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  • ANKARA: Tiny ethnic minority disputes `common' error

    Tiny ethnic minority disputes `common' error
    VERCÄ°HAN ZÄ°FLÄ°OÄ=9ELU
    YEREVAN - Hürriyet Daily News
    Sunday, October 4, 2009


    The world knows them as the `Yazidis,' but this tiny ethnic minority
    disputes the common misconception and calls themselves the `Ezidis.'
    `The whole of the Muslim world, Turks foremost, call us the
    `Yazidis,' which means devil worshipper. But we, the Ezidis, worship
    the sun,' said Pir Razmi Siyabend Rashoyan, the religious leader of the
    three Ezidi villages in Armenia.
    According to Rashoyan, the Muslim world is prejudiced against the
    Ezidis because of their line of descent. `They call us the Yazidis
    because we came from the bloodline of the Umayyad Caliph Yazid bin
    Muawiyah, who killed Husayn ibn Ali, the grandson of the Prophet
    Mohammed in Kerbala,' he said.
    Ezidis make up an important Iraqi minority community. Estimates of
    the size of the Iraqi communities vary significantly, between 70,000
    and 500,000. They are primarily Kurdish speaking, and most live in the
    Mosul region of northern Iraq. There are traditional communities in
    Georgia, Turkey and Syria, but these have declined since the 1990s with
    some of their members migrating to Europe, especially to Germany.
    Some scholars have derived the name Yazidi from the Old Iranic
    `yazata,' or divine being, while others say it is a derivation from
    Umayyad Caliph Yazid, revered by the Ezidis as an incarnation of the
    divine figure Sultan Ezi.
    Despite the migration trend in other countries, Armenia has a more
    stable Ezidi community, accounting for about 40,000 people, and they do
    not see themselves as a minority in Armenia. The Ezidis in Armenia
    mostly live in the villages of Talin, Barozh and Hogdemperyan, which
    are 300 kilometers away from the capital, Yerevan.
    Due to their village lives, the Ezidis experience chronic water and
    gas problems. Aziz Tamoyan, the leader of the Ezidi people in Armenia,
    said the lack of water was felt most during the winter. `Taking a bath
    is a luxury for the villagers,' Tamoyan said. `They try to survive in
    the wintertime by melting ice to get fresh water.'
    Anna Mistoyan, a resident of Talin, which is few meters away from
    the Turkish border, said: `There is neither water nor gas. It is
    torture to live here. During the winter, we cannot even get the amount
    of water that we get in summer. There is no gas, so we cannot get warm.'
    The village's primary school is poorly cared for and dilapidated.
    Kinarik Sivazian, one of the longest tenured teachers in the school,
    said the building desperately needed reconstruction.
    `It is almost impossible to study in here during the winter,'
    Sivazian said. But Garush Hiroshoyan seemed more optimistic about the
    situation in the village. `I am 90 years old. My father and mother came
    here after fleeing from Turkey,' Hiroshoyan said. `Yes, we do not have
    water and gas, but we have peace in this country.'
    Tamoyan said the Ezidis in Armenia fled Anatolia during the late
    days of the Ottoman Empire and suggested that they had also suffered
    during the 1915 killings of Armenians. `My people got their share from
    the Armenian genocide in 1915,' Tamoyan said. `After those days, some
    Ezidis came to Armenia, and some of them migrated to various countries
    across the world. Although our roots were in Anatolia, the Ezidi
    population there is almost none at the moment.'
    Recent normalization talks between Yerevan and Ankara have been
    facing various woes and opposition from many sides, but the Ezidis have
    their own reasons. They do not hesitate to voice their opposition
    against the negotiations and openly confessed that they still have some
    bias against not only Turks but also the Kurdish population in
    southeastern Turkey. The Ezidis said they were fearful that they would
    encounter problems if the border between Armenia and Turkey were opened.
    Tamoyan said they were happy to live in Armenia: =80=9CWe see ourselves
    as a part of the Armenian society and totally do not feel like a
    minority. We can get education in our mother tongue, so we do not have
    any difficulties at all.'

    © 2009 Hurriyet Daily News
    URL: www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=3Dtiny-ethnic-mi nority-disputes-8216common8217-error-2009-10-04
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