Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Fisk: Armenia's Burden

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Fisk: Armenia's Burden

    The Star (South Africa)
    December 29, 2012 Saturday
    E1 Edition


    ARMENIA'S BURDEN

    by Robert Fisk


    Between wars, I lecture on the Middle East. But rarely have I seen an
    audience so moved, so trapped by history, so tearful, as one night in
    Sharjah last spring.

    Nothing I said upset them. But the pictures I showed them were
    terrifying. In front of me, young and middle-aged Armenians - well-off
    for the most part, businessmen and women, well-educated - sat in an
    almost religious silence as they watched a succession of four
    photographs.

    Each showed the progress of an Armenian death march from Erzerum, old
    people, carts, young men with hidden faces, the doomed on their way to
    death 97 years ago.

    The four pictures were taken by Victor Pitchman, an Austrian soldier
    in the Turkish army, who could not have known that these men and women
    were about to die.

    Nor could they have known. They are heading in a straight line, down a
    straight road, women with scarves, over-burdened donkeys, past the
    same bunch of trees which feature in each photograph, a pale line of
    hills on the far horizon.

    All the Armenians of Erzerum were to die at the hands of the Turks in
    the 1915 genocide.

    There are many photographs of Armenian survivors. And there are
    pictures of their corpses. But few show the living just before they
    were slaughtered.

    These people, in the pictures I had been trawling through from the
    Armenian genocide museum in Yerevan, were the living dead. Shellfire,
    wounds, death.

    Each year, we report this miserable saga. But old wars and other
    genocides lean heavily upon us, as they did upon my Armenian audience
    in the Gulf.

    These were their grandparents and great-grandparents, plodding along,
    possessions piled on horse-carts, a pleasant enough, sunny day, clouds
    high in the sky.

    Only the grave awaits them.


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X