- Music of the world at İş Sanat
- Jazz fun begins
- December at Babylon
- Exciting nights at Balance
- Tango Pasion at Maslak
- Open Sesame!
- Silk Road films pass through Bursa
- History and cinema meet for the 9th time
- They loved Turkey
- Genghis Khan is coming
- Contemporary art in Istanbul
- ‘Opening and closing doors of life’
- Palace storage chests...
- What André Kertész saw and felt
- Marking the 150th anniversary of the Crimean War...
- Nature and nature
- Mithat Bereket’s ‘Compass’
- Nedim Günsür retrospective
- The vibrant sculptures of Mehmet Aksoy
- a 24-hour-a-day exhibition
- Civil Aviation at the end of 2006
- “The customer is my all”
- Skylife trademark is registered
- ‘444 0 THY’ is most successful call center
- Professional Competence Workshop held at Turkish Airlines
- Special talks for Turkish Airlines’ cabin personnel
- Turkish Airlines promotes Turkey in Prague and Dublin
- Turkish Airlines’ Rostov office has a new address
- ‘Here, there and everywhere’ for 111 Euros
- Luck puts a smile on your face at www.thy.com!
- Teachers fly at half price
- Direct flights to 10 more cities
- Turkish Airlines to transport 100,000 pilgrims to Mecca
- Turkish Airlines celebrates World Children’s Day
They loved Turkey
A comprehensive exhibition entitled, ‘They Trusted in Turkey’, opened last September at the Art Gallery of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Ankara.
The focus of the exhibition was the prominent men and peoples who, forced over the course of history to leave their own countries for various reasons, chose to live in the Turkish lands. The exhibition materials were turned by the Foreign Ministry into a reference work consisting of information and documents on numerous historical figures, from the Hungarian King Francis II Rakoczy to the Polish poet Adam Mickiewicz, including statesmen, politicians, artists and military officers. Information was also collected on other immigrants to Turkey, such as the Abaza people, the Crimean Tatars, and the Kazakhs, and their history.
