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Lebanon's Armenians: well-integrated but declining

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  • Lebanon's Armenians: well-integrated but declining

    Lebanon's Armenians: well-integrated but declining
    By Nayla Razzouk - BEIRUT

    Middle East Online, UK
    April 21 2005

    Armenians whose ancestors escaped massacre in Ottoman Turkey gain
    Lebanon's respec with their skills, hard work.

    Lebanon's well-integrated Armenian community is gearing up for the
    90th anniversary of the massacre of their ancestors in Ottoman Turkey
    amid concerns over emigration which has halved their number in 15
    years.

    The Christian Armenians have been hit by the same economic hardships
    as other communities in the tiny Arab country which welcomed their
    forefathers with open arms.

    >>From 250,000 at the end of Lebanon's 1975-1990 civil war, during
    which tens of thousands emigrated, the Armenian community has
    dwindled further to about 120,000, according to political and
    religious leaders of the community.


    "We suffered emigration like all other communities in post-war
    Lebanon. We are trying to face that problem, and so are our churches,
    with financial and housing aid," said MP Jean Ogassabian, one of six
    ethnic Armenian deputies in the 128-member parliament.

    "But since Armenia's independence in 1991, many of the funds that we
    used to receive are now going" to the former Soviet republic, said
    another, MP Serge Tor Sarkissian.

    Lebanon hosts the Arab world's largest Armenian community, the
    descendants of survivors of the 1915-1917 massacres of Armenians who
    are now leading a global campaign to declare the mass killings a
    genocide.

    The massacres have been acknowledged as genocide by a number of
    countries, including France, Canada and Switzerland. Armenians around
    the world will mark the 90th anniversary of the start of the
    slaughter on April 24.

    "A draft law proposal for official Lebanese recognition of the
    genocide has been in my drawer for two years because Lebanon does not
    need more crises. We are Lebanese first, and we are forever grateful
    to Lebanon," said Tor Sarkissian.

    Most of Lebanon's Armenians hail from the region of Cilicia, today in
    Turkey, and not in the present-day state of Armenia.

    >>From refugees living under tents on wastelands, the Armenians gained
    the respect of other communities in Lebanon with their skills and
    hard work that allowed them to gain prominent economic and political
    positions.

    The community is today represented by a government minister, six MPs
    and three main political parties. The mother and wife of President
    Emile Lahoud are of Armenian origin.

    Many of Lebanon's top jewellers, leading industrialists, prominent
    physicians, popular television presenters, artists and at least half
    of the musicians of the national symphony orchestra are Armenians.

    If many Lebanese are known to speak Arabic, French and English, some
    Lebanese Armenians are even quadrilingual.

    At election time, the Armenian vote is an important factor since many
    of them are registered in Beirut and important regions nearby. They
    have however often been criticised for voting in block, in favor of
    the government of the day.

    The Armenians maintained a neutral stand during the war.

    "The Armenians mind their own business to the point that they even
    celebrate Christmas on their own," on January 6, said Wassim Husseini
    in a joke summing up how Armenians are generally viewed.

    But such stereotypes belong more to the past, said Arda Ekmekji, dean
    of arts and sciences at Haigazian University, the only Armenian
    higher learning institute outside Armenia.

    "Today, Lebanese Armenians are completely integrated, they live
    across the country and speak perfect Arabic," she said. "When two
    Lebanese meet in Paris, they naturally speak Arabic!"

    Beside the input of the family, Armenian identity is kept alive by
    active political, cultural and sporting institutions as well as some
    70 Armenian schools and the university.

    And there is the commemoration of April 24.

    Near Saint Gregory the Illuminator Armenian church north of Beirut,
    children file in groups into a mausoleum to watch in silence a
    display of skulls from the massacre.

    In the all-Armenian village of Anjar, in eastern Lebanon, residents
    live amid apple orchards, vineyards and Islamic ruins in six quarters
    named after the six villages of mountainous Musa Dagh, in today's
    Turkey.

    Armenians from around the world trek to Anjar to pray at the memorial
    of the heroic and poorly-armed Armenian villagers in Musa Dagh who,
    faced with almost certain death, fought for 40 days against invading
    Turks in 1915.

    http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=13285
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