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IWPR: Armenia: Yezidi Identity Battle

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  • IWPR: Armenia: Yezidi Identity Battle

    Institute for War & Peace Reporting

    ARMENIA: YEZIDI IDENTITY BATTLE

    New textbooks highlight division within Armenia's Yezidi community.

    By Onnik Krikorian in Yerevan

    Yezidis in the western Aragatsotn region of Armenia have taken a dim
    view of government efforts, supported by the UN children's agency,
    UNICEF, to bolster minority education in the republic.

    At the beginning of September, at an event staged in the Yezidi village
    of Alagyaz, government officials said that new textbooks in minority
    languages would be distributed to schools in minority-populated
    villages, while UNICEF said it would provide stationary and other supplies.

    Less than a month later, however, Yezidis in Alagyaz and ten surrounding
    villages were complaining. Their language is the Kurmanji dialect of
    Kurdish, but the books funded and provided by the government were
    instead written in Ezdiki. While the latter is still Kurdish by another
    name, the alphabet chosen for publication was in the unaccustomed
    Cyrillic alphabet instead of the more usual Latin or Arabic scripts.

    "All schools have at present is old Soviet-era textbooks," said Gohar
    Saroava, a young journalist with the Mesopotamia newspaper in Yerevan
    and one of the few Muslim Kurds remaining in Armenia. Others, however,
    are more outspoken. "These [new] books are a shame and we don't want to
    have this rubbish," said Torkom Khudoyan, vice-president of the National
    Committee of Yezidis of Armenia.

    Speaking to IWPR, both UNICEF and Hranush Kharatyan, head of the
    Armenian government's department for national minorities and religious
    affairs, confirmed reports that the new textbooks are being rejected,
    but said that it was outside their remit to intervene. Critics, however,
    argue that the situation should never have arisen in the first place and
    allege it is part a continuing attempt to promote a non-Kurdish identity
    among Armenia's Yezidis.

    Yezidis are the largest ethnic minority in Armenia, with most having
    arrived in the country in the mid 19th and early 20th centuries. Widely
    dismissed as devil worship, Yezidism in fact combines elements from
    Zoroastrianism, Islam, Christianity, and Judaism. Although the Yezidis
    are generally considered to be Kurds who resisted pressure to convert to
    Islam, there have been attempts to identify them as a separate ethnic
    group in Armenia since the last years of Soviet rule.

    In 1988, an appeal was made to the Soviet authorities by some Yezidi
    leaders requesting that they be designated as an ethnic group. This
    coincided with the beginning of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over
    Nagorny Karabakh, as a result of which, thousands of Muslim Kurds fled
    Armenia, alongside ethnic Azerbaijanis. Yezidis, however, were spared.

    In 1989, the request was granted, and in the last Soviet census
    conducted the same year, out of approximately 60,000 Kurds who had been
    formerly identified as living in Armenia, 52,700 were for the first time
    given a new official identity as Yezidis. The 2001 census put the number
    of Yezidis and Kurds in the republic at 40,620 and 1,519 respectively.

    Hasan Tamoyan, editor of the Armenian-language Yezidikhana newspaper and
    head of the Yezidi programme on Armenian Public Radio, eagerly cites the
    last census as evidence that Yezidis are not Kurds. Tamoyan is also one
    of the authors of the controversial new school textbooks.

    "There are over 40,000 people who identified themselves as Yezidis and
    only around 1,500 that identified themselves as Kurds," said Tamoyan.
    "Aren't you inclined to believe the official data? Is Kurmanji listed as
    a language in the census? The Kurdish language is not even mentioned.
    There is only the Yezidi language, Ezdiki."

    However, few specialists on the Yezidis outside of Armenia agree.

    "The Yezidi religious and cultural tradition is deeply rooted in Kurdish
    culture and almost all Yezidi sacred texts are in Kurdish," said Philip
    Kreyenbroek, head of Iranian studies at the University of Goettingen in
    Germany and a leading specialist on the Kurds and the Yezidis of Turkey
    and northern Iraq.

    Dr Christine Allison, a lecturer at the Institut National des Langues et
    Civilisations Orientales, INALCO, in Paris currently conducting
    fieldwork among Yezidis in Armenia, agrees. "I have met more Yezidis in
    Armenia who believe they are also Kurds," she said, "and with the
    exception of two villages in Iraq, Yezidis speak Kurmanji Kurdish. Their
    oral and material culture is typical of Kurdistan and pretty much
    identical to non-Yezidi Kurds."

