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Journal Article

Citation

Six-Hohenbalken M. Dialect. Anthropol. 2019; 43(2): 161-183.

Affiliation

Institute of Social Anthropology, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Hollandstrasse 11 - 13, 1020 Vienna, Austria.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Springer)

DOI

10.1007/s10624-018-9506-9

PMID

31231149

PMCID

PMC6546659

Abstract

This paper addresses the (post)-memories of the generations of offspring of survivors of the genocidal processes in the Ottoman Empire during World War I. About 12,000 Yezidis managed to flee to Armenia and establish a diasporic community. Based on ethnographic fieldwork within this community, including interviews with members of subsequent generations, this article focuses on the narratives and experiences of women as well as gender-specific violence. The gathered empirical data makes it possible to elaborate on the hardly documented history, on its lasting effects, and on gender-specific differences in these narrations. Despite certain politics of silencing, memories of genocidal persecution were passed down from one generation to the next. The most recent case of genocidal persecution of Yezidis in Shingal (Iraq) 2014 affected the very foundations of the Yezidi community both in Armenia and the transnation-and at the same time revived their joint remembrance of the fate of their ancestors who had once sought refuge in Armenia.


Language: en

Keywords

Commemoration; Genocide; Memory; Silencing; Transgenerational transmission

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