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Diaspora is Armenia's Top Asset

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  • Diaspora is Armenia's Top Asset

    Diaspora is Armenia's Top Asset
    By iwpr.net
    Created 16 Apr 10

    Loyal expatriate Armenians return often, support economy.
    By Aghavni Harutyunyan in Yerevan


    In a market in Yerevan, visitors can buy an empty jar labelled simply
    `Armenian Air'. It appears absurd, but it taps into a profitable
    emotion: the love that diaspora Armenians feel for this little
    post-Soviet Republic.

    Ashot, who runs the stall selling the jars, said they were very
    popular with visiting Armenians and had helpfully labelled the jars
    with ingredients: the spirit of hospitality; the air of Yerevan and
    the mountains; the smell of Armenian bread and meat; the steam of Lake
    Sevan.

    Five million of the world's eight million Armenians live outside the
    republic, and their visits are a major boost to its economy. Almost
    two-thirds of the 575,281 tourists who came to Armenia last year were
    from the diaspora.

    Salbi Agarakian, in her late fifties, was born in Aleppo in northern
    Syria but has lived in Los Angeles for almost half a century. She
    first came to Armenia in 1991 and has visited whenever she can since.

    `When I see Armenian TV channels, when they show the [Yerevan
    landmarks] Cascade Complex or Republic Square, I immediately want to
    come to Armenia, to walk the streets, to mix into the crowds. I always
    miss Armenia. I feel pangs for it, for the people and the country,'
    she said.

    `Compared to the 1990s, there have been significant changes, but the
    country must grow further. All of us must try to become better.
    Although it takes 16 hours to fly here, and my work does not let me
    travel often, I want to be in [the religious centre of] Echmiadzin for
    Easter, to hear the priests talk, to be among the people, with my
    family, my extended family. For me the nation is a family, and not
    just people. Here I do not feel alone, I am with my family.'

    Agarakian's ancestors, like those of most diaspora Armenians, were
    scattered across the world by the mass killings of Armenians committed
    by Ottoman Turkish troops in the First World War. The question of
    whether the campaign of murder was a genocide or not has dogged
    relations between Armenians and Turkey ever since.

    According to Suren Manukyan, deputy director of the museum of the
    Armenian genocide, there are no precise figures for the number of
    Armenians who lived in what is now eastern Turkey before 1915. He said
    most historians think there were two million, of whom 500,000 survived
    the mass killings, and found asylum in various countries around the
    world.

    The major inflow of diaspora Armenians takes place in April, since
    April 24 is the Remembrance Day for the victims of the atrocities,
    marking the anniversary of the arrest and savage murder in 1915 of 250
    Armenian intellectuals in Istanbul.

    In the first years of Armenian independence, many diaspora Armenians
    invested in the country, although often these deals ended unhappily
    owing to official corruption or incompetence.

    `Several complaints remain today. Either the money due for payment is
    not paid, or a high price is set for some services or goods. The
    American and French Armenians are used to accuracy, and clear
    relations,' said Tevos Nersisyan, spokesman for the diaspora
    ministry, which was set up in October 2008 with the aim of encouraging
    unity among Armenians.

    `This is a very difficult duty, since sometimes Armenians from
    different societies differ more amongst themselves, than in relation
    to different nations. There are people who feel themselves to be
    Armenians if they no longer have Armenian names, while many who have
    Armenian surnames feel they are foreigners. It happens that Armenians
    living in the same country only meet each other at our events.'

    For seven years, Anahit Meliksetian and Artush Andreasian have visited
    Armenia regularly from their home in Iran. Their two children study in
    Yerevan.

    `We always had connections to the homeland. When the chance came to
    study in Armenia, the children preferred to come to Armenia although
    we have a `green card' and they could have studied in the United
    States,' Meliksetian said.

    `Everything is coming together bit by bit. Armenia is our homeland. We
    do not ask what our country can do for us. We ask what we can do for
    our country.'

    Her daughter, Ani Andreasian, is in her second year at university in
    Yerevan.

    `I decided for myself that I would live and work here. I do not feel
    like I do in Armenia anywhere else. It is nice to feel that
    everything, be it good or bad, is mine. I am thinking about living
    here for longer, and becoming a citizen of Armenia,' Ani said.

    Diaspora Armenians can receive citizenship in a simplified procedure,
    without the usual need to live in the country for three years or know
    the Armenian language. They can also, if an agreement exists with
    their country of origin, become dual nationals.

    Armenians from the 18 countries whose citizens require an invitation
    to gain a visa can enter the country without bureaucratic
    procedures. This applies to countries like Syria, Egypt and India,
    which have significant Armenian populations.

    Iranian Armenians can get an entrance visa at the border. Shahen
    Babaians, was born in the city of Urmia in Iran, and first came to
    Armenia in 1991, although his homecoming was not what he had hoped for
    since the economy was collapsing and the country was at war over
    Nagorny Karabakh.

    `After three months I returned to Iran, but with a desire to come back
    to Yerevan as soon as I could. However, I only got back to Armenia in
    2002. Then I came to Armenia with a firm desire to live here, to
    marry, to raise a family. After a few trips, I at last managed to move
    my business to Armenia, to marry an Armenian woman, and my daughter
    Sose is now six years old,' he explained.

    He said it was harder to run a business in Armenia than Iran, but did
    not regret his decision to move.

    `I always dreamed of living in my homeland. I know Armenian badly, and
    always dreamed that my children would get an Armenian education, and if
    possible, in the homeland itself,' he said.

    Aghavni Harutyunyan is a journalist from the Azg newspaper.

    Seda Muradyan, IWPR Armenia country director, contributed to this
    report.

    © Institute for War & Peace Reporting
    48 Gray's Inn Road, London WC1X 8LT, UK
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