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Nazarian: Ninety-Nine Years Ago Today

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  • Nazarian: Ninety-Nine Years Ago Today

    Nazarian: Ninety-Nine Years Ago Today

    By Eric Nazarian on April 26, 2014


    Impressions from the Armenian Genocide commemoration in Istanbul

    Ninety-nine years ago in the wee spring hours, Ottoman-era policemen
    marched through the streets of old Constantinople. Over the course of
    that fateful night, and the weeks that followed, they arrested and
    deported the most prominent Armenian writers, poets, journalists,
    intellectuals and men who lived by the pen from the Golden age of the
    Armenian intelligentsia in old Constantinople. These men were taken to
    the Haydarpasha train station and shipped deep into the interior of
    Ottoman Turkey where they were jailed and murdered.

    A scene from the commemoration in Istanbul (Photo by Eric Nazarian)

    Only a few survived, among them the iconic Komitas Vartabed, the
    priest, composer and musicologist who became mute and descended into
    madness as a result of the horrors he witnessed during the Armenian
    Genocide.

    Komitas's ancient musical soul went silent and today, 99 years later,
    I sat on the wet asphalt in the heart of Istanbul listening to his
    otherworldly voice recorded once upon a time in the early 20th
    century. It was crackling and booming on multiple loudspeakers among
    Armenians, Turks and Kurds gathered and jam-packed like sardines to
    honor the Armenian martyrs and to call what happened here in this
    country by its rightful name'Genocide. Young, old, middle-aged,
    natives and diasporans¦we all sat side-by-side humming with Komitas,
    Dle Yaman and Der Voghormya.

    Youth and elders held up laminated color and black-and-white
    photocopies of Krikor Zohrab, Siamanto, Diran Kelekian, Daniel
    Varoujan and several Ottoman-era Armenians who lived by the pen and
    were cut down by the swords. Their eyes gazed out from the photocopies
    at this new, small and fearless generation of Turks and Armenians
    committed to keeping the flame and voice of memory alive through the
    act of solemnity and presence together as a unified voice.

    This is a brave and vocal minority that has chosen to not be silent.
    Middle-aged women wept openly. Members of the New Zartonk stood
    steadfast with printed banners. All gathered had managed through
    solidarity and sheer will to silence the filet mignon of Bolis real
    estate where millions pass through on a daily basis.

    The press swarmed all over the street, perched on the roofs of
    businesses and establishments that demonstrated great respect to the
    commemorators by allowing the photojournalists to lean out of their
    windows and second-story patios immortalizing this brief hour on this
    very busy Spring day where the spirits of our one and a half-million
    dead were prayed for. Next year, this generation will return again and
    again and again.

    While the speechwriters and politicos continue to conjure new ways to
    manipulate verbs and adjectives to avoid the truth of the Genocide,
    this new generation will be burning the midnight oil printing out the
    laminated images of the martyrs.

    This small victory is a symbolic one that would have been unimaginable
    before. However small, its echoes are being heard now very loud and
    clearly across the world thanks to the point, shoot, save and upload
    settings in our garden variety of smart phones. And today's presence
    and solidarity, like Komitas's voice, will not be silenced. Today, I
    began to grasp the meaning of the word `vicdan' which means
    `conscience' in Turkish.

    These young university students and Istanbul natives were here out of
    duty and a calling sitting on the damp asphalt holding vigil. They
    were here because they cared. Who would have thought that in 2014 we
    would hear the ear-shattering boom of Der Voghormya in the ground-zero
    of Istanbul? That is not to say things here are where they should be.
    Far from it but each small symbolic step here is a step forward.

    After the end of the commemoration, I was handed a red carnation. With
    Komitas's voice lingering in my ears, I felt a certain temporary peace
    gnawed by the begrudging reminder that we would never be able to grasp
    the complete magnitude of what happened during the Genocide. Yet, we
    will continue to hold candles to collective and personal memory and
    through voice, song, image, solidarity and creative outpouring honor
    and demand justice for what will continue to dwarf our imaginations
    for generations to come.

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2014/04/26/ninety-nine-years-ago-today/




    From: A. Papazian
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