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  • Another Great Shame...

    ANOTHER GREAT SHAME...
    by Alkan Chaglar

    Cyprus Mail
    May 10, 2009 Sunday

    THIS WEEK, undisclosed sources reported that in a conversation
    with a representative of the Cypriot Maronite community in London,
    President Demetris Christofias announced that Maronite villages in
    northern Cyprus would not be under Greek Cypriot administration in
    a future Federal Cyprus, as was the case with the Annan plan.

    It is believed that the President, who is chief negotiator for the
    Greek Cypriot community, 'traded' the Maronite villages in talks with
    his Turkish Cypriot counterpart in order to regain Rizokarpaso/Dip
    Karpaz.

    To make matters worse for Cyprus' 1,500-year-old Maronite community,
    President Christofias declined a request by the Maronite community
    that they are elevated to the status of a community; according to
    the same sources, Mr Christofias said this would not happen with or
    without a solution.

    Cypriot Maronites originally came to Cyprus from the ancient
    territories of Syria, the Holy Land and Lebanon in four principal
    migrations between the eighth and the thirteenth centuries.

    An ancient part of the Cyprus cultural mosaic, Maronites boasted 60
    villages in 1224 and by the time of the Ottoman conquest of 1571,
    the community still had 33 villages scattered around the island from
    Lefka to Apostolos Andreas.

    However, the Maronite community began a sharp and unbroken decline
    during Ottoman rule, where they were subjected to 400 years of
    religious persecution. Ottomans massacred many Maronites, whom they
    considered to be agents of Venice, while a great many more fled or
    converted either to Islam or Orthodox Christianity.

    Only four villages had survived by the time the British arrived in
    1878 and community life was centred in these villages. Tragically,
    the racialist 1960 Constitution reduced the community to a future of
    assimilation in the Greek Cypriot community, which was later speeded
    up by the harrowing events of 1974, where the entire community was
    uprooted from their ancestral villages and separated from their
    churches and schools.

    The 1960 Constitution, which segregated everything into 'Greek' or
    'Turk' and allowed no 'Cypriot' to develop, forced communities like
    the Maronites, Latins and Armenians to choose whether they wanted to
    be listed on the Greek or Turkish electoral register.

    Many chose the Greek electoral register for practical reasons but this
    soon became incorrectly interpreted as minorities choosing to 'become
    Greek Cypriots' giving certain circles in the Greek Cypriot community
    the green light to pursue assimilatory policies towards the community.

    By denying the communities any degree of autonomy, where they could
    preserve themselves, Greek Cypriot politicians frequently talk of the
    Maronites and Armenians as 'belonging' to their community as if they
    are objects in a China shop.

    For communities like the Cypriot Armenians "being part of the Greek
    Cypriot community" has meant that when its own Melkonian School
    required funding to survive, the larger community justified its
    position to deprive it of funding because of the size of the community.

    Employing a demographic yardstick may be practical elsewhere where an
    economic view of demand-supply is applied to everything but in Cyprus
    it clearly only has benefits for the numerically larger communities,
    while cutting the lifeline of smaller communities. Surely, size cannot
    be everything.

    Victims of a 'majority-rules-at-all-costs' attitude, the Maronites
    are in an unenviable position where another community with another
    language and different religion controls their future and will not
    let it save itself let alone grow.

    I watched my Maronite friends debating on Facebook with sadness,
    they did not have ambitions like Greek or Turkish Cypriots to become
    President, Foreign Minister or to ever become a MEP - they seemed
    resigned to their fate always trying to choose the lesser of two evils.

    I suggested to one Maronite friend, "Why do you have to choose to be
    under the rule of another community at all?" "That is the way it is
    for us, Alkan... we are trying to survive as best we can."

    But could it really be that if you are born Maronite through no choice
    of your own that your rights and life ambitions will have to be lower
    than other citizens? What kind of country are we forming if we permit
    such an absurdity?

    As unbelievable as it may sound to an outsider reading this, the crux
    of the problem is that very few people think and act as Cypriots in
    Cyprus - even those governing the Republic of Cyprus.

    Majority rules in the south and majority rules in the north, and if
    there is a solution, everything will simply be divided into Greek or
    Turk. By refusing to promote a Cypriot inclusive identity where we
    can bring all our people into one, we are simply not learning from
    our mistakes.

    As a result, communities like the Maronites who have got by and
    survived only by quietly living in the shadows of the larger community,
    are left tiptoeing in the background, deprived of a say in the unity
    talks designed to shape the future of our Cyprus.

    It would be interesting to see whether this state policy of
    assimilation is legal under EU law, which has precedence over Cyprus
    law. The EU can certainly play a role in reversing some anachronistic
    practices on the island, even if Cypriot politicians remain blind
    to it.

    Regardless of communal rights and representation, Maronite Cypriots
    and other minorities are EU citizens with citizenship rights.

    One of the few countries on earth where communities, their rights and
    their future can be traded like cattle, EU Cyprus must mature as a
    state to end its ethnic rivalry between Greek and Turkish Cypriots,
    and to realise that we possess all of us a sovereign state which is
    home to minority communities that are not Greek or Turkish Cypriots.

    As the internationally recognised Cyprus, the Republic of Cyprus
    Government needs to act less like a Greek Cypriot government and
    more responsibly as a Cypriot government giving communities like the
    Maronites a choice over what they want as a community for their future,
    before a solution is ever signed.

    Out of respect and courtesy, Maronites should be offered the
    opportunity to belong to neither Greek nor Turkish Cypriot communities
    but be protected in a third, neutral Federal Zone. As a Cypriot zone,
    this Federal area would not only free them from assimilation but
    could be the blueprint for additional Federal zones for us Cypriots
    who prefer to identify themselves as Cypriots without a prefix.
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