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Not Dead Yet; Armenians In Turkey

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  • Not Dead Yet; Armenians In Turkey

    NOT DEAD YET; ARMENIANS IN TURKEY

    The Economist
    U.S. Edition
    November 18, 2006

    A diaspora survives

    Turkey's Armenian population is growing

    IN THE grimy alleys of Istanbul's Kumkapi district the air is thick
    with a rarely heard language: Armenian. Marina Martossian, who has
    been working illegally for five months as a cleaner, is typical of
    40,000 compatriots there. She is delighted with her $300 monthly pay
    and calls her Turkish bosses "the kindest people in the world".

    That's a big change. Bitter debate over the fate of the Ottoman
    Armenians-did the mass killings of 1915 constitute genocide?-has
    fuelled decades of enmity. A survey by TESEV, a think-tank in
    Istanbul, showed some 70% of Armenians had a negative view of the
    Turks: a tenth called them "enemies"; a similar chunk "barbarians".

    Among Turks, 34% thought poorly of Armenians (17%, bizarrely, believed
    the Armenians were Jews).

    Turkey's Armenian minority dwindled to 80,000. In 1993 Turkey
    sealed the border with Armenia, after it seized the province of
    Nagorno-Karabakh from the Turks' Azeri cousins. The issue poisons other
    ties too: this week Turkey broke off military relations with France,
    after parliament there voted to criminalise denial of the genocide.

    Now Turkish officials go easy on the Armenians-in contrast to other
    illegal workers. They also welcome changing attitudes among diaspora
    Armenians, especially among those who actually visit Turkey. In an
    e-mail widely circulated among emigres this month, Kardash Onnig, an
    Armenian-American artist, who recently returned from an arts festival
    in the eastern province of Kars, says he "never imagined that an
    Armenian artist singing Armenian songs could elicit a response of
    such brotherly humanity. I was in a sea of Turks dancing to Armenian
    tunes. What joy! My eyes were full of tears."
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