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Anti-Semitism in Armenia Result of Hate against Israel-Turkish Coop

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  • Anti-Semitism in Armenia Result of Hate against Israel-Turkish Coop

    Anti-Semitism in Armenia is a Result of Hate against Israeli-Turkish
    Cooperation

    The Journal of Turkish Weekly, April 22, 2005

    Armenia's tiny Jewish community has grown seriously concerned by what it
    says is mounting anti-Semitism in the South Caucasus country. The issue
    has growth over the past year amid a rise in anti-Jewish propaganda in
    Yerevan. The government has so far done little to address the Jewish
    community's concerns.

    Armenian Aryan Union Armen Avetisian in a interview in Iravunk alleged
    that there are as many as 50,000 "disguised" Jews in Armenia, and
    promised he would work to have them expelled from the country. He was
    arrested on 24 January on charges of inciting ethnic hatred, however he
    is no exception in Armenian society.

    Davut Sahiner says "anti-Semitism is an old Armenian disease. However
    has increased in the recent years as a result of Turkey-Israel
    co-operation".
    According to Sahiner, Armenians did not like Jews during the Ottoman
    Empire and they made co-operation with Greeks against the Ottoman Jews.
    Sahiner further argues that armed Armenians not only killed the Muslim
    Ottomans but also killed many Jewish in Eastern Anatolia. "In Hakkari
    for instance armed Armenian militants destroyed the Jewish district and
    killed many" added Dr. Davut Sahiner.

    Dr. Nilgun Gulcan on the other hand says the anti-Semitism reached its
    peak during the Second World War among the Armenians: "The Nazis
    established an Armenian brigade to destroy the Jews. The Armenians
    sought an independent country in the Caucasus and they did co-operation
    with the Nazis."

    The Karabakh Jewish experience is the most vivid one to understand the
    level the anti-Semitism reached in modern Armenia. Steve Sterdlow says
    the number of Jews in Karabakh has decreased to 30, and the Karabakh
    which was a paradise for the Jews during the Azerbaijaini rule, became a
    'hell':

    "The 30 Jews left in Nagorny Karabakh find themselves trapped in a
    society which regards them with growing suspicion

    For the tiny Jewish community in Nagorny Karabakh, paradise has been
    lost irretrievably.

    During the Soviet period, the Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan enjoyed a
    reputation as a haven of ethnic and religious tolerance. Thousands of
    Jews from Russia, Ukraine and Belarus flocked there in a bid to escape
    the anti-Semitism endemic in Soviet society.

    But the aftermath of the six-year war has ushered in a new era of
    chauvinism and intolerance to non-Armenians living in Nagorny Karabakh.
    And the Jewish community has dwindled to just 30 people." (Steve
    Sterdlow, "The Forgotten Jews of Karabakh", IWPR, 4 June 2001).

    Dr. Gulcan says "the tiny Jewish community pays the cost of
    Turkish-Israeli co-operation in the region. Israel has good relations
    with Turkey and Azerbaijan and Armenia has always been close to
    anti-Israeli forces in the region."
    According to Dr. Gulcan minorities have always faced serious
    discrimination in
    Armenia:

    "Armenia occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijani territories. After the war,
    no Azerbaijani left in Armenia. All were killed or deported, while
    Azerbaijan allowed a strong Armenian minority in its country. Similarly
    there is a 100,000 Armenian community in Turkey, and many Armenians go
    to Turkey to work."

    Copyright 2005 The Journal of Turkish Weekly
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