1 Sympathy and Exclusion: The Migration of Child and Women Survivors of the Armenian Genocide from the Eastern Mediterranean to Canada, 19231930 Daniel Ohanian University of California, Los Angeles This text is a near-final draft of an article published in the fall 2017 issue of the journal Genocide Studies International.* The finalized version, which I cannot post online due to copyright restrictions, is accessible here and here. * * * Abstract: In 1918, some 500,000 Ottoman Armenians found themselves displaced from their homes or living in Muslim households in the Eastern Mediterranean and the South Caucasus. For most, life did not return to normal after WWI. Rather, new wars, war scares, political manoeuvrings, economic policies, famines, and epidemics during 19181930 resulted in a long-term refugee crisis that was responded to by a large number of Armenian and non- Armenian organizations. This article looks at one such response: the humanitarian relocation to Canada of 110 boys and 39 girls and womenall genocide refugees and most of them orphans. It traces how this relocation campaign was realized despite Canadian iՎՎigrՂtiՐՏ ՂuthՐritiՆs’ ՍՐՏg-standing efforts to keep Asians, the impoverished, and the stateless from entering the country. Breaking with the often simplistic and celebratory tone of the literature on humanitarian aid to Ottoman Armenians, this article discusses how the preceding fundraising campaigns of 18801922 were a liability for this subsequent relocation project, and it pays special attention to the people and ideas that opposed it. Key words: Canadian immigration, refugees in Canada, genocide survivors, Georgetown Boys, history of childhood, Asia Minor Catastrophe, WWI refugees