Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Bezjian: A Walk Through Dante's Inferno

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

  • Bezjian: A Walk Through Dante's Inferno

    Bezjian: A Walk Through Dante's Inferno

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2014/01/12/inferno/
    By Nigol Bezjian // January 12, 2014

    Special to the Armenian Weekly

    I was recently asked to help a journalist from a Prague-based radio
    station do a report on the Syrian-Armenian refugees in Beirut. She
    wanted to meet all sorts of folks - wealthy, poor, young and old - who
    were trying to make a go of it with what was left from a fragmented
    life. I took her to Bourj Hammoud - Little Armenia - where many of them
    could be found, and to a restaurant serving the much-cherished Aleppo
    cuisine.



    An Aleppo street before the war in Syria.

    We met one of the owners, a young, charming man with the freshly
    acquired acuteness of a businessman. He quickly invited us to a table
    and asked about our preferred drink from a list of American/global
    soft drinks. We settled for cold bottled water with a local name,
    though it was surely owned by some international conglomerate.

    The journalist was originally from Stepanakert, the capital of the
    Nagorno Karabagh Republic (NKR), which was born from a brutal war with
    Azerbaijan that saw more than 30,000 killed on both sides. She had
    been born in the midst of that war, during the unfolding of the Soviet
    Union. And here she was covering a new war with its own displaced
    Armenians.

    While she was preparing her recording device, I had already begun to
    engage this man, almost a third my age: Which neighborhood of Aleppo
    was he from? How did he make it to Beirut safe and sound? What school
    had he gone to?

    His words took me back, step by step, to my youth in Aleppo.

    He had attended the Haigazian kindergarten and elementary schools, and
    the Karen Jeppe high school. When I told him that a generation ago, I
    had lived in the same vicinity and had attended the same schools, a
    sparkle shined in his eyes, followed by an unwilling smile of comfort:
    He had at last met someone who could relate to his demolished past. It
    was a moment of consolation between familiar strangers.

    He asked when I had left our beloved Aleppo. During the 1973
    Arab-Israeli War, I said, but didn't hear his response as my mind was
    spectacularly taken back to my own war and departure. I'm not sure how
    the meeting with the young reporter took shape. I was fixated on the
    notion that in this part of the world, every generation has had a war
    and has felt its mark.

    My generation witnessed the many internal upheavals that gave us
    nothing but panic and fear every day, as coup d'états spread young
    army conscripts like ants through our streets and alleys. Then we had
    the 1967 Six-Day War with Israel, and the 1973 Yom Kippur War, when we
    moved to Beirut and then the U.S., leaving my grandmother and aunts
    behind. They, in turn, survived the Lebanese civil war, which began in
    1975 and lasted 15 bloody years.

    My grandmother had been a survivor of World War I, which gave us the
    infamous Armenian Genocide. As a four-year-old, she was forced to walk
    from her ancestral village in Sepastia through the scorching Syrian
    desert of Der Zor, to the unwelcoming streets of Aleppo. All this,
    with her younger brother, orphaned, thirsty, barefoot, and with hardly
    any clothes on, witnessing horrors that made their generation
    speechless for decades.

    My father, who was born in Aleppo, lived through the wars of Syrian
    independence from the French mandate, and then the internal wars over
    control of the city among various armed groups, until it was time for
    World War II. As a young man then, he joined the British Army. He was
    first sent to Palestine, then Egypt, and eventually to Bologna to
    fight to liberate Italy. He returned to Aleppo as a handsome,
    war-experienced 19-year-old with limited knowledge of Italian, which
    he had acquired from his girlfriends, and a mark of being westernized.

    This same man, now with a wife and three boys, had to take up arms
    again in the early 1960's to defend Armenian neighborhoods when the
    short-lived Egyptian-Syrian union was being dismantled.

    `Every generation has his war in the Middle East,' I heard myself
    saying to no one in particular as I came back from my mental tour of
    the past century.

    The young restaurateur turned to me in a gentle move from the
    reporter's microphone, as if continuing his interview. `This is a
    destiny we have, to live out wars and upheavals, genocides and
    massacres in the Middle East. This century has been bloody for us, in
    Egypt, Iran, Lebanon, Iraq, and Syria, where we settled after the
    Turkish massacres and found a life from the start. Yet we have to deal
    with being killed again and again. For a century now, we have not
    found peace and calm,' he said, sipping from his glass of a soft drink
    overfilled with ice.

    The ensuing, dense silence in noisy Bourj Hammoud was broken by his
    conclusion, uttered in the humblest of voices: `Me and my other two
    partners had a great life and spent every night in restaurants and
    clubs in Aleppo, Damascus, Cairo, and Beirut. We were entertained as
    if we were kings. Now in Beirut we work day and night to make our
    customers feel like royals. This is the reversal of events, if you
    survived at all. We are lucky and thankful, but thankful to whom and
    why is what I do not know.'

    I had no words, no ideas, on how to soften his pain when teardrops
    fell from his eyes, while he insisted that we choose anything from the
    menu as his guests. Only someone who has experienced a walk through
    Dante's Inferno and come back alive could offer such generosity.

    The journalist had to make another appointment to complete her
    interview, this time without my presence, my personal interjections
    and musings.

    This is just one story of too many to be told, and so it goes...

Working...
X