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Armenian Genocide Survivor Passes Away At 106

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  • Armenian Genocide Survivor Passes Away At 106

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SURVIVOR PASSES AWAY AT 106

    NewsBlaze
    March 19 2008
    CA

    106-year old Hayganoush Markarian was one of last two known Bay
    Area survivors

    Hayganoush Markarian, one of only two known remaining survivors of
    the 1915 Armenian Genocide living in the Bay Area, passed away at
    the age of 106 on March 13.

    Last October, Markarian's story of survival was presented by Rep.

    Lynn Woolsey to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs during a hearing
    regarding a resolution officially recognizing the Armenian Genocide by
    Congress. Rep. Woolsey showed committee members Markarian's photograph
    and urged her colleagues to pass the resolution. The resolution passed
    in committee and awaits a vote by the full House of Representatives.

    Markarian was born Hayganoush Azarian on January 24, 1902 in the city
    of Kharpert in current-day eastern Turkey. The area was the historic
    homeland of Armenians until the Ottoman Turkish government began a
    systematic campaign to exterminate the Armenian population in 1915,
    which culminated in the death of 1.5 million Armenian men, women and
    children through massacres and forced deportations.

    In Kharpert, Markarian lived with her parents, older brother,
    and four sisters. When the Turkish government began the Armenian
    Genocide, first through the conscription of Armenian men and boys
    into special army units, Markarian's brother and father fled into
    hiding. Her brother, Karekin, dressed as a girl in order to safely
    cross dangerous areas. He made his way to Russia, then Sweden,
    and finally to the United States. Her father, Minas, who had been
    a successful businessman, hid among some of his Kurdish clients,
    moving from residence to residence to avoid detection. Meanwhile,
    Markarian's mother found a way to keep the rest of the family together
    in Kharpert during the mass deportations, avoiding massacre until
    the end of WWI when they were reunited with Markarian's father.

    Unfortunately, Minas suffered an early death as the result of the
    difficult conditions he had faced hiding in water wells for long
    periods of time.

    In 1923, Markarian's mother moved the family to Aleppo, Syria, where
    Hayganoush married Markar Markarian in 1925. They remained in Aleppo,
    raising five children, until 1956 when the entire family moved to
    Lebanon. In the meantime, their eldest son, Armen, migrated to the
    United States to pursue an education, and remained in America to
    teach. In 1969, the rest of the Markarian family followed Armen to
    the United States.

    In both Syria and Lebanon, Markarian was an active member of the
    Armenian Relief Society, the oldest Armenian women's organization
    operating in the world. The organization was established in 1910
    in New York City to provide humanitarian assistance to Armenians in
    need. Markarian continued her membership until her death this week.

    Hayganoush Markarian's funeral will take place on Wednesday, March
    19, at 11 am, at St. Gregory Armenian Apostolic Church in San
    Francisco. She is survived by Armen and Victoria Markarian, Arsen
    and Alice Gregorian, Zohrab and Elizabeth Markarian, Sinan and Seta
    Yazejian, Constantine and Nayiri Bouboussis, and six grandchildren.
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