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Memories Of A Lost Jerusalem

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  • Memories Of A Lost Jerusalem

    MEMORIES OF A LOST JERUSALEM

    Al Arabiya

    Thu Feb 09, 2012 15:25 pm (KSA) 12:25 pm (GMT) Thursday, 09 February 2012

    The Graf Zeppelin over Jerusalem, 1931 by Elia Kahvedjian (Elia Photo
    Service) inShare.0By Niamh McBurney for Al Arabiya

    Some eras remain engraved in memories. But others are fortunate enough
    to be documented by the sagacious few. Elia Kahvedjian collected and
    took around 3,000 photographs of Jerusalem and surrounding areas in
    the early part of the 20th century. Kahvedjian documented Jerusalem
    in its final years under the British Mandate, preserving forever
    parts of the city that were soon to be destroyed or redeveloped.

    Born in Urfa, in southern Turkey, Kahvedjian was a refugee of the
    Armenian genocide. Forced on a death march with his mother after his
    remaining extended family was murdered by Ottoman troops, the young
    Elia, estimated by his family to be around 10 or 11, was sent to an
    orphanage in Nazareth run by the American Near East Relief Foundation.

    When he told the orphanage he didn't know his surname, they asked
    what his father sold in his shop. "Coffee", he replied, so he became a
    'Kahvedjian', from 'kahve', the Turkish word for coffee.

    At the orphanage he was taught by Garro Boghosian, an amateur
    photographer who began paying Kahvedjian to accompany him on his
    excursions in order to carry his unwieldy equipment. The young orphan
    fell in love with photography, and from Nazareth he was sent to
    Jerusalem, to live in another orphanage. There he began working for a
    wealthy Christian family, the Hananya brothers, who ran a photography
    shop in the center of the city.

    Working in the photography shop gave Kahvedjian the opportunity to
    further his knowledge in the trade. When the brothers grew older and
    wanted to retire, Elia bought the shop from them and continued to
    run it. His family have recently found a picture of Elia in a group
    portrait of the Jerusalem Order of the Freemasons. They believe his
    association with the Freemasons gave him access to contacts within
    the British army, which subsequently become pivotal to his survival.

    According to his family, a British army officer warned Elia two days
    before the start of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War (referred to by Israelis
    as the War of Independence) that he should dispose of his belongings
    and leave the city. He hid his negatives and photos in a storeroom
    in the Armenian Quarter, closed the shop and fled the city.

    When he returned, in 1949, he opened the shop in the Christian Quarter
    that remains the "Elia Photo Service" to this day. In 1987 Kahvedjian's
    daughter-in-law rediscovered the forgotten glass-plate silver nitrate
    negatives when she tidied the storeroom. The family developed a number
    of the films, and organized the photos for Elia's first exhibition,
    held in the American Colony Hotel. The exhibition was wildly received,
    and the family proceeded to turn the shop into a small photographic
    museum. Filled with the black and white photos that span Kahvendjian's
    career, the shop serves tourists keen for images of a time gone by
    and residents reminiscing about their earlier lives.

    In 1998 the family chose a selection of the photographs to create a
    book, "Jerusalem Through My Father's Eyes." The book was printed under
    the family's supervision with paper imported especially from France.

    The volume was the subject of a very public court case in the Jerusalem
    District Court after several shop owners in Jerusalem began selling
    unofficial copies it. The family won the case and were awarded
    damages. It is still unknown where the forgeries were produced.

    Today, Elia's portrait watches over all those who come to gaze at his
    pictures in his family's small establishment. Antique cameras that
    remain in working order hang from the ceiling amongst the black and
    white memories of a lost time. According to his family's estimate,
    Elia died at 89, in 1999. But his life, and the life of an older
    Jerusalem, live on.


    From: Baghdasarian
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