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  • We owe the Armenians

    FOREIGN EXCHANGE: We owe the Armenians
    -Kalpana Sahni

    Daily Times, Pakistan
    Dec 23 2006

    The Ain-i-Akbari mentions numerous Armenians who had been invited by
    Akbar to settle down in Agra. Mariam Zamani Begum, one of Akbar's
    wives was allegedly an Armenian, as were the Chief Justice, Abdul
    Hai, the Lady Doctor, Juliana, and several others

    Ashot Hindilyan graciously offered to show us around the Armenian
    Quarter of old Jerusalem.

    "Is your name linked to India?" I asked.

    "Naturally, -hindi- Hindilyan. At some point of time my family traded
    with India. So much so I am told that I even look like an Indian. Do
    I?"

    "Y-e-e-s, I guess so. Your nose is definitely not an Armenian
    nose..."

    A professor at Birzeit University, Dr Hindilyan took us to every nook
    and corner of old Jerusalem's Armenian quarter with its narrow
    cobbled streets lined with stone houses, the library, the cemetery.

    We witnessed the ancient church service in the 11th century Armenian
    Church of St James. As special guests, we were shown some church
    treasures. These were cotton block-printed altar curtains depicting
    the life of the Holy Family - all made in Madras! One of the most
    treasured ones was an enormous block-printed curtain with images of
    plants. Below each image was its name in Armenian script. Hindilyan
    read out - imli and looked up as if to ask if it made any sense.

    "Of course, that's an imli tree!"

    We tried to identify the other plants too. Why anybody would make a
    veritable encyclopaedia of South Indian plants for an Armenian
    church's altar curtain is anybody's guess. Perhaps some Armenian with
    a passion for botany had guided the block printers while writing down
    the names in Armenian script for them to copy. This particular
    altarpiece was made in the 18th century.

    Well, this episode spurred my curiosity. I remembered a Mr
    Khachaturian who, long long ago, had been my cousin's landlord in
    Bombay. So I started foraging for more information.

    We are ignorant about our Armenian links that go back to the second
    century. Armenians had once traded in many parts of India and their
    settlements were scattered along the coastline: Bombay, Surat,
    Madras, Calcutta, and later in Agra, Lucknow, Delhi, Lahore, Gwalior.

    Persia's Shah Abbas encouraged Armenians from Persia in the 17th
    century to trade with India. Their numbers swelled and soon they set
    up schools in Madras and Calcutta. The first Armenian language
    periodical was printed in Madras in 1794 and not in Armenia. It was
    the British who gradually forced them out, feeling threatened by
    their commercial expertise.

    The Ain-i-Akbari mentions numerous Armenians who had been invited by
    Akbar to settle down in Agra. Mariam Zamani Begum, one of Akbar's
    wives, was allegedly an Armenian, as were the Chief Justice, Abdul
    Hai (in Armenian 'hai' means Armenian), the Lady Doctor, Juliana, and
    several others.

    Some claim that Sarmad, an outstanding Sufi poet of the 17th century,
    was an Armenian Jew, while others that he was Armenian Christian. He
    arrived in India in 1654 from Kashan in Persia, became a bhikshu, and
    later turned to Sufism. Better known as the Naked Sufi, he attracted
    followers from all faiths and classes. He wrote in one of his Persian
    quatrains, "I obey the Koran. I am a Hindu priest and a monk; I am a
    Rabbi Jew, I am an infidel and I am Muslim."

    Among his disciples was Dara Shikoh, the prince philosopher and
    humanist. Aurangzeb killed both Dara Shikoh and Sarmad. To this day
    people lay floral tributes on the grave of Sarmad located near
    Delhi's Jama Masjid.

    The Zamzama canon outside the Lahore museum was made in 1761 by an
    Armenian gun-maker, Shah Nazar Khan, for Ahmed Shah Durrani, the
    Afghan invader of the Punjab. The Sikhs later captured it.

    What a lot we owe the Armenians! An Armenian lady doctor opened the
    first nursing home in Calcutta; an Armenian conducted the first
    archaeological digs. There are so many unsung Armenian heroes in our
    history who fought the British alongside us. Colonel Jacob Petrus
    commanded Scindia of Gwalior's Army for 70 years (1780-1850) against
    the British. Mesrovb Jacob Seth writes:

    "His reputation was so high and he was so respected that the entire
    city of Gwalior mourned his death in 1850. Thousands including the
    nobility and military attended his funeral, and guns were fired
    ninety-five times from the ramparts of the historic Gwalior Fort, to
    mark his age."

    Then there was the legendary Gorgin Khan, Commander-in-Chief of Mir
    Qasim, the Nawab of Bengal's army, and Movses Manook, a Colonel in
    the Nizam of Hyderabad's Army. The list of Armenian military officers
    is long. There were historians too. Tovmas Khojamalyan wrote a
    history of India in 1768. It included the period of British rule,
    which could provide a very important source of alternative
    information, especially in the chapters about the infamous 'black
    hole' tragedy.

    Was this a one-way traffic? Not at all! The 4th century Syrian
    historian Zenob Glak mentions that from the 2nd to the 4th century AD
    there existed in the Armenian area of Taron, an Indian settlement of
    some 15,000 Indians, which prospered for over two hundred years and
    consisted of 20 Indian villages. They were wiped out with the coming
    of Christianity to Armenia. A Toran village by the name of Hindkastan
    existed until the early 20th century as well as other names -
    Hindukhanum, Hindubek and Hindumelik.

    Dr Kalpana Sahni has been a professor at the Jawaharlal Nehru
    University, New Delhi. A doctorate in Russian literature, she has
    published extensively on literature and cross-cultural issues. She
    can be reached at [email protected]

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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