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Nothing Like The Real Thing: A Traveler Visits Kughi

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  • Nothing Like The Real Thing: A Traveler Visits Kughi

    NOTHING LIKE THE REAL THING: A TRAVELER VISITS KUGHI
    Betty Apigian-Kessel

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/06/13/nothing-like-the-real-thing-a-traveler-visits-kughi/
    June 13, 2012

    I'm sitting in front of the computer; one drawer of the desk also
    harbors my make-up. I begin to paint my face, mirror in hand,
    thinking to myself as I spy a reappearing patch of gray in my hair,
    "What startling physical changes will the next decade bring?"

    I was in this casual mode of needless worry when I spied a new
    e-mail labeled "Kughi." I was not prepared for the news and photos
    that unfolded before my unbelieving eyes. It was like a direct
    communication from old Armenia that jolted me with such euphoric
    emotion that it had to be read several times to sink in.

    It gave me chills to think that your grandparents might have been
    baptized in that church, that they may have run and played in these
    fields." (Photo by Khatchig Mouradian) It was from the Armenian Weekly
    editor, Khatchig Mouradian. I furrowed my brow in curiosity as I read
    the message that told me what he had been up to in his travels.

    I was shaken to the bone. After being my editor for many years, he knew
    me better than I realized. My reputation had preceded me in a nice way.

    Mouradian, a Ph.D candidate, had just returned from a trip to western
    Armenia, this time traveling the genocide-ravaged regions of Kharpert
    and Kughi. These travels to what is now referred to as eastern Turkey
    are vital to scholars who search a thorough understanding of the
    topography of the land and the attitudes of the now mostly Kurds who
    occupy it.

    Although a picture is worth a thousand words, nothing can take the
    place of being an actual traveler to the confiscated lands of your
    ancestors and seeing it for yourself. Mouradian has done just that. I
    was the beneficiary.

    He knows my father was from Kughi and, as he says, "When we left the
    car to walk into the village there, I visited the church ruins and
    I said the 'Hayr Mer' for the soul of your grandparents who hailed
    from that village. It gave me chills to think that your grandparents
    might have been baptized in that church, that they may have run and
    played in these fields."

    This is what connects all Armenians together, our common history of
    exile, deportation, and the death march.

    Mouradian sent me photos of the stream my father often spoke of,
    fondly describing the water that came flowing down from the mountain
    and rippled over the rocks "as cold, clear, and anoush." Now I could
    see it with my own eyes, just like Dad always said it was.

    The Ottoman-Turks decided the fate for all Armenians when they planned
    the Armenian Genocide. I was born much later than my three siblings
    but the scars of what the Turks did were imbedded in my genes even
    before my conception.

    No one with a sense of humanity about them can account for the
    brutality and senseless mass killings the Turks inflicted on their
    Armenian population.

    "I wonder how many Armenian children washed their faces, bathed,
    and played in its waters, and later, the tears of how many Armenian
    mothers mixed with them." (Photo by Khatchig Mouradian) Kindness and
    sensitivity will always remain in style, and Mouradian demonstrated he
    has these qualities when he thought of my family. He wondered if it was
    in that same church that my grandparents were baptized and later wed.

    "How much love, faith, and dedication have these church walls
    witnessed," the young editor pondered.

    Evidence of using stones and pillars from the old churches were
    visible in the repairs of the Kurds' homes. They have no connection
    to the land like the Armenians do.

    He continued, "The stream that runs through Kughi is just beautiful.

    The closer it gets to the village, though, the more garbage bags and
    trash you'd see in it. I wonder how many Armenian children washed
    their faces, bathed, and played in its waters, and later, the tears
    of how many Armenian mothers mixed with them."

    Mouradian said one of the two destroyed churches had walls, but they
    were so open to the elements that a garden had been planted inside it.

    The Kurds also told him the Armenians always picked the most attractive
    places to build their homes and villages.

    It was comforting to know my Kughi, the place of my roots, the region
    that gave me the father I adore, the man who was my finest teacher,
    was a lovely place to live.

    My treasures and gifts come in many ways. This was by far the most
    special and unexpected. They say you never know what tomorrow will
    bring and I, the analyzer and jaded, still have lessons to learn. Stay
    open, receptive, and positive to the unknown future.

    The photos of Kughi's houses, churches, and the stream for me are
    priceless gems but the words of my editor are engraved in my heart.

    "Kughi's stream sings the song of all its Armenian children scattered
    around the world. I could hear it. And Kughi is lucky, really lucky,
    despite the sad shape it is in today. It is lucky because its children
    have not forgotten its stream, its churches, and its houses. Because
    its children, living across the Atlantic, still sign their emails
    'Betty from Kughi.'"

    It's not the end, my fellow Hyes-it is the beginning. Stay strong
    and never give up the fight for justice.

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