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Family Memories Published in Long-Running Church Newsletter Series

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  • Family Memories Published in Long-Running Church Newsletter Series

    Family Memories Published in Long-Running Church Newsletter Series

    http://asbarez.com/111452/family-memories-published-in-long-running-church-newsletter-series/
    Friday, July 12th, 2013

    BY ELISE KALFAYAN

    What was daily life like in Western Armenian provinces and communities
    before the Genocide, and how did families adapt as they emigrated to
    the U.S.? Stories and memories passed down to parishioners of United
    Armenian Congregational Church, printed in the church's Herald
    publication over the past four years, are a rich source of cultural
    history.

    Starting with Gesaria/Kayseri, series editor Joyce Abdulian selected
    regions and asked church members to contribute family memories.
    Launching the series, she wrote `The Herald hopes to continue
    featuring family life in the old country as part of our Armenian
    heritage and culture...' The response was very enthusiastic, and
    continues to the present as UACC looks forward to celebrating its 50th
    anniversary.

    The first three articles in January 2009:

    `Some Personal Remembrances of My Childhood in Gesaria' by Steve
    Zurnacian (who emigrated to the U.S. to study at MIT and then UCLA)
    `Memories of My Family's Life in Kayseri' by Dr. John Kassabian
    (Kassabian wrote that his parents did not meet until their families
    had emigrated to the U.S., but the stories they shared with him `gave
    me a sense of life in Kayseri. Fortunately, my grandfather kept a
    journal of significant events.')
    `Memories of Family Life in Gesaria' by Helen Chakmakjian Rainey (who
    wrote about both her family and her husband's family and how they came
    to the U.S.)

    Stories about family life in Van, Hadjin, Tarsus, Kharpert, Kilis,
    Marash, Aintab and more followed, with one or more submitted for each
    region. While many touched on the tragic or difficult circumstances
    that caused the families to emigrate, their main subjects were life in
    the old country and planting new roots in the U.S.

    Onnig Shahan (whose original family name, Shahbaghlian, came from the
    farming area north of Van called Shaghbaghe) wrote about his father's
    journey out of Armenian in 1923 and eastward on the Trans-Siberian
    railway. The family ended up in Shanghai, China; he was born there in
    1925. From Shanghai the family went by boat to San Francisco in 1927.
    His twin sisters were born in 1928. (The family later settled in
    Glendale, and he and his sisters graduated from Herbert Hoover High
    School!)

    Joyce Abdulian with her brother Maynard

    The focus on Aintab (where my father's family lived) continued for
    three issues, as several families submitted histories, including one
    from series editor Abdulian, `Images of Aintab Life.' Abdulian wrote
    that her grandmother `somehow concealed all of her beautiful jewelry
    on the fateful journey from Aintab to Aleppo...pieces of the jewelry
    were sold by my uncle Levon [Levonian, principal and founder of the
    Ouzoum Naseratz School in Aleppo]...to build the school and provide
    scholarships for needy students.'

    In an issue covering stories from Marash, she also wrote about her
    mother's school and included a photo of the 1913 diploma. Abdulian and
    her brother Maynard Kuljian are pictured in front of Marash College,
    in this photo taken in memory of their mother during a visit to her
    alma mater. Most of the families who send in stories also provide
    original photos, usually historical but occasionally taken by the
    authors themselves while visiting their parents' or grandparents' home
    towns.

    Abdulian published a short history of Musa Dagh in conjunction with
    church member Anges Andreassian Darakjian's narrative, `My Father,
    Rev. Dikran Andreassian.' Andreassian was the pastor who led the Musa
    Dagh Defense Council and that community's successful resistance
    against Turkish forces.

    Family memories of life in Kessab were featured extensively in three
    2012 Herald issues, as a number of church members were from that
    Syrian town. Aleppo was of course frequently mentioned as a short- or
    long-term stop for many families (including mine) who now attend UACC.
    Our prayers go out to the Armenians, including relatives of church
    members, still in Syria now.

    Having run through most of the Armenian provinces, Abdulian is now
    looking for stories from families who settled in South America or
    Africa before arriving in the U.S. She is also researching how some
    church members' families were assisted by the American National
    Committee for Homeless Armenians (ANCHA).

    The series has run uninterrupted since 2009, and the Publications
    Committee is very pleased with its effects. `People often tell me that
    they really enjoyed the latest article,' says Abdulian. `It touches
    our hearts to learn more about each others' family journeys, how
    people came here and what their older relatives shared with them.'

    `Encouraging families to set these stories down has been a real
    blessing. Committing them to print perpetuates our culture and our
    unique history,' says Herald Editor Fred Mickaelian. `The series is
    colloquial in tone but very effective.' The UACC Herald has a mailing
    list of about 700 addresses, and is also sent out to more than 60
    people via email.

    The Committee is in the process of deciding how these 25+ individual
    histories could be published together as a stand-alone volume,
    possibly in conjunction with UACC's 50th anniversary celebration. No
    decision has been reached. Regardless, the Herald collection is
    impressive in itself, and congratulations and thanks are due to Joyce
    Abdulian, the Publications Committee, UACC, and all the individuals
    who have taken the time to set down their family stories for
    posterity.

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