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  • War in Syria sparks efforts to help Armenians

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    June 23 2013

    War in Syria sparks efforts to help Armenians

    By Britanny Levine
    June 23, 2013, 3:41 p.m.


    To understand why Zaven Khanjian wants the Armenian community in Syria
    - a dwindling population caught in the crossfire of civil war - to
    endure, you have to go back nearly a century.


    Long before in-fighting began more than two years ago, Armenians
    settled in Syria after being driven out of Turkey during the genocide
    of 1915.

    Destitute and sick, the Christians were welcomed by the mostly Arabic
    Syrians and flourished, especially in Aleppo, a city close to the
    Turkish border and hard hit by war between rebel forces and the
    sitting government.

    "We want the community to survive as long as the war is going on,"
    said Khanjian, a Glendale real estate agent and Aleppo native who
    leads the nonprofit Syrian Armenian Relief Fund.

    But while many Armenians may feel indebted to Syria - a country that
    welcomed them when they were at their lowest point - thousands
    continue to flee amid an increase in the number of kidnappings and
    reported damage to homes and churches.

    Even an Armenian genocide memorial has been ransacked, said Lena
    Bozoyan, chairwoman of the Armenian Relief Society of Western U.S.A.

    Humanitarian aid is the primary goal, but there's also a deeper desire
    to prevent an Armenian community with historical significance from
    disintegrating completely.

    "The dwindling of the community in Syria will have a detrimental,
    long-term impact for the cultural vibrancy of the diaspora as a
    whole," said Ara Sanjian, director of the Armenian Research Center at
    the University of Michigan-Dearborn.

    But the effort to preserve the diaspora in Syria is increasingly
    difficult as fighting rages on, especially in Aleppo, which claims the
    largest Armenian population. Most Armenians with roots there are known
    to be loyal to the current regime, but Khanjian said philanthropic
    efforts out of Glendale are apolitical.

    The U.S. recently announced plans to bolster support of the rebels
    after determining that the Syrian regime had used chemical weapons
    against its own people.

    The Syrian Armenian Relief Fund, launched last year in partnership
    with Glendale-based Armenian Relief Society and other Armenian
    philanthropic groups, has sent $500,000 in assistance to struggling
    Syrian-Armenians. Organizers raised another $100,000 at a benefit
    concert in Hollywood two weeks ago.

    The money is sent to a coalition of Armenian nonprofits in Syria that
    doles out food, clothing, construction materials for damaged
    buildings, and medical care to the needy. During Armenian Christmas in
    January, the group dispersed cash to about 5,000 families, Khanjian
    said.

    Before the fund started, the Armenian Relief Society had already
    collected $100,000 for Armenian schools.

    But there are some things the fund won't pay for, such as relocation costs.

    "We want our people to stay there," Bozoyan said.

    Population estimates vary, but Sanjian, of the Armenian Research
    Center, said that before the conflict began, there were about 70,000
    Armenians in Syria, 70% of them in Aleppo. Armenian news agencies have
    reported that more than 10,000 have fled to Lebanon and Armenia, but
    some estimates peg the exodus as being almost twice that.

    http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-war-in-syria-sparks-efforts-to-help-armenians-20130623,0,6892382.story


    From: Baghdasarian
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