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  • BEIRUT: Enduring Gratitude: Armenian Diaspora Mobilizes On Behalf Of

    ENDURING GRATITUDE: ARMENIAN DIASPORA MOBILIZES ON BEHALF OF LAND THAT TOOK IN FOREBEARS
    By Christopher Atamian

    The Daily Star - Lebanon
    Nov 10 2006

    Armenians the world over owe a special debt to Lebanon and the Lebanese
    people. From 1915 to 1923, starved Armenian refugees - victims of a
    genocide at the hands of Ottoman Turks - came straggling across the
    desert into what is now Syria and Lebanon. Whether out of compassion -
    so say idealists - or demographic politics - so say cynics - Armenians
    were welcomed with open arms.

    Statistics are hard to come by, but by most measures some 50,000
    Armenians started their lives again in the land of the Cedars -
    principally in the Karantina camp (they later moved on to Bourj
    Hammoud) and in the village of Anjar.

    With time, as most Lebanese will tell you, Armenians became successful
    in all areas of life in Lebanon and numbered as many as 250,000 to
    350,000. At the height of their presence, the Armenians operated 40
    schools and opened the only Armenian university in the diaspora -
    Haigazian University.

    Many Armenians left Lebanon during the Civil War and the diaspora
    spread elsewhere. But many remained. As many as 150,000 to 200,000
    still call Lebanon home.

    It is no surprise, then, that Armenians from all over the diaspora
    have responded to the war in Lebanon this past summer with the same
    compassion once extended to them. In France, an Armenian Web site -
    www.yevrobatsi.com - reported from Lebanon throughout the 34-day
    Israeli offensive.

    The exposure meant a lot to people stranded in Beirut or Broummana or,
    for that matter, Southern cities such as Tyre.

    "The support of Yevrobatsi meant that we felt that someone out there
    understood what was happening to us during the Israeli bombings
    and that we were not alone," says Nada Haddad, who served as a
    correspondent for the site from Beirut.

    In New York and Washington, curator and Aleppo-born cultural critic
    Neery Melkonian, who spent her adolescence in Beirut, led protests by
    a group of repatriated Armenian-Lebanese demonstrating against the
    war. The collective Melkonian formed - Armenians in Solidarity with
    Lebanon - issued a mission statement of sorts, outlining its support
    for Lebanon.

    "We deplore the Bush administration's approval of Israel's excessive
    military response to a political conflict," the statement read. "We
    believe that all countries in the region have the right to exist
    in peace and security. All sides to the conflict must recognize
    this reality."

    http://www.dailystar.com.lb

    Finan cial support for Lebanon has also begun to arrive from
    organizations in the Armenian diaspora, ranging from small individual
    donations to million-dollar cash infusions. The Armenian Network
    recently donated several thousand dollars through the charity organ
    of the Armenian Diocese, the Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR).

    Most recently, Harut Sassounian, president of the United Armenia Fund
    (UAF), boarded a plane to Beirut on November 2. The purpose of his
    trip was to lend assistance to 28 Armenian schools currently operating
    in Lebanon.

    The UAF is a collective effort of several Armenian-American
    associations, including the Armenian Assembly of America, the Armenian
    General Benevolent Union (AGBU), the Armenian Missionary Association
    of America, the Armenian Relief Society, the Eastern Diocese of the
    Armenian Church of America, the Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church of America and the Lincy Foundation (the latter being the
    charity arm of multi-billionaire Kirk Kerkorian's operations).

    All in all, the UAF will donate a total of $4.7 million to Lebanon's
    Armenian schools.

    The support coming from the Armenian diaspora is also more than
    immediate and urgent. Mid- to long-term assistance is in the works
    as well. On November 22, three youth organizations - the Armenian
    Students Association, the AGBU Young Professionals and the Armenian
    Network - are teaming up with the Hye Q's, the Armenian Gay and
    Lesbian Association of New York, at a downtown nightclub called Earth
    to party and raise money for both Armenia and Lebanon.

    As one Armenian-Lebanese aptly puts it: "Lebanon took in our
    grandparents. It's our second home. The least we can do now is give
    back as much as we can to the country."

    Given their history, Armenians have tended to look out for themselves
    and to donate disproportionately to Armenia and Armenian causes.

    Now, perhaps wealthier and more confident than in the past, they are
    returning a long-term favor to those who, in their hour of gravest
    need, opened their arms to them some 90 years ago.

    Christopher Atamian is a New York-based writer and journalist of
    Armenian-Lebanese origin who writes on culture and politics for The
    New York Times, Gourmet, New York Press and more.

    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edi tion_id=1&categ_id=2&article_id=76788
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