunu" ( The Deportation of the Hundreds of Thousands), which was published in the Turkish daily Akşam in the 1970s. ![]() Hablemitoğlu was a lecturer on Atatürk's thoughts at Ankara University. Şengül Hablemitoglu, and daughters Kanije, and Uyvar, named after the outmost forts of the Ottoman Empire in the west and in the north. After serving as press consultant in some organizations, he did his master study and doctoral thesis on the History of Turkish Reforms at Ankara University. Between 19, he published a monthly journal titled Dilde, Fikirde, İşde Birlik. ![]() Hablemitoğlu graduated from the School of Press and Journal at the Faculty of Political Science, Ankara University in 1977. ![]()
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