    Nahro Zagros, an ethnic Kurdish PhD student from Iraq studying the
    ethno-musical traditions of Yezidis at the University of York, concurs.
    Zagros says that he also stumbled upon what many consider to be the
    artificial division of the community on a recent visit to Armenia. "The
    school in Shinkani has refused these textbooks, and teachers from Rya
    Taze, Alagyaz, Dirik, Orta Chia, Amri Taze and Jamushlow have also
    rejected them," he said.

    The situation in Armenia also differs markedly from that in neighbouring
    Georgia, home, according to official statistics, to 18,000 Yezidis.

    "There are problems in Georgia, but we [Kurds] are one nation," said Pir
    Dima, a Yezidi religious leader from Tbilisi visiting Armenia in
    September. "It's just that our religion is different. However, the
    problem in Georgia is nowhere near as serious as it is in Armenia.
    Yezidis here [in Armenia] don't want Armenians to know that they are
    Kurdish because Muslim Kurds killed Armenians as well as Yezidis [during
    the 1915 genocide]."

    Rostom Atashov, president of the Union of Yezidis in Georgia, told IWPR
    his community uses the Kurmanji dialect and the Latin script. "We are
    both Yezidis and Kurds," he said. "We have one language and it is
    Kurdish, and if you look at where the Yezidis came from geographically,
    it is Kurdistan. In Georgia, we've never even debated this problem.
    Yezidis are Kurds, and we all believe that."

    Atashov also says he believes that the division has opened up Armenia's
    Yezidi community to the appeal of organisations such as the outlawed
    Kurdistan Workers Party, PKK, currently fighting a separatist guerrilla
    war in Turkey. "The Armenian government doesn't want to recognise
    Yezidis as Kurds so the only people willing to help Yezidis in Armenia
    with establishing their identity are groups such as the PKK," he said.

    And that certainly seems to be the case in at least six Yezidi villages
    in the Aragatsotn and Armavir regions of Armenia visited by IWPR this
    autumn. While many Yezidis openly identified themselves as such, all
    also said they were Kurmanji-speaking ethnic Kurds. They additionally
    expressed support for the PKK and displayed portraits of Abdullah
    Ocalan, the organisation's imprisoned leader, in their homes, cultural
    centres and schools.

    In recent years, several PKK representatives have also openly visited
    Armenia to tour Yezidi villages. Last year, Yusuf Avdoyan, a Yezidi from
    the Armavir region of Armenia, was killed along with six other PKK
    members fighting in Batman, Turkey. According to the Kurdistan Committee
    in Armavir, his sister has now also joined the PKK and is currently
    fighting with them.

    Some experts believe that the government has only succeeded in
    alienating the Yezidis through its education policies. One academic from
    Europe speaking to IWPR on the condition of anonymity said, "The state
    seems to be distinctly encouraging the Ezdiki faction and has not
    latched on to the fact that Kurmanji and Ezdiki, which were the same
    language for the entire Soviet period, are still the same. The most
    obvious and cost-effective compromise would be to produce Ezdiki-Kurdish
    schoolbooks in a mutually agreed alphabet."

    Kharatyan says that she proposed a solution such as this to resolve this
    conflict over language, but was threatened by both sides of the Yezidi
    community instead. The government has since said it will monitor the
    distribution of the controversial textbooks, but the Kurdistan Committee
    is now printing its own textbooks in the Latin script for distribution
    to Yezidi schools during the second half of November.

    Knyaz Hassanov, head of the Kurdish community in Armenia, told IWPR,
    "These books do not concern us. They are not important and we have
    decided to publish our own. The overwhelming majority [of Yezidis in
    Armenia] consider themselves Kurds, so if 1-2,000 do not feel the same
    it's not significant enough of an issue for us. Besides, it's also their
    right."

    Onnik Krikorian is a British-born journalist and photojournalist who has
    written on Yezidis in Armenia since 1998. He has a blog from Armenia at
    http://oneworld.blogsome.com.

    For Andrei Liankevich's vivid photo essay on the Yezidis, visit the IWPR
    Caucasus website and scroll down the right-hand column
    http://www.iwpr.net/?p=crs&s=p&o=-& amp;apc_state=henh

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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