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Armenians In Ethiopia - A Vanishing Community

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  • Armenians In Ethiopia - A Vanishing Community

    ARMENIANS IN ETHIOPIA - A VANISHING COMMUNITY
    By Scribd

    Keghart.com
    Aug 6 2009

    Garbis Korajian, a personal friend and a reader of Keghart, brought
    to my attention an essay about Armenians in Ethiopia. Reportedly, the
    material was used for a PhD thesis by a Swedish author. Unfortunately,
    a search did not reveal his identity. Having personal knowledge
    of the community, I find the concluding remarks very relevant. To
    view the essay in its entirety, please click at Scribd where this
    and the following posting entitled Ethiopian Armenians In their own
    words are transcribed from. Sentiments of gratitude are extended to
    the unknown author. Anybody who is familiar with him please contact
    Keghart. [?] Patapan's book and Ashot Abrahamian's monograph about
    the history of Armenians in Ethiopia - not utilized by the author -
    contain additional and important information - Dikran Abrahamian

    What I find interesting in anthropology is migration in particular
    - how it affects culture and erases ethnic boundaries. What I find
    most interesting are just those groups that find themselves in the
    middle, the ones one never thinks of: those that live in our midst
    - the groups that prove to be exceptional. My interest in social
    anthropology has always been in those areas that concern migration,
    culture and contemporary ethnicity. How people move, how cultures
    are changed by people in motion. I myself have roots in Ethiopia,
    a country that is most often connected with poverty or enigmatic
    Rastafarian-mystique. To write about Armenians in Ethiopia can seem
    rather far-fetched to the uninitiated, but I realised directly that
    this was what I wanted to write about. I have on a number of occasions
    gone by the Armenian Church in Addis Ababa but never considered why it
    is situated there, or even thought at all why there should be Armenians
    in Ethiopia; shouldn't they be in Armenia? When we began reading about
    the Armenian diaspora in the A-course the pieces started falling into
    place. And the more I looked, the more information I also found about
    the diaspora, except those supposedly living in Ethiopia. One answer I
    obtained was that they had been dead for a long time. In an Armenian
    forum on the Internet they laughed at my question and answered that
    there are no black Armenians.

    I decided to find out what the situation was. What came out of
    my search was a picture of a very little Diaspora on the verge of
    extinction, one which had once been very alive but will hardly survive
    much longer. This made me even more interested. What had happened? Why
    had they suddenly become so few, and where are the remaining Armenians
    today? The Armenian diaspora has been documented a number of times,
    with the exception of the group in Ethiopia. One has most often
    chosen to document the Diasporas that have taken root in what we
    call the West. Those groups among the dispersed which choose to
    settle in other places are forgotten. Even for many Armenians in the
    diaspora, the Ethiopian group is forgotten, despite the fact that the
    first Armenians came to Ethiopia already in the 16th century. More
    followed at the end of the 19th century, and in connection with
    the Armenian genocide the Armenian population was reduced to just
    over one thousand. But today there are few Armenians in Ethiopia,
    and many Ethiopians have forgotten the role that the Armenians have
    played through the years. Ethiopia's Armenians belong to the past,
    though no one has investigated what happened: there is very little
    research on Diasporas in the Third World. The focus on Ethiopia has
    been on other levels: that it is a country with an extremely rich
    and old history influenced by many different peoples is unknown. That
    there exist Swedes with different backgrounds is for most people not
    particularly strange; but it is more difficult to understand that -
    not only in the West - there are groups of people who do not live up
    to the stereotype.

    [.................................... ....................................]

    Conclusion

    The strength of the Ethio-Armenians lies in their solidarity. Through
    maintaining their cultural heritage and the assets that have always
    belonged to them, the community has through the years created an
    identity that will live on as long as there exist individuals to
    maintain it. By constantly keeping the group's infrastructure intact,
    an arena for identity has continued to exist, and the infrastructure
    also finances that arena purely economically. It is an identity that
    is constantly reproduced within the group through socialisation and
    a common basis of values.

    The community's days are numbered, since the small size of the group
    speak against it, and this is something that the Ethio-Armenians are
    well aware of. The majority of those who have remained in the country
    will surely stay for the simple reason that they have lived in Ethiopia
    their whole lives. The age of the majority is very high, and many are
    far too old to move and start again, as many did when the Derg came
    to power. Among the younger Ethio-Armenians there is no chance of
    reproducing within the group. Even if they marry outside the group,
    the Armenian identity must continue to be the dominant one in order
    for the group to be able to live on. This is not an impossibility,
    but in the long run the identity will cease existing in connection
    with the group's doing so.

    The younger people in the group are more unsure of their future in
    Ethiopia, and certainly more inclined to move elsewhere. Virtually
    all Ethio-Armenians have more relatives outside Ethiopia than in
    the country itself, and with time this can be a decisive reason for
    leaving the country.

    The club, the church and the school cannot live on without dedicated
    individuals - but what would be the point in keeping a church if there
    no longer exists anyone to visit it? An influx of new individuals
    from the Armenian diaspora presupposes that they are basically
    Ethio-Armenians in order for the group's identity to live on.

    [William Saroyan's statement] 'For when two of them meet anywhere in
    the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia' ... presupposes
    that there exist individuals who are willing to work for the group
    and its future. It is in this way that they have up to now succeeded
    in maintaining their identity, and constantly reproducing it through
    the years no matter what has happened in their surroundings. The
    Derg revolution strengthened the solidarity among those remaining,
    but at the same time the revolution decided the Armenians' future in
    the country.

    My conclusion is that the Armenian diaspora in Ethiopia will within
    30 years be but a memory. The solidarity will live on outside of
    the country, but if there is no immigration the Ethio-Armenian
    identity in Ethiopia could never live on. The group will probably
    never be compensated by the Ethiopian state either, and therefore a
    return migration is unlikely. The Armenians' legacy in the country -
    businesses, buildings and perhaps even the church - will surely live
    on. Most of what was once founded by Armenians still remains, even
    if it is now owned or run by ethnic Ethiopians. The Armenian legacy
    will remain even if it is not referred to as Armenian, in the same
    way as we today in Sweden call pasta bolognese Swedish plain food. The
    Ethiopian telephone catalogue is full of Armenian names, though they
    are today borne mainly by ethnic Ethiopians. The Ethio-Armenians still
    living in Ethiopia are the last generation of Ethio-Armenians. When
    they no longer remain, the end will have come for a several hundred
    year Armenian presence in Ethiopia.

    Read reader comments http://www.keghart.com/node/560

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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