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  • Opening Eyes To Plight Of Assyrians

    Hartford Courant,
    Nov 25 2006

    Opening Eyes To Plight Of Assyrians
    November 25, 2006


    By LORETTA WALDMAN, Courant Staff Writer


    Growing up in Iran, Sharokin Betgevargiz remembers diving into ditches
    at the sound of approaching MiGs during the Iran/Iraq War. In the
    apartment she shared with her parents in a Tehran suburb, shelter was
    found under beds and in doorways. Black tape crisscrossed the windows
    in case of flying glass.

    Now 36, Betgevargiz lives in New Britain and teaches the history of
    graphic design at Central Connecticut State University. She has not
    forgotten her childhood terror, nor how she says it felt growing up
    as a Christian in a mostly Muslim world.

    That is how she explains her passion for calling attention to the
    plight of Assyrians: a less visible, seldom mentioned group than the
    Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds now caught up in the bloodshed ravaging
    Iraq.

    Yet these mostly Christian descendants of the ancient Mesopotamians
    are frequent targets of fundamentalist Islamists who see them as the
    face of the West. Abductions and beheadings are common, she says. Men
    go to work and never return. Women are terrified to leave their
    homes.

    "We equal George Bush" in the eyes of the enemies, said Betgevargiz.

    She and other Assyrian Americans living in New Britain have organized
    events on Sunday and Monday to highlight the struggles of Assyrians
    in Iraq. Both events will feature films by Lina Yakubova, an Assyrian
    ethnographer and documentary filmmaker living in Armenia.

    The first, scheduled Sunday at 12:30 p.m., is at the Assyrian St.
    Thomas Cultural Center, 92 McClintock St., New Britain. The second is
    set for Monday at 7 p.m. at the Torp Theater at Davidson Hall at
    CCSU.

    New Britain has one of the largest Assyrian communities in the
    Northeast, with 250 households. In Connecticut there are about 5,000
    Assyrians, representing about 10,000 estimated to be living in the
    region, according to the Assyrian National News Agency.

    Nationwide, there are an estimated 300,000 Assyrians, the agency
    says. Most are concentrated in Chicago, Detroit and California. Many
    are doctors, lawyers, engineers and other professionals who have fled
    the numerous conflicts in the Middle East since World War II.

    Atrocities against Assyrians in the latest Iraq war include the
    decapitation of a priest last month, the abduction and murder of 15
    women and the crucifixion of a 14-year-old boy, according to news
    reports and local Assyrians.

    The origin of the community in New Britain dates to the arrival of 70
    Assyrian families sponsored by Presbyterian missionaries at South
    Church in 1904, Betgevarigiz and others say. Today, this thriving but
    low-profile community boasts a church, St. Thomas Church of the East,
    and its own cemetery.

    The events Sunday and Monday are part of an effort to establish a
    safe zone in northern Iraq. A march in Washington is planned Dec. 4;
    Assyrians from throughout the U.S. are expected.

    "When you talk about Iraq, it's not just Muslims," Betgevargiz said.
    "These are real people with real differences. I don't just want
    Assyrians to come to these talks. I want everyone."

    http://www.courant.com/news/local/hc-assyriadoc1 125.artnov25,0,3414998.story?coll=hc-headlines-loc al
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