Refugee Experience As Trauma

REFUGEE EXPERIENCE AS TRAUMA

Arab News
August 1, 2012 Wednesday
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

Bashar Assad has massacred close to 20,000 Syrians, he has turned a
million of them into destitute refugees.

To speak of refugees is to speak of a monumental crisis in the human
condition. If you were ever one of these unfortunate souls, the terror
of it stays with you for the rest of your life. It haunts you for
decades after the fact. Its imagery – the demonic helplessness and
fear, the dispossession and uncertainty – insinuates itself into
your sunbconscious, recurring, at unguarded moments, in bouts of
post-traumatic stress.

Judged by the way it is seen in the media, the issue of Syrian refugees
fleeing the mayhem in their homeland is but a sidebar on a pitiless
conflict that has cost thousands of lives.

All wars, we argue, create refugees, civilians who arrive at the
borders of potential host states, harrowed and beaten, often with only
the clothes on their backs, seeking asylum and protection. Sad, yes,
we say, but there will be intimations of a happy ending: The refugees
will one day, hopefully soon, return and their agonies will be over.

So let’s move on! Not so fast, please, with the facile explanations.

The war in Syria, now well into its second year, resulted in the
exodus of 120,000 civilians to the continguous states of Turkey,
Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq. That is the official number of refugees
who have registered for assisstance from humanitarian agencies. The
actual number, according to the office of the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees, “is ten times as big.” (Over the last week alone, as many
as 100,000 people may have fled the fighting in Allepo.) Meanwhile,
as these refugees pour in, the host states will increasingly feel the
strain as their infrastructure is put under pressure to provide water,
housing, classrooms and food.

Thus the capacity of small countries like Jordan and Lebanon to
help will soon reach a saturation point. No doubt in coming days and
weeks, the United Nations, along with countries from North America,
the European Union and the Arab League, will chip in and see to it
that these folks do not go without. That’s the easy part. Consider
the human toll, the wounds that will permanently scar the psyche.

Syrian refugees come from every walk of life and several ethnic
backgrounds. They are rich and poor, they are Syrian Arabs, Kurds,
Armenians and Palestinians, but they all have one thing in common:
They faced the trauma of flight, having witnessed fighting, destruction
and death at close range, and violent acts perpetrated against friends,
neighbors and loved ones.

For a refugee distress is often chronic. At the core of the refugee
experience lies the remembrance of the greatest disaster that can
befall man: Severance from home and homeland. Home, as shelter and
abode, is the outward sum of a person’s nobility, and his homeland
is the place where he is thoroughly humanized as a citizen with a
national and archetypal identity.

With the one destroyed and the other rendered unsafe, you are compelled
to wander the earth, or dwell in the open fields, with mere canvas as
a roof over your head, in partial return to the manner of a beast. The
tragic solemnity of such an image is immeasurably humbling or those
of us who have not lived the refugee experience.

I, however, as a diaspora Palestinian, have known that experience, and
my life continues, to this day, to bear its stamp. Though I’m often
loath to bring – for its inappropriateness – the first person into
my columns, I will indulge a recollection here, that I had invoked
elsewhere in the past, about a man whose psychological wounds, that
he sustained as a refugee, literally killed him.

The man, called Abu Hassan, then in his late forties (he never knew
or much cared about how old he was exactly) was a 1948 refugee from
the city of Haifa, in Palestine, where he had been a shopkeeper,
self-confident and secure at being an independent businessmen,
respected around the neighborhood where he lived in his own home and
worked in his own shop.

Now in Beirut, where he and his family ended up at a Palestinian
refugee camp, he was enrolled with a United Nations relief agency
that doled out food rations to the refugees.

The transition was so sudden, so cataclysmic, it shook him to his core.

For several years after that, he would mope around mumbling
incoherently about how soon, for surely it must be soon, he and
his people would return home, to Haifa, where they would no longer
be subjected to such indignities in “the land of others.” His hair,
which had been jet-black when he left Palestine, now turned snow-white,
and his voice, which had been resonant before, now lost its pitch. He
walked hunched over.

