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ANKARA: The Armenian Diaspora

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  • ANKARA: The Armenian Diaspora

    The Armenian Diaspora
    By Etyen Mahcupyan

    Zaman newspaper
    5 December 2004

    We can say that diaspora groups live everywhere in the world in an
    environment where they feel 'out of sorts.'

    It is not easy to be the object of a state of permanent and mandatory
    guest-hood where they painstakingly learn the language and culture
    of a society and as they do, get alienated from themselves.
    Especially if one has, like the Armenians, a past
    filled with pain, if one has been forcefully torn away from their
    homeland and have been so heartbroken as to consider the possibility of
    return a sort of non-issue; then being in the diaspora translates into
    a very heavy emotional burden. To sum up in a single sentence, the
    Armenian diaspora today is 'the East within the West...' These people
    who were forced to depart from their homelands had to quickly adapt
    to modernity of the Western countries they arrived in. This state of
    being torn away led to an unavoidable process of individualization,
    standing on your own feet, getting into multiple relations with the
    people and institutions in the arrived countries. The requirements
    of the workplace and especially the needs of children often eroded
    the patriarchal codes of the family and a type of normlessness was
    experienced in relation to how much the West lured the children away.
    Consequently, the destiny of the Eastern diaspora in
    the West is necessitated by the fact that the individualization
    experienced in the socio-economic sphere does not correspond to
    anything in the cultural sphere; more explicitly stated, they have to
    sustain their identity within the alienation of the culture offered
    them there…

    Consequently, in order to retain their own identity, the Armenians had
    to reform their communities in the Western world. Their identities
    that had been fragmented at the individual level were reproduced anew
    over such togetherness. And for this reason, from the viewpoint of
    diaspora Armenians, 'identity' turned into a characteristic that
    could be supported not as an individual but only as a community.
    While communal activities became the only functional realm holding
    them together, the expression of identity politics was also abandoned
    to the charge of the aforementioned organizations… The communal
    diaspora organizations acquired immunity and sometimes even a kind of
    sacredness in the work they undertook because of the implied meanings
    of identity. Hence, while the 'individual' implied a subject bounded
    by personal life, societal participation was sought and lived through
    the 'community.'

    The meaning of this is that it led communal politics to possess force
    to create hegemony over the individual. On the other hand the Armenian
    community continued to sustain a spiritual hierarchy within itself
    because of its communal logic and its Ottoman past. Yet the secular
    societies of the West were not made up of a character that would
    permit the spiritual leadership to assume, as it did in the Ottoman
    case, a political leadership as well… Hence today this political
    vacuum is being filled by the political elite heading the communal
    organizations in the Armenian diaspora. Yet the political elite of
    the Armenian elite that had weak democratic traditions in its own
    inception and that still reproduced itself anew within a patriarchal
    mentality can be transformed into a type of political oligarchy….

    And political oligarchy reproduces itself anew and fortifies its
    position through radicalism, for radicalism contains this image that
    implies it defends Armenian culture much more. In so far as no one
    can claim that Armenian culture should be defended less, radicalism
    naturally becomes the only politics… And what emerges is a nationalist
    stand that centers on the absence of consideration that is in reality
    without any 'political backbone.' While the diaspora imagines itself
    to be engaged in politics, it actually remains contained by hardening
    intra-community politics. The protective instinct created by sudden
    change of living space creates, in the end, a reactionism that freezes
    time, fixes the community, and obstructs politics by pushing it into
    irrational channels.

    --Boundary_(ID_afQEgtsAqv5mRuDzqpNxcA)--
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