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DUBAI: Language Keeps Minorities United

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  • DUBAI: Language Keeps Minorities United

    LANGUAGE KEEPS MINORITIES UNITED
    By Abbas Al Lawati, Staff Reporter

    Gulf News
    Dec 14 2007
    United Arab Emirates

    Dubai: "I'm Iraqi, Armenian Iraqi," says Gulizar Jonian, an architect
    in Abu Dhabi who also heads a weekly Armenian school there. "I am
    attached to Iraq. The Iraqis treated my grandparents very well when
    they moved there from Turkey, but Canada has also been very hospitable
    to me," said the Iraqi-Canadian citizen.

    "What unites Armenian minorities around the world is the Armenian
    Apostolic Church, and the Armenian genocide," she said, referring
    to the mass killing of Armenians in First World War. "We remember
    the dates and stories very well. They have been passed on through
    the generations."

    Although Jonian's family adopted the Iraqi identity and learned the
    Arabic language, her parents and grandparents found it important
    to instill the family's Armenian identity in her. "If you loose
    the language, you loose a whole generation. It's important to keep
    the torch lit." Similarly, Jonian finds it important to teach her
    own children their language, as well as the children of many other
    Armenians living in Abu Dhabi as principal of the Armenian school.

    Since it was difficult to travel to Armenia during the Soviet era,
    Jonian says independence for the state in 1991 was a breath of fresh
    air for those who wanted to visit their ancestral homeland. "Soviet
    stamps on our passports could cause trouble before. But that's not
    the case any more. I love Armenia. We often go there on holiday."
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