He moved with effort. His world and its ways in Palestine, once as
familiar to him as the wince of his own muscles, were gone. He gasped
for breath, as it were, and wished for death. In no time, his last
breath was inhaled and his wish was granted.

That Abu Hassan was my father is not the issue. The issue is that
there were hundreds, possibly thousands, of Palestinian refugees like
him who met a similar fate soon after the ‘nakbe’ descended on them.

Professor Laurie Vickroy, of Bradley University in Illinois,
was writing about Cuban refugees in her paper, “The Traumas
of Unbelonging,” but she could have been writing about refugees
everywhere, from those tens of thousands of Irish families who escaped
the potato famine in their homeland in the late 1840s to Syrian
refugees escaping the terror unleashed upon them by the Assad regime.

“While situations of displacement often foster survival through
cultural adaptability,” Vickroy wrote, “in the context of traumatic
exile, a lost home can remain not only psychically embedded as a
place of origin and identity but also of an anguished dissolution
of the self.” Professor Vickroy is right. And trust me on this one,
I write from experience.- Email: [email protected]

Bishop Mkrtchyan’s Hydro-Plants…And More

BISHOP MKRTCHYAN’S HYDRO-PLANTS…AND MORE
Kristine Aghalaryan

July 17, 2012

When I first wrote about Bishop Abraham Lazarian’s link to the
three hydro-electric power stations in the village of Hermon, Hetq
was besieged with comments.

Many came to the rescue of Bishop Lazarian, Primate of the Vayots
Dzor Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church, arguing that the
clergyman couldn’t possibly have any commercial interests in local
electricity generation.

Tatev Artzrouni, coordinator of the Syunik Benevolent Organization,
also responded, assuring me that the Elegis plant belonged to them
and was constructed by a German company. (Elegis once operated two
plants in Hermon).

It’s now time to add a degree of reality to the issue by presenting
some facts.

The Syunik Social Benevolent Organization was registered in 2004. The
founders were Garik Shahgaldyan, Mayis Lazarian and Gevorg Lazarian
(see image below). Let’s look at the names in order.

http://hetq.am/eng/investigation/16651/bishop-mkrtchyans-hydro-plantsand-more.html

Armenia Lacks Hotels, Tourism Specialist Says

ARMENIA LACKS HOTELS, TOURISM SPECIALIST SAYS

tert.am
08.08.12

A number of tourism organizations do not invite their customers to
Armenia because of hotel shortage in the country, Alexan Zakyan,
director of Union of Incoming Tour Operators of Armenia, told the
reporters on Wednesday.

“Armenia lacks hotels. During these summer days their number is not
enough to accommodate tourists,” he said, adding that previously this
gap was filled by Dvin hotel which is not operating now.

Zakyan said it is difficult to say how many hotels are in Armenia but
only few of them correspond to international standards. He stressed
the hotel prices in Armenia are very high. “A tourist arriving in
Armenia needs averagely 5,500 euros while having this sum he/she can
have a better, high-quality rest at the seaside,” Zakyan said.

Armine Adamyan, the president of the union, said there is a noticeable
progress in tourism sphere in Armenia but concrete figures are not
known. “Armenia is not Brazil to come here to watch carnivals, Armenia
does not have see, but Armenia attracts tourists with the number of
historic-cultural sites,” she said, adding that it is necessary to
organize some events for those visiting Armenia.

Zhoghovurd: Poor Quality Medicines And Food Supplied To Some Orphana

ZHOGHOVURD: POOR QUALITY MEDICINES AND FOOD SUPPLIED TO SOME ORPHANAGES AND OLD PEOPLE’S HOMES

Panorama.am
08/08/2012

Citing reliable sources, Zhoghovurd daily reports that poor quality
medicines and food are supplied to some orphanages and old people’s
homes of Armenia, with Armenia’s State Commission for the Protection
of Economic Competition (SCPEC) carrying out audit in the sector.

