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Istanbul Armenians: The Diaspora's `Outsiders'?

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  • Istanbul Armenians: The Diaspora's `Outsiders'?

    Istanbul Armenians: The Diaspora's `Outsiders'?

    Vahe Sarukhanyan

    hetq
    20:36, May 4, 2011


    Arus Yumul, an Armenian sociologist who lectures at the Bilgi
    University in Istanbul, says that if the dominance of Muslims over
    non-Muslims during the Ottoman Empire was a hierarchical division,
    after the founding of the Republic in Turkey that difference
    theoretically disappeared, but that this phenomenon still exists today
    in Turkey but not in an overt way.

    Yozge Genc, another expert with the Turkish Economic and Social
    Studies Foundation (TESEV), told me that the main problem of Armenians
    today in Turkey is that they are not regarded as full citizens of the
    Turkish state.

    "Armenians are still identified by their religion and ethnic
    affiliation," says Genc, adding that the other minorities in Turkey
    have the same problem but that in the case of Armenians such a thing
    is expressed in a slightly different way.


    Pakrat Estukyan, the Armenian edition editor at Agos weekly expressed
    the same thought, noting that at one time Armenians in Turkey
    constituted a nationality, a people, but that they had been reduced to
    a mere "community" today; and a religious one at that.


    For years the number of Armenians living in Turkey has hovered between
    60,000 - 70,000 and that's not counting the number of crypto-Armenians
    living in Anatolia and western Armenia. Experts say their number is
    quite large.

    Estukyan said that even though only a citizen's religion is noted in
    passports, government agencies have a good handle on nationality data
    as well.

    As the largest non-Muslim minority in Turkey, Armenians are not
    represented in political or social sectors and do not hold state
    office. Yozge Genc said that the employment process for state office
    is quite complicated for Armenians, especially when national security
    issues come up.

    Armenians serve on the Sisli Municipal Council, but it's one district
    in Istanbul where most of the city's non-Muslims reside.

    Ozge Genc says that an Armenian was recently assigned to the
    government's Central Secretariat for EU Affairs, but this was a
    singular event. Mensur Akgun, Director of the Global Political Trends
    Center (GPOT) says that a lot has to do with personal and practical
    contacts and not just a person being Armenian.

    Silvia Tiryaki, his deputy, says that the Turkish "deep-state" avoided
    assigning Armenians to top posts after the operations of ASALA in the
    1970s and 1980s.

    Pakrat Estukyan disagrees with this belief and stresses that the
    divide was created not because of ASALA but the 1915 Genocide;
    something the Turks don't talk about.

    Sociologist Yumul says that for the worldwide Armenian diaspora, the
    Istanbul-Armenian community is akin to a "lost lamb", an "outsider".
    She says that other Armenians have taken them to task for being
    non-active in Armenian affairs and for cow-towing to the government in
    Ankara. Yumul says she agrees with these assessments when it comes to
    the Ottoman period, but that after Turkish independence Armenians not
    only didn't get involved in Armenian politics but also Turkish
    affairs. It was kind of a survival strategy she noted.

    Yumul added that the community is slowly integrating into the larger
    Turkish society and that mixed marriages are paving the way.

    "At one time Armenian parents resisted but this too has faded. The
    next generation will be more like a hybrid, free to chose whether they
    are Armenian, Turk..."

    She was quick to add that this doesn't mean that Armenians will
    disappear in Turkey.

    However, the use of Armenian as a daily language of communication is
    also on the decline; the number of Armenians who can't speak the
    mother tongue is growing. Parents send their kids to Armenian
    elementary schools but afterwards many go to private or foreign high
    schools so that they won't have problems with the Turkish language in
    college.

    The 1990s were a turning point for the community in many ways.
    Armenians, like the other minority communities, began to voice their
    concerns, speak about the discrimination they faced, and even raise
    the taboo subject of the 1915 Armenian Genocide

    Twenty years ago, all this was unthinkable. What the next twenty will
    bring for the community remains a big question mark.




    From: A. Papazian
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