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Video Captures Memories Of WWII

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  • Video Captures Memories Of WWII

    VIDEO CAPTURES MEMORIES OF WWII
    By Melody Hanatani/ Staff Writer

    Belmont Citizen-Herald, MA
    May 25 2006

    Markar Markarian was only a teenager when he was sitting in a cargo
    plane hundreds of feet above the Pacific Ocean, under attack from
    the Japanese.

    The incident occurred in the midst of World War II and Markarian,
    an 18-year-old from South Boston, was serving in the 25th Ordinance
    Company, traveling around the Pacific repairing artillery weapons
    for the United States military.

    The day when the Japanese shot at his plane was the most action he
    saw during his three years in service.

    "I didn't know if I was going to get home," said Markarian, now an
    82-year-old Belmont resident.

    Markarian's story will be told along with nine other local
    Armenian-American veterans in a documentary titled "Our Boys: Armenian
    World War II Veterans."

    The documentary was co-produced by Lexington residents Tom Spera and
    Roger Hagopian, whose fathers served in the war.

    The film will premiere this evening at the Armenian Library and Museum
    of America in Watertown.

    According to Hagopian, Spera wanted to find a way to honor veterans
    after the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II. Spera approached
    Hagopian, a filmmaker, and the two spent the past year interviewing
    veterans about the war, and interviewing women about their experiences
    on the home front.

    Hagopian grew up hearing stories about World War II from his father
    and the many other veterans who were around him. The 10 interviewees
    in the documentary either attend the Armenian Memorial Church in
    Watertown or the First Armenian Church in Belmont.

    They range in age from 70 to 95.

    "I felt most comfortable going to them because I already had a prior
    relationship with them," Hagopian said last week. "A lot of these
    guys grew up together in Watertown."

    All the veterans are children of parents who survived the Armenian
    genocide. Almost half of the veterans in the documentary had lost a
    parent by the time World War II began, Hagopian said.

    Some soldiers revealed stories they had kept secret for more than
    60 years. Hagopian said these include secrets they kept from their
    own family.

    "They are humble guys who didn't ask to be interviewed but they
    cooperated enthusiastically," he said.

    One veteran lost his brother in the war. He has spent the past 60
    years trying to make some sense of the death.

    "His brother died so he could live, that's the way he felt,"
    Hagopian said.

    Veterans' wives and relatives recall life on the home front and their
    roles in comforting soldiers.

    "They were young kids," Hagopian said of the veterans. "They were 17
    and 18 years old, and they responded to a national crisis and they
    were patriotic, they were heroic and they were humble ... and some
    of them made the ultimate sacrifice."

    Markarian's division was sent to fix weapons in areas that had already
    been cleared off from battle.

    He remembers staying on an island off the Philippines and seeing the
    Japanese soldiers come down the mountains with no clothes or guns. He
    said the Japanese would occasionally steal their food.

    There were periods of weeks and months when Markarian and his fellow
    comrades would be bored from lack of work.

    He recalls one four-month workless period when he created a ping-pong
    table out of gun crates.

    Markarian was in the Philippines when his division was told that
    troops were en route to Japan to drop the atomic bomb.

    It was good news for some soldiers who had been there for 18 months
    and had no idea when they would be able to return home.

    "There were six of us who went in as replacements and [the other
    soldiers] said, 'You are going to die here, we have been here 18
    months and there is no sign of us going out,'" Markarian said.

    Markarian was discharged in 1946, about half a year after the war
    ended.

    He slowly made his way back to Massachusetts, first stopping in
    Seattle where he contacted his parents at 2 a.m. Eastern Standard Time.

    He then went to Fort Devens and eventually made his way to North
    Station in Boston where he took the train to Broadway Station and
    took a cab home.

    Markarian moved to Belmont around 1953, after he married. He and his
    wife raised two daughters who later married two brothers.

    He has attended the Memorial Day Parade in Belmont almost every year
    since he moved to town. Watching the annual parade always gives him
    the same feeling.

    "I feel tingling in my body when the flag goes by," he said. "I'm
    still very proud."

    "Our Boys: Armenian World War II Veterans" will be shown at 7:30
    p.m. tonight at the Armenian Library and Museum of America, located
    at 65 Main St. in Watertown Square. Admission is free (donations
    appreciated). The filmmakers will be on hand to answer questions
    and discuss the making of the video, which runs for approximately 55
    minutes. A reception with refreshments will follow.
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