Gayane Sahakyan, head of the press service of SCPEC, confirmed the
rumor to Zhoghovurd.

“We keep our attention focused on the sector. We have received
complaints from individuals about poor quality of food supplied. Now we
check whether there is misuse of public funds in the sector. SCPEC will
unveil results of the audit in September,” she is quoted as saying.

Red Dog Howls Play About Armenian Genocide To Be Staged In New York

RED DOG HOWLS PLAY ABOUT ARMENIAN GENOCIDE TO BE STAGED IN NEW YORK

tert.am
08.08.12

Red Dog Howls play, telling about the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman
Empire in 1915, will be staged in New York from September 4.

The play authored by Alexander Dinelaris tells about a young man who
accidentally comes into terms with the unknown history of his family.

After the death of his father the young man finds a box and reading
the letters kept inside, reveals he is not a Greek but the heir of
Armenians killed during the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire.

According to CNNturk, the performance has provoked the outrage of
the representatives of the Turkish community of the USA.

“This performance is not an art but an attempt of bringing the events
of 1915 on the agenda again. It is propaganda,” Ali Cinar, head of
American Federation of Turks said.

Children Adopted From Armenia Are In Safe Hands In Abroad

CHILDREN ADOPTED FROM ARMENIA ARE IN SAFE HANDS IN ABROAD

ARMENPRESS
8 August, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS: According to the data of Statistics
Service of Armenia in the first half of 2012 66 children from Armenian
orphanages have been adopted- 33 boys and 33 girls. On January-June
2012 by the citizens of the Republic of Armenia have been adopted 12
and by foreigners 18 children. On the same period of 2011 15 children
have been adopted by Armenian citizens and 26 by foreigners.

Armenpress was informed from the head of department of Statistics of
National Statistic Service Nelly Baghdasaryan that most children who
are subjected to adopting are from Yerevan. From children have been
adopted in 2012 33 have both father and mother and 27 have only mother.

After the adopting of the child the orphanages can not be interested
in the destiny of the child any more. If the adopting takes place
outside of Armenia the embassy of abovementioned country continues
to be occupied by the life of the child.

According to domestic code of Armenia, as well as decisions of
the Government the Consulates of the Republic of Armenia implement
the protection of rights of the children who are adopted outside
of Armenia.

The ministry of Justice is the central body of control towards the
children who have been adopted in Armenia and taken to abroad. In
the words of press secretary of the Minster of Justice Karine
Kalantaryan up to now the central body has not received any massage
about violations of rights of adopted children. “There are reports and
photos which prove the care towards adopted children” she said. There
has not been recorded return to Armenia after adoption.

Head of the department of public relations of the Ministry of Labor
and Social affairs Hasmik Khachatryan said that most of all children
less than one year old are being adopted. “The parents in order to
hide the fact of adopting a child choose little children which do not
remember anything” she said. There happen cases when after adopting
the child they return them after a short time. “There are not many
such cases but still they happen” she said.

The adoption of a child is implemented in Armenia according to the
Constitution of Armenia, Civil Code and other documents. In eight
orphanages of the Republic there are 877 children including 370 in
professional orphanages.

La Compagnie Aerienne Armavia Augmente Ses Vols A Destination D’Alep

LA COMPAGNIE AERIENNE ARMAVIA AUGMENTE SES VOLS A DESTINATION D’ALEP
Stephane

armenews.com
mercredi 8 aout 2012

La compagnie s’est engagee a assurer cinq vols supplementaires durant
le mois d’août, malgre l’absence de reponse officielle du Gouvernement
pour la soutenir financièrement. RFE/RL rend compte de l’arrivee a
l’aeroport Zvartnots d’Erevan, lundi dernier, de 150 Armeniens d’Alep,
qui ont affirme que les quartiers armeniens n’ont pas ete touches
par les combats.

