Assyrian Caucus looks to address challenges facing the community
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[March 29, 2022]
By GRACE KINNICUTT
Capitol News Illinois
gkinnicutt@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Illinois lawmakers have
formed the Illinois Assyrian Caucus in an effort to help them understand
and learn about challenges facing the Assyrian community and how to
address them.
Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago, announced the formation of the caucus at
a news conference in early March. The caucus has 18 founding members
from the Senate and House, including 17 Democrats and one Republican.
Villivalam will serve as co-chair alongside Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz,
D-Glenview.
“I look at our role as a caucus as working with the community to ensure
that their voice is heard and that they have a seat at the table when we
have policy discussions,” Villivalam said.
Assyrians are a transnational ethnic group and are indigenous to parts
of Iraq, Turkey and Syria. The United States is home to more than
600,000 Assyrian Americans with about 100,000 living in the Chicagoland
area according to the Assyrian Universal Alliance Foundation.
According to the AUAF, the first Assyrians to settle in Illinois
immigrated from modern-day Iran in 1889.
Atour Sargon, vice chair of the Assyrian Policy Institute, said the
formation of the new caucus speaks to the growing influence of the
community. It is a welcomed development, she said, in uplifting the
voices of Assyrians and helping legislators understand the needs and
priorities of the Assyrian community
The Assyrian Policy Institute is a nonprofit organization that advocates
for the rights of Assyrians and other minorities throughout the Middle
East.
In an interview with Capitol News Illinois, Sargon said the top
priorities the API would like to see addressed are senior, immigrant and
refugee services, the opioid crisis, and access to mental health
resources.
Sargon said the API would like to see improved access to immigrant and
refugee support services such as trauma response services for those who
have survived traumatic experiences in countries Assyrians have fled.
The group is also advocating for immigrant rights protections and
improved access to citizenship.
To address the opioid crisis among young adults in the community, Sargon
wants to establish programs to help prevent substance abuse and to
expand access to support services for families.
“It’s a really taboo issue in our community,” Sargon said. “Providing
improved access to resources can really help a great deal.”
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Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago, announces the
formation of the Illinois Assyrian Caucus during a news conference
in early March. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Grace Kinnicutt)
She also said the API would like to have group social programs readily
available for seniors who spend time alone at home while family members
are working.
Another challenge that was noted during the news conference was
Assyrians assimilating into the local community and learning English
while trying to keep the language, culture and traditions of their home
country.
“I think the hardest challenge that any immigrant faces when they are in
this country is the balance of assimilating and learning the language,
culture and traditions here,” Villivalam said.
Sargon said in interview that the API would like to see the Assyrian
language offered as an accredited option at public high schools.
Sargon said the institute wants to see within the coming year the
passing of Senate Joint Resolution 21, which would formally recognize
the Assyrian Genocide of 1915 and the Simele Massacre of 1933 as a
genocide. It would also declare Aug. 7 as Assyrian Remembrance Day.
“Assyrians have had a long history of being marginalized and denied
representation, suffering executions and enduring political oppression,”
Sargon said.
The Assyrian Genocide began in late 1914 and continued for more than a
decade with the peak of the violence occurring between 1915 and 1918.
The Ottoman Turks and allied Kurdish tribes subjected hundreds of
thousands of Assyrians to massacre, torture and cultural and ethnic
destruction along with the destruction of villages and cultural heritage
sites, and the assassination of Assyrian intellectual and religious
leaders.
The massacres took place in various locations across modern-day Turkey,
Iran and Iraq. An estimated 250,000 Assyrians were murdered during the
genocide with a large number forced into permanent exile.
The Simele Massacre was committed by armed Iraqi forces and took place
across more than 100 Assyrian villages, leading to the death of about
6,000 Assyrians. Inhabitants of 65 Assyrian villages were massacred,
including 3,000 in Simele.
Illinois would be the fourth state to formally recognize the Assyrian
Genocide.
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