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National Hero Monte Melkonian Would Be 57 Today

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  • National Hero Monte Melkonian Would Be 57 Today

    NATIONAL HERO MONTE MELKONIAN WOULD BE 57 TODAY

    13:31 25/11/2014 Â" SOCIETY

    November 25 is the birthday of national hero of Armenia and
    Artsakh, legendary commander, philosopher and warrior, activist of
    national-liberation struggle of the Armenian people Monte Melkonian.

    He would have turned 57 today.

    Monte Melkonian was born on November 25, 1957 at Visalia Municipal
    Hospital in Visalia, California to Charles and Zabel Melkonian. He was
    the third of four children born to a self-employed cabinetmaker and an
    elementary-school teacher. By all accounts, Melkonian was described
    as an all-American child who joined the Boy Scouts and was a pitcher
    in Little League baseball. Melkonian's parents rarely talked about
    their Armenian heritage with their children, often referring to the
    place of their ancestors as the "Old Country." His interest in his
    background only sparked at the age of eleven, when his family went
    on a year-long trip to Europe in 1969.

    While taking Spanish language courses in Spain, his teacher had posed
    him the question of where he was from. Dissatisfied with Melkonian's
    answer of "California", the teacher rephrased the question by asking
    "where did your ancestors come from?" His brother Markar Melkonian
    remarked that "her image of us was not at all like our image of
    ourselves. She did not view us as the Americans we had always assumed
    we were." From this moment on, for days and months to come, Markar
    continues, "Monte pondered [their teacher Señorita] Blanca's question
    "Where are you from?"

    In the spring of that year, the family also traveled across Turkey to
    visit the town of Merzifon, where Melkonian's maternal grandparents
    were from. Merzifon's population at the time was 23,475 but was almost
    completely devoid of its once 17,000-strong Armenian population
    that was wiped out during the Armenian Genocide in 1915. They did
    find one Armenian family of the three that was living in the town,
    however, Melkonian soon learned that the only reason this was so,
    was because the head of the family in 1915 had exchanged the safety
    of his family in return for identifying all the Armenians in the town
    to Turkish authorities during the genocide. Monte would later confide
    to his wife that "he was never the same after that visit....He saw
    the place that had been lost."

    Upon his return to California Monte returned to his education. In high
    school, he was exceeding all standards and having a hard time finding
    new academic challenges. Instead of graduating high school early,
    as was suggested by his principal, Monte found an alternative thanks
    to his father: a study abroad program in East Asia. At the age of 15
    Monte traveled to Japan for a new chapter in his young life. While
    there he began making money teaching English which helped finance his
    travels through several Southeast Asian countries. This introduced
    him to several new cultures, new philosophies, new languages, and in
    several cases, like his travels through Vietnam, new skills that would
    become immensely valuable in his later life as a soldier. Returning
    to the United States, he graduated from high school and entered
    the University of California, Berkeley, majoring in ancient Asian
    history and Archeology. In 1978 he helped to organize an exhibition of
    Armenian cultural artifacts at one of the university's libraries. The
    section of the exhibit dealing with the 1915-23 genocide was removed
    by university authorities, at the request of the Turkish consul
    general in San Francisco. The display that was removed was eventually
    reinstalled following a campus protest movement. Monte eventually
    completed his undergrad work in under three years. Upon graduating,
    he was accepted into the archeology graduate program at the University
    of Oxford. However, Monte chose to forgo this opportunity, and instead
    chose to begin his lifelong struggle for the Armenian Cause.

    After graduating from U.C. Berkeley in the spring of 1978, Monte
    traveled to Iran, where he taught English and participated in the
    movement to overthrow the Shah. He helped organize a teachers'
    strike at his school in Tehran, and was in the vicinity of the
    MeydÄ~An-e ZhÄ~Aleh (Jaleh square) when the Shah's troops opened fire
    on protesters, killing and injuring many. Later, he found his way to
    Iranian Kurdistan, where Kurdish partisans made a deep impression on
    him. Years later, in southern Lebanon, he occasionally wore the uniform
    of the Kurdish peshmerga which he was given in Iranian Kurdistan.

    In the fall of 1978, Monte made his way to Beirut, the capital of
    Lebanon, in time to participate in the defense of the Armenian quarter
    against by the right-wing Phalange forces. At this time, he met
    his long-time confidante and future wife, Seta Kebranian. Monte was
    affiliated with the Hunchakian socialist party and was a permanent
    member of the militia's bases in Bourj Hamoud, Western Beirut,
    Antelias, Eastern Beirut and other regions for almost two years,
    during which time he participated in several street battles against
    rightist forces. He also began working behind the lines in Phalangist
    controlled territory, on behalf of the "Leftist and Arab" Lebanese
    National Movement. By this time, he was speaking Armenian - a language
    he had not learned until adulthood (Armenian was the fourth or fifth
    language Monte learned to speak fluently, after Spanish, French and
    Japanese. In addition, he spoke passable Arabic, Italian and Turkish,
    as well as some Persian and Kurdish).

