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Georgia: After Decades In Exile, Meskhetian Turks Return To Lost Hom

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  • Georgia: After Decades In Exile, Meskhetian Turks Return To Lost Hom

    GEORGIA: AFTER DECADES IN EXILE, MESKHETIAN TURKS RETURN TO LOST HOMELAND

    Eurasia Insight
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar ticles/eav100909.shtml
    10/09/09

    Roughly 65 years ago, Osman, a 90-year-old Meskhetian Turk, lost
    his home in Georgia to Stalin's dictat. Now, after a lifetime in
    Central Asia, Osman, along with hundreds of other Meskhetian Turks,
    is trying to come home again.

    Even after Stalin's death in 1953, Meskhetians, a Muslim people who
    speak a Turkish dialect, were allowed to live anywhere in the Soviet
    Union except for Georgia itself. With the collapse of the Soviet
    Union in 1991, a few hundred Meskhetians started to trickle back,
    in search of their roots. Instead, they found problems.

    Many Christian Georgians termed the Meskhetians' return to their
    native Samtskhe-Javakheti region in southern Georgia "the Turks'
    second great invasion" - a reference to Ottoman Turkey's takeover of
    Samtskhe-Javakheti in the 16th century. That prejudice still lingers.

    Despite it, a few thousand Meskhetians now live in Georgia. The
    Georgian government says that it has laid the groundwork for more to
    return this year.

    Osman's village of Abastumani in Samtskhe-Javakheti is one of
    the few places where these exiles have returned to their truly
    ancestral land. The ruins of the house where Osman was born lie just
    a stone's throw away from his current dwelling. But as Osman and other
    Meskhetians are learning, the divide that keeps Meskhetians strangers
    in their own land is wide, and it remains difficult to bridge the gap.

    Editor's Note: Temo Bardzimashvili is a freelance photojournalist
    based in Tbilisi.
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