Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Lost-And-Found Armenians Need Our Help

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Lost-And-Found Armenians Need Our Help

    LOST-AND-FOUND ARMENIANS NEED OUR HELP
    Keghart.com team editorial

    http://www.keghart.com/Editorial_Crypto_Armenians
    7 June 2010

    In the early to late '70s some Diaspora Armenian students studying
    in Yerevan, having established a patriotic and private group called
    Khempag, engaged in the study of various aspects of life in Armenia
    and Armenians in Diaspora. They were particularly dissatisfied with
    the accepted interpretations of historical events and policies that
    had contributed to shaping Soviet and Diaspora Armenian societies.

    Their efforts culminated in the establishment, for Diaspora students,
    of a historical society named after Movses Khorenatsi. Members
    of the group included Marxists, Ramgavars, Hunchaks, ARF and ASALA
    sympathizers, and Chezoks. At its peak the group boasted a membership
    representing close to 10% of the Diasporan student body.

    The task of the group was not limited to research but included an
    action plan that primarily was gauged to disseminate the notion of
    demands versus recognition with respect to the Genocide of Armenians.

    Furthermore, through a variety of student activities it strived
    to cultivate an atmosphere of political and intellectual tolerance
    and provide a contextual experience of co-operation that could be
    transported to Spyurk.

    There were anecdotal reports at the time that many orphans of the
    Genocide and their descendants had converted to Islam to avoid Turkish
    or Kurdish persecution. These forced converts would occasionally
    confide their roots to strangers, it was rumoured. A sizeable portion
    of these individuals apparently lived in Kurdish areas and some had
    joined the recently formed militant Kurdistan Workers' Party. Others
    had left Turkey for Europe, taking advantage of the demand for cheap
    labour in Germany and in other European countries.

    The members of Khempag were interested to know more about these
    crypto-Armenians, and possibly establish some contacts. One of the
    members was entrusted to travel to Turkey, particularly to the Kurdish
    areas and file a report. Listening to detailed descriptions that were
    brought back it became evident that earlier reports were not fiction.

    In village after village many old and young people had come forward
    to tell their stories, that they or their parents were of Armenian
    origin, that they had "adopted" Islam, had changed their way of life,
    their language, and married Turks or Kurds to survive.

    Over the past forty years some Hamshen Armenians and crypto-Armenians
    from Kurdish areas and elsewhere in Turkey have migrated to Europe,
    establishing communities, particularly in Germany. For a variety of
    complex reasons, which are beyond the scope of this editorial, they,
    by and large, have remained isolated from mainstream Armenian life.

    One wonders whether an important contributory element to this
    isolation has been the unwelcoming attitude of mainstream Armenians
    themselves. Is it without cause that Alice Aliye Alt, a resident of
    Germany, who has converted to Christianity and has tried to raise
    her children as Armenians, and whose artist son has presented an art
    exposition about the Genocide, recently made unflattering remarks
    about the absence of a welcoming embrace by Armenian communities?

    She stated, "Many of my dearest friends, members of the enlightened
    Turkish intelligentsia, helped in our struggle to discover and
    establish our identity, and in the recognition of the known and
    unknown chapters of the Genocide of Armenians. Also our German and
    Greek humanist friends in Germany and elsewhere were always at our
    side. I cannot tell the same about most of the huge Armenian community
    here, who until recently were suspicious of us."

    Having witnessed the uncaring attitude of native Armenians of
    Armenia towards their compatriots after the repatriation in the '40s,
    the disrespect of Indian-Armenians towards their own relatives who
    had migrated from Persia to India later in history, the critical
    approach of established Armenian communities towards newcomers in
    a variety of countries, it is not unreasonable to think that what
    Mrs. Alt says corresponds to reality. Armenians like to speak of
    unity; they write articles; compose songs, and shout at the top of
    their lungs about unity. Yet, when the opportunity is presented to
    help re-integrate lost Armenians who yearn to rejoin the Armenian
    'family', we fail miserably. That's what the past forty years tell
    us about the odyssey of the Hamshenites and other crypto-Armenians
    who have settled in Europe.

    Will Armenian organizations, cultural and otherwise, come to their
    senses and help our brethren who are caught in the vise of an identity
    crisis? Armenians look at secret Armenians as Turks while Turks treat
    them as gavoor Armenians. Their dignity should be respected with
    utmost care. Their desire to become Armenian again should be welcomed.

    They are in need of a variety of services, foremost all specialties
    that deal with rehabilitation. They should not be looked at as
    "potentials" who can "populate" and inflate the number of membership
    of this or that organization. The approach should not be utilitarian
    but humanitarian.

    As observed by a Keghart.com reader, "Armenians, particularly in
    Europe, should provide all kinds of assistance to encourage these
    "lost" Armenians regain their identity. Armenians in Europe should
    hold informational meetings for these Islamized Armenians, provide
    them with books, brochures, speakers. If these Armenians are left to
    their own devices, their children will become Europeanized and we would
    lose them forever. They are specially precious to the Armenian nation
    because of the lost-and-found aspect and because of their command of
    European languages, skills and citizenship they can be of great help
    to the Armenian nation."




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X