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  • Houshamadyan: Lebanese-Armenian Is On A Mission To Reconstruct The L

    HOUSHAMADYAN: LEBANESE-ARMENIAN IS ON A MISSION TO RECONSTRUCT THE LOST WORLD OF OTTOMAN ARMENIAN TOWN AND VILLAGE LIFE

    Sona Avagyan

    11:45, March 29, 2013

    It was only by accident that Lebanese-Armenian Vahe Tachjian found
    out that his grandfather's house in Sis was still standing

    Years ago an archaeologist friend of Vahe Tachjian, a Lebanese-Armenian
    historian now residing in Germany, travelled to Sis on a work
    project. Like many other foreign visitors, he stayed at Yaverin Konagı
    (Yaver House), the town's only boutique hotel and restaurant.

    Later the man showed Vahe pictures of the hotel and said, "Look at
    this beautiful hotel. In the past it was the home of some Armenian."

    At once, Vahe Tachjian recognized the hotel - it was the mansion of
    his grandfather, Krikor Mjrkian. It had been converted into a hotel
    after all these years. Vahe says that his family has always kept a
    photo of the mansion in their archives. In addition, Krikor Mjrkian's
    mansion appears in many of the photos of old Sis.

    People taking pictures of the Sis Catholicosate were bound to capture
    the mansion as well since it was located in front of the religious
    center.

    Today, visitors staying at the hotel will see a photo of the old
    mansion and read the name of the former owner of the building, Krikor
    Mjrkian. But the accompanying short history is distorted. It reads
    the Krikor Mjrkian bequeathed the mansion to his eldest son Khatchik
    Mjrkian and that he later sold it to a Turk in 1923.

    The reality is quite different. Krikor Mjrkian had good connections
    with the members of the local Ittihadist party and was able to make it
    through the Genocide alive, within the confines of his house. But in
    1918, two Turkish members of that same party murdered Krikor Mjrkian
    in front of his house.

    "The French had arrived in Sis by 1919. Until 1920, there was still
    an Armenian presence in Sis, but they all left that year, including
    my family. What's more interesting is that when I was working in
    the French archives (all the archives of French Cilicia are to
    be found in Nantes), I found the court file of Krikor Mjrkian's
    murderers. The French had captured the two killers and wanted to
    try them in court. Later, due to political reasons, they deemed it
    preferable to let them go," relates Vahe Tachjian.

    Khatchik, and the rest of Krikor Mjrkian's children, were born in that
    mansion. They all survived the Genocide and immigrated to Cyprus and
    later to Beirut.

    "In the 1960s, Krikor Mjrkian's son Khatchik, my grandfather, got into
    contact with his old Turkish neighbours who were living in Sis. He
    visited Sis just so he could see the house. He took some photos and
    returned. A few years later he passed away. I don't know if his death
    was caused by the emotions he experienced there. He saw his house
    for the last time and died," says Vahe Tachjian.

    When the section on Sis is ready in the Houshamadyan website, it will
    probably include the story of Krikor Mjrkian and his mansion

    The Armenians of the Ottoman Empire Left Over 300 Memoirs

    [Vahe_Tachjian.jpg] Vahe Tachjian

    Vahe Tachjian is the director and chief editor of the Houshamadyan
    project. The Houshamadyan non-profit organization was founded in 2010
    in Berlin and was twenty members. As the website says, Houshamadyan
    is a project designed to "Reconstruct Ottoman Armenian Town and
    Village Life." Its aim is to depict how Armenians lived before the
    1915 Genocide. Images of that life are reconstructed through the
    memoirs bequeathed by Armenians who lived in the Ottoman Empire and
    had either survived the Genocide or had emigrated earlier.

    The primary sources for Houshamadyan are the more than 300 memoirs in
    which the survivors wrote, starting in the 1920s, about the towns and
    villages in which they once lived. There are also articles written in
    the Constantinople, Tiflis and Baku Armenian press and books printed
    in Constantinople and Tiflis on the same subject matter.

    Studying and collating this material, Houshamadyan is then able to
    present an overall picture of life for Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
    - whether social, history, music, trades, holidays, religious customs,
    cuisine, literature, etc.

    Houshamadyan strives to use only Armenian language sources. It believes
    the accepted practice in Ottoman studies of using only Ottoman,
    French and English sources to depict the history of Armenians as a
    big mistake. In addition, the daily life of Armenians is only lightly
    touched upon in Ottoman studies.

    The families of Genocide survivors often donate old photos, documents,
    as well as other items of tangible culture value to Houshamadyan to
    be displayed in the website. Vahe Tachjian says that such items bear
    the entire memory bank of a given family, but that a family might
    not comprehend a given item's importance.

    "Last year we launched our first tour. We went to Beirut and, in
    conjunction with Haigazian University, we organized a meeting at a
    school in the Armenian populated neighbourhood of Bourj Hamoud. We
    announced that the Houshamadyan group had come from Berlin and
    requested that if anyone had old photos, documents, items or anything
    else that their grandfathers, grandmother, or earlier relatives had
    brought from the Ottoman Empire, to bring to us. We would photograph
    it on the spot and return it," says Vahe Tachjian.

    Heeding our call, many Lebanese-Armenians directly donated a bunch of
    items to us. We now keep them in Berlin. On March 27, Houshamadyan held
    it first exhibition at the Greens Party cultural center in Berlin. It
    will last for two weeks and will display primarily photos and a number
    of other such items.

