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Yezidi Community Of Armenia Expects Businessman To Restore Old Cemet

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  • Yezidi Community Of Armenia Expects Businessman To Restore Old Cemet

    YEZIDI COMMUNITY OF ARMENIA EXPECTS BUSINESSMAN TO RESTORE OLD CEMETERY

    SOCIETY | 15.01.14 | 14:47

    NAZIK ARMENAKYAN
    ArmeniaNow

    Yezidis National Union "Sinjar" issued a statement accusing businessman
    Seryozha Grigoryan of destroying the old Yezidis cemetery in the
    Myasnikyan community of Armavir province. The Union says Grigoryan
    (who is a relative of MP Hrant Grigoryan from the Republican Party)
    destroyed the cemetery to make the site for the vineyard for his
    winery.

    "What happened to the old cemetery is sacrilege, since a person who
    does not respect the memory of other people's deceased cannot respect
    own deceased (relatives). If this happened in Azerbaijan, we wouldn't
    be so surprised and anger would not be so strong. A few years ago
    we witnessed how the old Armenian cemetery in Nakhichevan, which was
    sacred to us and was considered a cultural value for the world, was
    destroyed in the result of state policy of Azerbaijan. By this step
    the businessman Seryozha Grigoryan not only offends people, but plays
    with an international reputation in Armenia," reads the statement.

    Yezidis are the largest ethnic minority in Armenia, with an estimated
    population of about 40,000. Most of Yezidis live in rural areas. The
    Yezidi community publishes three newspapers; the Public Radio of
    Armenia broadcast programs in Yezidi every day.

    The Sinjar Union's chairman Boris Tamoyan told ArmeniaNow that the
    Yezidis of Myasnikyan noticed the half of the tombstones on the small
    cemetery were fallen down (or broken) and the territory was smoothed
    down yet six month ago. (According to residents, there were about 20-25
    graves.) They informed the village's head about it and asked him to
    fence the cemetery, which is adjacent to the winery and demanded that
    businessman Grigoryan restores them. However, only a few tombstones
    were put on their places the residents applied to the union.

    "There are some assumptions that Yezidi participants of the Sardarabad
    battle (1918) are also buried in that cemetery. We hope we can draw
    authorities' attention to the incident, which is now in the spotlight
    of mass media," says Tamoyan.

    Grigoryan has not yet answered the accusation.

    http://armenianow.com/society/51344/yezidis_cemetery_armenia_sinjar



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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