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  • Newton man's memories of Armenian Genocide to go online

    Newton man's memories of Armenian Genocide to go online
    By Dan Atkinson / Daily News Staff

    Daily News Tribune, MA
    April 21 2005

    Peter Bilezikian doesn't like to talk about the past. He used to have
    nightmares of Turkish soldiers pulling out his teeth and gouging out
    his eyes when he was a boy, and although the images stopped long ago,
    he is visibly affected when recalling his life during the Armenian
    Genocide.

    But he recently gave an oral history of his trials, and someday
    soon, it will be available for the whole world to hear.

    On Sunday, the Armenian Library and Museum of America hosted a
    presentation about putting oral histories online as part of their
    commemoration of the genocide. As fewer and fewer survivors remain,
    it is important to make sure their tales are accessible to as many
    people as possible, according to museum spokesman Alan Manoian.

    "If we can get online, then people can, at their own comfort and
    leisure and pace, go deep into understanding the genocide," he said.

    The genocide refers to a period from 1915-23 in Turkey when, by
    some estimates, 1 million Armenians were killed by Turks. Another
    million are reported to have been deported.

    Armenian Genocide survivors in general have been reluctant to
    speak about their experiences, Bilezikian said, for fear of reprisals
    against family members still living in Turkey. But oral histories
    offer a powerful view that other sources leave out, according to
    Bethel Charkoudian, Bilezikian's daughter.

    "These are eyewitness accounts interpreted through people who
    experienced suffering. They're not intellectual exercises," she said.
    "It's like post-traumatic stress syndrome. They remember every
    detail."

    Bilezikian, who is 92 years old and lives in Newton, came to
    America in 1922 when he was 10 years old. He recalled watching his
    mother sign a document denying his family owned any property in
    Turkey, making it impossible to go back to claim the vineyards they
    once owned. He described seeing children with swollen bellies keel
    over in the streets, dying of hunger.

    "I used to think it was a natural thing to die of starvation,"
    he said. "Feeling hungry was nothing unusual."

    The children of survivors have been more interested in their
    parents' stories than the parents often are, Charkoudian said. She
    took oral histories from many community members 30 years ago, but her
    father refused to talk with her. Only recently did he give a history
    to Roger Hagopian, a documentary filmmaker and second-generation
    Armenian.

    "We're just trying to keep the story alive," Hagopian said. "It
    doesn't hurt us as much to go back."

    But movies are hard to copy, as are the audiotapes that
    Charkoudian used to record her histories. The tapes had to be
    carefully stored and used infrequently to prevent wear and tear, she
    said, and she was constantly worried about them breaking and a
    survivor's story being lost forever.

    Columbia University is trying to make survivors' histories more
    permanent by moving them beyond physical damage -- in cyberspace.
    Their Armenian Oral History Archive is placing its transcriptions and
    recordings on the Web, with the ultimate goal by next year of a
    searchable database for its collection of more than 140 interviews,
    according to archive curator Varoujan Froundjian.

    "If a student is writing an essay about the genocide, just
    typing into Google will bring him to the archives and help him get
    the details," Froundjian said.

    Even though her father does not like to dwell on the past,
    Charkoudian thinks it is important to keep his history alive. Her
    children are interested in their roots, and genocide is still a
    scourge today, she said.

    "Every generation has its genocide," she said. "It happened in
    Rwanda, it's happening in Sudan ... people are only now just starting
    to take a political stance against it."

    Dan Atkinson can be reached at [email protected].

    Armenian Genocide commemoration events

    The Greater Boston Committee for the Commemoration of the
    Armenian Genocide, an umbrella organization of all area churches and
    major civic groups, announces the following communitywide
    commemoration events for the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
    Genocide. All events are free and open to the public, unless
    otherwise noted. For more information and periodic updates, log on to
    www.weremember1915.org.

    "The Road to Redemption: Memories of the 1915 Armenian Genocide"
    -- Thursday, April 21, at 7:30 p.m., at Boston University's Morse
    Auditorium, 602 Commonwealth Ave., Boston. Presented by the Greater
    Boston Committee for the Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.

    Massachusetts State House Commemoration -- Friday, April 22, at
    11 a.m., in the Chamber of the House of Representatives, followed by
    an informal reception in the Great Hall. George Keverian, former
    Speaker of the House, will be honored for his service and his respect
    of the state's Armenian community.

    Ecumenical Service and Memorial Service -- Saturday, April 23,
    at 6:45 p.m., at Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church, 145 Brattle
    St., Cambridge. A service for 250 Armenian intellectuals who perished
    on April 24, 1915. Presented by the Honorable Clergy of Boston
    Armenian Churches.

    Requiem and Memorial Concert for the 90th Anniversary of the
    Armenian Genocide -- Saturday, April 23, at 7:30 p.m., at Holy
    Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church. Presented by Erevan Choral
    Society, under the direction of the Very Rev. Oshagan Minassian.

    Rally to Commemorate the Armenian Genocide in New York --
    Sunday, April 24. Buses depart from St. James and St. Stephen's
    Armenian Churches in Watertown to Times Square, for those wishing to
    take part in the rally to commemorate the genocide and denounce the
    denials made by the Turkish government.

    The Films of J. Michael Hagopian -- Friday, April 29 and May 6,
    various times, at Kendall Square Cinema, 1 Kendall Square, Cambridge.
    Screenings of "Germany and the Secret Genocide" and "Voices from the
    Lake." Presented by the Greater Boston Committee for the
    Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide, with cooperation of Kendall
    Square Cinema. Tickets are $5.
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