    Houshamadyan studies the history of not only Western Armenia but all
    regions of the Ottoman Empire (for example the western districts
    of Konya and Izmir and the Arab provinces of Baghdad, Aleppo and
    Jerusalem) where Armenians lived. A large number of memoirs were
    written about Armenians not only in Western Armenia but in the
    abovementioned regions as well. Vahe Tachjian says this is why
    theHoushamadyan website uses the terms Ottoman Armenians and not
    Western Armenians.

    During the Genocide, Armenians living in the mountains took up arms
    while those in the towns tried to reason with the Turks

    [f06643cbf3.jpg] Kesirig (Kesrig) village's priest Rev Hagop
    Der-Hagopian and his family (Source: Vahé Haig.) This photo is from
    houshamadyan.org

    Sifting through the materials collected by Houshamadyan, Vahe Tachjian
    always learns something new and interesting. For example, in Western
    Armenian villages the houses were one story. If not, either they had
    no window or just a small one on top. What's new is that after 1908,
    those one story homes became two story and with a window or two.

    "Having a window signified that the outside would be looking in
    on you. Before, a stranger couldn't look inside. That's to say a
    neighbouring Kurd or Turk would start looking inside. For them,
    that psychological change happened after 1908," says Vahe Tachjian.

    A short time later, in 1909, the massacre of Adana Armenians would
    alter that hope for a new life. After 1909, those Armenians who
    had earlier left for the United States and had returned with their
    families to Western Armenia were thoroughly disillusioned and once
    again left for America or Egypt.

    As to the question whether the pre-Genocide social milieu and daily
    life of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire revealed any indications that
    years later these same Armenians would be subject to Genocide, Vahe
    Tachjian says that Armenians either didn't wish to see the coming
    tsunami that would destroy them or that they couldn't understand
    where it was headed. He argues that this is because the Armenians
    comprised the weakest element in an empire that started down the road
    of committing genocide.

    He also notes that it's difficult to leave your hearth and home in
    times of comparative peace; when no practical steps are being taken
    to destroy you. The first objective of Armenians was to remain in the
    Ottoman Empire and to live safely and well. Armenians were puzzled as
    to why the Ottoman authorities weren't safeguarding their lives and
    property from marauding Kurdish beys and were seeking assistance from
    those same authorities and Armenian institutions in its service. When
    they found no solution from those quarters it was only then that
    Armenians slowly started to think of other solutions. Khrimian Hayrik
    presented one of those solutions, but you can't pick up an "iron ladle"
    and wield it in the course of one day.

    When I asked if his study of Houshamadyan materials revealed any
    differences in lifestyle between those Armenian communities that
    organized self-defense efforts and those that didn't, Vahe Tachjian
    responded that those residing in mountain enclaves, semi-autonomous
    and with little contact with the outside world (Mousa Ler, Zeytoun,
    Shadakh), took up arms and resisted when they were ordered to pack
    up and leave. Armenians living in the towns tried to reason with
    the Turks and convince themselves that this was merely a temporary
    resettlement. They believed the statements of community leaders and
    institutions who, also under the influence of the authorities, told
    Armenians that they would all be returning.

    Turkey's Embassy shows an interest in Houshamadyan, but not the
    government of Armenia

    [2374173050.jpg] The Gosdanian family from the town of
    Harput/Kharpert. (Source: Isabel Calusdian Goshgarian collection.) The
    photo is from houshamadyan.org

    Vahe Tachjian says the history of the culture and lifestyle of
    Western Armenia is forgotten, both in the Republic of Armenia and
    the diaspora. Today's Armenians might be able to say where their
    grandparents came, but as to how they lived is a different matter.

    Fifty years ago there were still people who knew. That generation
    has since passed and a new, reconstructed history has come to the fore.

    In the new Armenian historiography, there is no room for local
    histories.

    The Houshamadyan director believes that not enough work is being
    done in Armenia to research the history of Western Armenia. True,
    the Genocide is studied, but research into the life of Armenians
    before 1915 is rare. There is a great deal of material regarding
    the western Armenian legacy stores away in the archives in Armenia,
    but it must all be examined, organized and published.

    In Berlin at the end of this year, Houshamadyan will publish the first
    volume of an academic research study entitled "Ottoman Armenians". The
    volume will include some ten academic articles and photos regarding
    the social and cultural life of Armenians. Houshamadyan also plans
    to organise lectures, conferences and exhibitions in the future.

    Vahe Tachjian laments the fact that no representative of the Armenian
    government, even the Ministry of the Diaspora or the Ministry of
    Foreign Affairs, has yet to express an interest in the work carried
    out by Houshamadyan.

    In comparison, Turkey's Embassy in Germany had contacted Houshamadyan,
    asking about its activities and members. The embassy even advised
    the organization to refrain from using the term genocide.

    Most visitors to the Houshamadyan website are from the United States,
    followed by Armenia and Turkey, especially from the interior provinces.

    Houshamadyan operates on the largesse of individual donors. In
    addition to a small permanent staff, the organization has a network
    of volunteers ready to help.

    Funding, and consequently, an adequate staff remain major problems.

    But Vahe Tachjian says that despite the obstacles the work being
    carried out is a reward in itself. After all, they are reconstructing
    an entire world.

    1st photo: Sis. Krikor Mjrkian's house is on the left, located just
    in front of Sis Catholicosate. The photo has been provided by Vahe
    Tachjian.

    http://hetq.am/eng/articles/24935/houshamadyan-lebanese-armenian-is-on-a-mis
    sion-to-reconstruct-the-lost-world-of-ottoman-armenian-town-and-village-life
    .html




    From: A. Papazian
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