Hayots Achkhar relève en outre, qu’en depit d’un dementi de l’Ambassade
de Syrie en Armenie, un conseiller de l’Ambassade, responsable du
service consulaire et culturel de celle-ci, aurait bien fait defection
au regime Assad. Le porte-parole du MAE armenien, Tigran Balayan,
a indique qu’une note diplomatique de l’Ambassade adressee au MAE
a fait etat de la suspension avant terme de la mission du diplomate
syrien en Armenie.

Hraparak relève, citant un fonctionnaire du Ministère de la Diaspora,
Firdus Zakharian, qu’au cours des derniers jours plus de 120 Armeniens
de Syrie ont saisi le Ministère avec differentes demandes. 12 d’entre
eux ont demande un lieu d’habitation et ont ete renvoyes au service
d’Etat des Migrations. D’après ce fonctionnaire, seuls 2 ou 3 % des
immigres de Syrie emettent le souhait de rester en Armenie, les autres
attendant une stabilisation de la situation en Syrie pour y retourner.

Ambassade de France en Armenie

Service de presse

2012 Elections: The Armenian Factor

2012 ELECTIONS: THE ARMENIAN FACTOR
by Garen Yegparian

August 7, 2012

Currently, there are at least 28 Armenians running for office in
the November U.S. elections this year. These offices range from city
councilmember to state-level constitutional office. Some of them have
not even gotten past their states’ primaries yet. Some are incumbents.

Some may be “Armenian” by marriage only, while others may have a
mixed heritage. Some may be running against friends/supporters of
our issues. Some may be totally delusional candidacies.

I don’t know, and have not even met, most of these compatriots who
have been bold, tough, and politically motivated enough to throw
their hats into their respective rings. They will likely be buffeted
by some pretty harsh clashes. But that’s what’s necessary.

The other thing that’s necessary is having an continuously updated
compilation of these brave souls so that support and advice can be
offered whenever possible and appropriate. Plus, it can serve as yet
another basis of developing our political power, a resource for the
candidates to pick one another’s brains for suggestions and ideas.

Since this piece will be read bi-coastally, I should point out that
many western states’ local elections are not held the first Tuesday in
November, as is the case for the most part in the eastern states. This
is why the list will be in constant need of updating.

I should thank the ANCA’s Eastern, Western, and D.C. offices for
helping me compile this list. That’s all this article will be, a list.

Some of the names and places may surprise you. Hopefully, it will
serve to inspire others to take the same leap. Please remember as
you read on that this is an imperfect list, and any gaps should be
filled in by you.

As you might expect, California has the largest number-six-of Armenians
running for office (with over half of our U.S. community living in
this state, hardly a shocker). Two members of Congress, Ana Eshoo
and Jackie Speier, are up for re-election as is State Assemblymember
Khacho Achadjian. We have three others seeking offices for the first
time: Adrin Nazarian and Greg Krikorian (the latter is key and will be
the subject of the next article in this election series) are seeking
election to the State Assembly, and Richelle Noroian is going for a
seat on the Santa Cruz City Council.

We have three states, all in New England, “tied” for the next highest
number of candidates, at four: Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode
Island. In Massachusetts, James Miceli and John Fresolo are running
for State House of Representatives, Stephen Simonian for State Senate,
and Peter Koutoujian for Middlesex County sheriff. I suspect there are
more given the size and age of our community in the state, but this
is what I’ve got so far. Mary Beth Ayvazian, Gary Azarian, Charlene
Takesian, and Kelly Upham-Torosian are all running for the State House
of Representatives in New Hampshire. Not only is this an impressive
showing for a state where we have a very small community, but imagine
if all of them get elected to the same chamber of the legislature!

Jared Nunes and Katherine Kazarian are running for the State House
of Representatives, Aram Garabedian for State Senate, and Scott
Avedissian for mayor of Warwick in Rhode Island. This is also an
impressive showing in a small state with a vibrant Armenian community.

