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  • 100 years of sorrow and joy

    100 years of sorrow and joy

    Montreal Gazette , Canada
    July 24, 2006

    Ask 'Nene' about the Armenian genocide, and her awful memories unfold
    in novelistic detail. But through a life of quiet, patient dignity,
    she has been a guiding light to her large family Article Tools

    ANNETTE AGHAZARIAN, Freelance Published: Monday, July 24, 2006

    Some people touch the lives of everyone they meet without ever
    realizing the effect they have. They don't need to write a book or
    govern a country to hold such great power; in their own simple way,
    they can restore your faith in God and humanity.

    This month, Arousiag Aghazarian turned 100 years old. You would never
    know it by looking at her, but if you take the time to listen to her
    stories, she will transport you to a time and place unimaginable.
    Although her health is failing, her mind and heart are still strong,
    and she has forgotten nothing.

    Memories unfold behind her now blind eyes, like the pages in a
    history book. If you ask her about her life, she will describe it
    in such detail that you might think she was reading passages from
    a novel. She can tell you how she witnessed the horrors of genocide
    as a child and travelled like a fugitive for more than a decade in
    her bare feet. She has seen entire families, churches and villages
    obliterated. She has experienced the ugly brutality of war but remains
    strangely optimistic, because she has always lived her life as a true
    survivor and never as a victim. If you listen very closely, you will
    understand the concept of faith: someone who quietly and courageously
    moves forward under tragic circumstances and never once asks, "Why me?"

    Imagine sitting atop a family tree spanning five generations and
    knowing that somehow, by the grace of God, your life was spared for
    reasons you never would have expected. You lived through a massacre,
    were married off at 13, and gave birth to your first child at 15,
    when you were still a child yourself. You are the mother of six,
    grandmother of 13, great-grandmother of 22, and you now await the
    grandchild of your own grandchild. Would you have ever dreamed that
    all these children would speak a language (Armenian) you were forbidden
    to learn?

    "Nene" means grandmother in Turkish. And all her children, from 85 down
    to to 2 years old, call her Nene. She lives with her only daughter,
    who refuses to put her in a convalescent facility. She has spent a
    century washing and cooking and mothering for so many, and to take
    her away from her home and her family would be unthinkable.

    When I suffered through eight years of infertility and had given up
    hope, Nene never once lost faith. She told me she would not leave
    this Earth until I produced a child. Only after my son was born did I
    truly understand the beauty of her perseverance. When I looked at his
    perfect little face, I felt what she always knew: to feel great joy,
    you must first know great sorrow.

    Nene never blames anyone for the events of her life. She knows her
    fate lies with a higher power. Through the atrocities of war, she
    followed a divine path that only her eyes could see. With the birth
    of each child, her heart grew stronger, as did her patience. When I
    asked her through what miracles she survived, the simplicity of her
    words fell heavy on my chest: "It was my silence that kept me alive.
    My silence and my patience - that is what God gave me."

    There are no diplomas on Nene's shelves. There isn't a Nobel Peace
    Prize for all her accomplishments, but her house is full of awards.
    On every wall, table or dresser there is the photo of a child Nene
    has raised. Every single one of us holds a memory deep in our hearts
    of a time when she made us feel worthy of her love.

    Some people escape tragic circumstances but allow their pain to
    consume them. Others live their lives with a quiet dignity and
    lead by example. Like Holocaust writer Elie Wiesel, Nene has often
    wondered why her life was spared when so many others were destroyed.
    She never questions God's will, but as she reached 100 years on this
    planet she couldn't help but ask why she's still here.

    Perhaps we, her family, need to be reminded to be grateful for what we
    have and for how far we have come. And that without Nene's strength
    and courage, none of us would be here today. She has taught us the
    importance of family and the appreciation of simple things.

    There are far too many of us now to be seated at one table for a
    Sunday meal, but we all can remember the wonderful smells that danced
    in Nene's kitchen. Until she went blind at 90, she still prepared with
    her own hands the delicacies that take all day to make - the home-baked
    bread, dolma, stuffed meatballs, roasted lamb, and her famous mantee.

    Nene's hands now lie still in her lap, but they are waiting. There is
    one more child on the way and she wants to be ready. She must rock
    him to sleep as she rocked so many of us when our own mothers were
    too tired. It is her legacy to soothe our cries.

    Annette Aghazarian is a Montreal writer and granddaughter of Arousiag
    Aghazarian.

    http://www.canada.com/montre algazette/news/arts/story.html?id=5f03e5e0-b5a3-4f ef-98e7-f4daeb39e3ec
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