Assyrians in Belgium are Belgian citizens of Assyrian descent. Belgium's Assyrian diaspora is concentrated in the Flemish cities of Mechelen and Antwerp, although there are also significant numbers living in Liège and Brussels. The majority of the Assyrian diaspora living in Belgium are of Turkish descent, mostly from the towns of Bohtan (Beth-Qardu),[1] Tur-Abdin and Hakkâri.[2][3]

Demonstration in Brussels, Belgium

History

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The first Assyrians came to Belgium around 1980; mostly from Tur Abdin in Turkey. They were political immigrants fleeing the Turkish-Kurdish conflicts in Southeast Turkey. They left their houses and moved to Europe for a brighter future.[3] Following the First Gulf War, the majority of Assyrian immigrants have come to Belgium from Iraq and Syria. In the 1980s (as with other immigrants in Europe), nationalism started to develop in Belgium among the Assyrians,[citation needed] who have continued to be oppressed in Turkey since the Assyrian genocide during World War I.[4][5][6]

Assyrians from Belgium, in common with other Assyrian communities around the world, have been involved in demonstrations aiming to raise awareness of the Assyrian Genocide.[2]

Current situation

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Assyrians integrated into Belgian society while maintaining their cultural identity, supporting social events organized by Assyrian clubs. Assyrians in Belgium have started projects including the publishing of an Assyrian grammar book by Efrem Yildiz, the organisation of trips in association with the Association of Assyro-Chaldeans in Belgium, the production of an Assyrian movie Akitu[7] and the founding of the Assyrian Belgian Youth (AJB). Additionally, politicians of Assyrian descent take part in Belgian politics: municipal councillors of Assyrian descent have taken office in Brussels, Etterbeek, Liège and Mechelen, including Ibrahim Erkan (Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, Christian Democrats), Sandrine Es (Etterbeek, Liberal Party) and Ibrahim Hanna (Etterbeek, Christian Democrats). New Flemish Alliance councilman Melikan Kucam is featured in Mechelen aan de Tigris (Mechelen on the Tigris), a book by Flemish author August Thiry about Assyrian refugees from Hassana in the southeastern Turkish district of Silopi.

Many Assyrians in Belgium belong to either the Chaldean Catholic Church or the Syriac Orthodox Church, with smaller numbers belonging to the Assyrian Church of the East.[8] The first Assyrians mainly worked in factories or opened restaurants, but today, most attend university and work in all economic sectors.[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Bohtan Neo-Aramaic
  2. ^ a b "Shlama Foundation". Shlama. Shlama.be.
  3. ^ a b Thiry, August (June 2007). Mechelen aan de Tigris [Mechelen on the Tigris] (in Dutch). Mechelen: EPO. ISBN 9789064452246.
  4. ^ "Assyrians in Türkiye". October 16, 2023 – via minorityrights.org. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ "Assyrians in Turkey experience oppression, discriminatory policies a century after the genocide". www.gerceknews.com. Archived from the original on 2024-01-23.
  6. ^ Bulut, Uzay (February 2, 2023). "The Endangered Assyrians and the Language of Jesus Seek International Support". Gatestone Institute.
  7. ^ Asmar, Riad. "Akitu the Movie". Akitu. Riad Asmar. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  8. ^ Nas, Kristof (2018-06-21). "Chaldeans in Belgium". Chaldeans in Belgium. Archived from the original on 2019-12-26. Retrieved 2019-12-26. The people we know today as Assyrians are largely Chaldeans and Arameans / Syrian Orthodox. In Belgium there are hardly any Assyrians who belong to the Assyrian Church.
  9. ^ "Diaspora en Assyrische Renaissance". the ARO. ARO.
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