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Robert Fisk's World: A Voice Recovered From Armenia's Bitter Past

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  • Robert Fisk's World: A Voice Recovered From Armenia's Bitter Past

    ROBERT FISK'S WORLD: A VOICE RECOVERED FROM ARMENIA'S BITTER PAST

    Independent.co.uk
    Saturday, 23 August 2008

    It's a tiny book, only 116 pages long, but it contains a monumental
    truth, another sign that one and a half million dead Armenians will
    not go away.

    It's called My Grandmother: a Memoir and it's written by Fethiye Cetin
    and it opens up graves. For when she was growing up in the Turkish
    town of Marden, Fethiye's grandmother Seher was known as a respected
    Muslim housewife. It wasn't true. She was a Christian Armenian and
    her real name was Heranus. We all know that the modern Turkish state
    will not acknowledge the 1915 Armenian Holocaust, but this humble
    book may help to change that.

    Because an estimated two million Turks - alive in Turkey today -
    had an Armenian grandparent.

    As children they were put on the death marches south to the Syrian
    desert but - kidnapped by brigands, sheltered by brave Muslim villagers
    (whose own courage also, of course, cannot be acknowledged by Turkey)
    or simply torn from their dying mothers - later became citizens of
    the modern Turkey which Mustafa Kemal Ataturk was to set up. Yet as
    Maureen Freely states in her excellent preface, four generations
    of Turkish schoolchildren simply do not know Ottoman Anatolia was
    between a quarter and a half Christian.

    Heranus - whose face stares out at the reader from beneath her
    Muslim he adscarf - was seized by a Turkish gendarme, who sped
    off on horseback after lashing her mother with a whip. Even when
    she died of old age, Fethiye tried to record the names of Heranus's
    Armenian parents - Isguhi and Hovannes - but was ignored by the mosque
    authorities. It was Heranus, with her razor-sharp memory, who taught
    Fethiye of her family's fate and this book does record in terrible
    detail the now familiar saga of mass cruelty, of rape and butchery.

    In one town, the Turkish police separated husbands, sons and old men
    from their families and locked the women and children into a courtyard
    with high walls. From outside came blood-curdling shrieks. As Fethiye
    records, "Heranus and her brothers clung to their mother's skirts,
    but though she was terrified, she was desperate to know what was going
    on. Seeing that another girl had climbed on to someone's shoulders to
    see over the wall, she went to her side. The girl was still looking
    over the wall; when, after a very long while, she came down again,
    she said what she had seen. All her life, Heranus would never forget
    what came from this girl's lip: 'They're cutting the men's throats,
    and throwing them into the river.'"

    Fethiye says she wrote her grandmother's story to "reconcile us
    with our history; but also to reconcile us with ourselves" which,
    as Freely writes, cuts right through the bitter politics of genocide
    recognition and=2 0denial. Of course, Ataturk's decision to move
    from Arabic to Latin script also means that vital Ottoman documents
    recalling the genocide cannot be consulted by most modern-day Turks. At
    about the same time, it's interesting to note, Stalin was performing
    a similarly cultural murder in Tajikistan where he moved the largely
    Persian language from Arabic to Cyrillic.

    And so history faded away. And I am indebted to Cosette Avakian,
    who sent me Fethiye's book and who is herself the granddaughter of
    Armenian survivors and who brings me news of another memorial of
    Armenians, this time in Wales.

    Wales, you may ask? And when I add that this particular memorial -
    a handsome Armenian cross embedded in stone - was vandalised on
    Holocaust Memorial Day last January, you may also be amazed. And
    I'm not surprised because not a single national paper reported this
    outrage. Had it been a Jewish Holocaust memorial stone that was
    desecrated, it would - quite rightly - have been recorded in our
    national newspapers. But Armenians don't count.

    As a Welsh Armenian said on the day, "This is our holiest
    shrine. Our grandparents who perished in the genocide do not have
    marked graves. This is where we remember them." No one knows who
    destroyed the stone: a request for condemnation by the Turkish embassy
    in London went, of course, unheeded, while in Liverpool on Holocaust
    Day, the Armenians were not even mentioned in20the service.

    Can this never end? Fethiye's wonderful book may reopen the past,
    but it is a bleak moment to record that when the Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink was prosecuted for insulting "Turkishness",
    Fethiye defended him in court. Little good it did Dink. He was murdered
    in January last year, his alleged killer later posing arrogantly for
    a picture next to the two policemen who were supposed to be holding
    him prisoner. It was in Dink's newspaper Agos that Fethiye was to
    publish her grandmother's death notice.

    This was how Heranus's Armenian sister in America came to read of
    her death.

    For Heranus's mother survived the death marches to remarry and live
    in New York.

    Wales, the United States, even Ethiopia, where Cosette Avakian's
    family eventually settled, it seems that every nation in the world
    is home to the Armenians. But can Turkey ever be reconciled with
    its own Armenian community, which was Hrant Dink's aim? When Fethiye
    found her Aunt Marge in the US - this was Heranus' sister, of course,
    by her mother's second marriage - she tried to remember a song that
    Heranus sang as a child. It began with the words "A sad shepherd on
    the mountain/Played a song of love..." and Marge eventually found
    two Armenian church choir members who could put the words together.

    "My mother never missed the village dances," Marge remembered. "She
    loved to dance. But after her ordeal, she never danced a gain." And
    now even when the Welsh memorial stone that stands for her pain and
    sorrow was smashed, the British Government could not bring itself to
    comment. As a member of the Welsh Armenian community said at the time,
    "We shall repair the cross again and again, no matter how often it
    is desecrated." And who, I wonder, will be wielding the hammer to
    smash it next time?
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