All the other states that sport Armenian candidates this year have only
one. In the West, Oregon has Brad Avakian running for re-election
as state labor commissioner. You will probably remember he just
made an unsuccessful effort to get elected to Congress, but didn’t
get past his primary. Another name you’ve probably already heard is
Danny Tarkanian, who beat eight opponents in his Nevada Republican
primary and is well positioned to get sent to D.C. A surprise state
is Idaho, where Al Shoustarian is running for State Senate. Finally,
we have Linda Arzoumanian running for re-election as Pima County,
Az.’s school superintendent. This one is particularly interesting
because the Gulen movement’s efforts to start charter schools have
been blocked in this jurisdiction. And, after 16 years in office,
Arzoumanian is now being challenged by someone from her own party. One
is tempted to wonder if there’s a connection.

In the East, Greg Dirdilian is running for the U.S. House of
Representatives from Michigan. Unfortunately, this is one of those
cases where any community of interest would be confronted with a tough
choice: one of its own running against a longtime supporter of its
issues (in this case, the incumbent Sander Levin). Tim Kapucian seems
to be assured of re-election to the Iowa State Senate. In Kentucky,
Minnesota, and New York, we have Mary Lou Marzian, King Banaian,
and Paul Saryian, respectively, running for the lower house of the
legislature of their state. Marzian and Banaian are incumbents. And,
one city council candidacy by an Armenian is under way, in Richmond,
Va.-Charles Diradour.

I invite and urge you to explore these candidacies, and support them
as appropriate. Also if you are a candidate for office, or know one,
or know someone who knows one, please let the ANCA know, so a list
of Armenian candidates and, later, office holders can be compiled.

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/08/07/2012-elections-the-armenian-factor/

Family With 11 Children Homeless In Armenia’s Gyumri (Video)

FAMILY WITH 11 CHILDREN HOMELESS IN ARMENIA’S GYUMRI (VIDEO)

August 06, 2012 | 18:32

GYUMRI. – Many homeless families resided in territories far away from
Armenia’s Gyumri following the 1988 quake.

A big family with eleven children used to live in a temporary shelter
on the way to Yerevan-Gyumri airport. However, as the temporary home
was spoilt due to damp, they had to move to a small rented home. The
family has no hope to receive an apartment by the state as it is not
considered to be homeless due to the quake.

“We, the Shirak center employees, and hetq.am journalist Yeranuhi
Soghoyan, visited the other day the family of the Gevorgyans within
the framework of philanthropic initiative “No child should be left
out of the school due to lack of cloths and stationery.” There are
9 girls and 2 boys in the family,” the statement reads.

http://news.am/eng/news/116178.html

Chamlian Introduces Innovative Armenian Language Instruction Program

CHAMLIAN INTRODUCES INNOVATIVE ARMENIAN LANGUAGE INSTRUCTION PROGRAM

asbarez
Monday, August 6th, 2012

A presentation by Shushan Garabetian on the smart board

GLENDALE-After a year of meticulous planning and extensive research,
a new Armenian Language Instruction program will be implemented at
Chamlian Armenian School beginning this fall. The program’s mission,
titled “The Saroyan Project,” was to develop and implement an Armenian
language program that would follow a new instructional approach –
one that would adopt a contemporary curriculum with creative and
effective teaching methodologies.

To develop the program, the School Administration formed a committee
consisting of members from UCLA’s Armenian Department, including Dr.

Talar Chahinian-Mahroukian, Ms.Shushan Garabedian, and Ms. Myrna
Douzjan, as well as Chamlian’s Western and Eastern Armenian Department
Chairpersons, Ms. Arax Zarzavatjian and Mr. Saro Nazarian respectively.

“We are truly excited and hope that the program will be successful and
appreciated,” said project director, Dr. Talar Chahinian-Mahroukian.

She added, “We will start with grade one for now and propagate
gradually to other grades.” Principal Vazken Madenlian proudly stated,
“The Committee has performed an outstanding job and we are excited
to move on to next phase as we implement the program.”