    In the spring of 1980, Monte was inducted into the Armenian Secret
    Army for the Liberation of Armenia, ASALA, and secretly relocated
    to West Beirut. For the next three years he was an ASALA militant
    and contributor to the group's journal, Hayastan. During this time
    several Palestinian militant organizations provided their Armenian
    comrade with extensive military training. Monte carried out armed
    operations in Rome, Athens and elsewhere, and he helped to plan and
    train commandos for the "Van Operation" of September 24, 1981, in which
    four ASALA militants took over the Turkish embassy in Paris and held
    it for several days. In November 1981, French police arrested and
    imprisoned a young, suspected criminal carrying a Cypriot passport
    bearing the name "Dimitri Georgiu." Following the detonation of
    several bombs in Paris aimed at gaining his release, "Georgiu" was
    returned to Lebanon where he revealed his identity as Monte Melkonian.

    In mid-July 1983, ASALA violently split into two factions, one opposed
    to the group's despotic leader, whose nom de guerre was Hagop Hagopian,
    and another supporting him. Although the lines of fissure had been
    deepening over the course of several years, the shooting of Hagopian's
    two closest aides at a military camp in Lebanon finally led to the
    open breach. This impetuous action was perpetrated by one individual
    who was not closely affiliated with Monte. As a result of this action,
    however, Hagopian took revenge by personally torturing and executing
    two of Monte's dearest comrades, Garlen Ananian and Arum Vartanian.

    In the aftermath of this split Monte spent over two years underground,
    in Lebanon and later in France. After testifying secretly for the
    defense in the trial of Armenian militant and accused bank robber
    Levon Minassian, he was arrested in Paris in November 1985, and
    sentenced to six years in prison for possession of falsified papers
    and carrying an illegal handgun.

    Monte spent over three years in Fresnes and Poissy prisons. He was
    released in early 1989 and sent from France to South Yemen, where he
    was reunited with Seta. Together they spent year and a half living
    underground in various countries of eastern Europe in relative poverty,
    as one regime after another disintegrated.

    On October 6, 1990 Monte arrived in what was then still Soviet
    Armenia. During the first 8 months in Armenia, Melkonian worked in
    the Armenian Academy of Sciences, where he prepared an archaeological
    research monograph on Urartian cave tombs, which was posthumously
    published. Seta and Monte were married at the monastery of Geghart
    in August 1991.

    Finding himself on Armenian soil after many years, he wrote in a letter
    that he found a lot of confusion among his compatriots. Armenia faced
    enormous economic, political and environmental problems at every turn,
    problems that had festered for decades. New political forces bent
    on dismantling the Soviet Union were taking Armenia in a direction
    that Monte believed was bound to exacerbate the crisis and produce
    more problems.

    Under these circumstances, it quickly became clear to Monte that,
    for better or for worse, the Soviet Union had no future and the coming
    years would be perilous ones for the Armenian people. He then focused
    his energy on Karabagh. "If we lose [Karabagh]," the bulletin of the
    Karabakh Defense Forces quoted him as saying, "we turn the final page
    of our people's history." He believed that, if Azeri forces succeeded
    in deporting Armenians from Karabagh, they would advance on Zangezur
    and other regions of Armenia. Thus, he saw the fate of Karabagh as
    crucial for the long-term security of the entire Armenian nation.

    On September 12 (or 14) 1991 Monte travelled to Shahumian region
    (north of Karabagh), where he fought for three months in the fall
    of 1991. There he participated in the capture of Erkej, Manashid and
    Buzlukh villages.

    On February 4, 1992 Melkonian arrived in Martuni as the regional
    commander. Upon his arrival the changes were immediately felt:
    civilians started feeling more secure and at peace as Azeri armies
    were pushed back and were finding it increasingly difficult to shell
    Martuni's residential areas with GRAD missiles.

    In April 1993, Melkonian was one of the chief military strategists who
    planned and led the operation to fight Azeri fighters and capture the
    region of Kalbajar of Azerbaijan which lies between the Republic of
    Armenia and former NKAO. Armenian forces captured the region in four
    days of heavy fighting, sustaining far fewer fatalities than the enemy.

    Monte was killed in the abandoned Azerbaijani village of Merzili in
    the early afternoon of June 12, 1993 during the Battle of Aghdam.

    According to Markar Melkonian, Monte's older brother and author of his
    biography, Monte died in the waning hours of the evening by enemy fire
    during an unexpected skirmish that broke out with several Azerbaijani
    soldiers who had gotten lost. Monte died in the arms of his closest
    and most trusted comrades.

    Monte was buried with full military honors on June 19, 1993 at Yerablur
    military cemetery in Yerevan, Armenia. According to one estimate,
    some 25,000 people filed past his open casket as it lay in state
    at the Officer's Hall in Yerevan. Among the dignitaries present
    were Levon Ter-Petrosyan, President of the Republic of Armenia,
    high-ranking Armenian and C.I.S. military leaders, and members of
    all the major political parties in the country.

    http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2014/11/25/monte-melqonyan/


    From: Baghdasarian
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