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Saving The Kids: A Canadian Nurse Rescued 5,000 Children In Turkey

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  • Saving The Kids: A Canadian Nurse Rescued 5,000 Children In Turkey

    SAVING THE KIDS: A CANADIAN NURSE RESCUED 5,000 CHILDREN IN TURKEY

    October 8, 2014

    Maclean's Magazine
    By Andria Hill

    Hidden away in the archives of Nova Scotia's Yarmouth County Museum is
    a collection of photographs featuring Armenian faces. One, taken early
    in the 1920s, shows children arranged on a hillside, their bodies
    spelling out "II Corinthians: I, 8-11." The thread connecting the
    Nova Scotian port, Armenia and the Biblical passage is Sara Corning,
    born in Cheggogin, eight kilometres north of Yarmouth. Her role in
    the heroic effort to rescue 5,000 Armenian, as well as some Greek,
    orphans from slaughter in the Turkish city of Smyrna(now Izmir)in
    1922 won her special recognition from the king of Greece. But with
    the exception of the museum staff and a few family members, Corning's
    exploits are largely unknown.

    Born in 1872, Corning trained as a nurse in the United States. She
    joined the U.S. Red Cross during the First World War and subsequently
    signed on with the Near East Relief, a U.S. charitable foundation
    established to assist the displaced populations of the Balkans, Asia
    Minor and the Middle East. In 1921, Corning arrived in a small village
    at the foot of Mount Ararat in Turkey to take charge of an orphanage.

    Years of civil strife and ethnic turmoil -- in which the Turks had
    driven the Armenians from their homeland -- had left hundreds of
    thousands without homes and starving. Nearly a million had died since
    1915 as the Turks took revenge on the Armenians for allegedly helping
    the Russians during the First World War.

    Corning set about her work with quiet, firm resolve, according to a
    distant cousin, Mary Anne Saunders, now in her 70s. Saunders, who
    lives in Yarmouth, recalls that as a young girl she found Corning
    formidable. "Her compassion," she says, "was offset by a no-nonsense
    approach" -- a balance that allowed Corning to tend those in desperate
    need, all the while in the shadow of danger.

    Armenia wasn't the only country with which the Turks had a
    long-standing conflict. Historic tensions between Turkey and Greece
    increased in 1919 when the Greeks captured Smyrna, declaring that
    because the port city had a significant Greek population, it should
    be annexed. In the summer of 1922, the Turks went on the offensive
    and turned the tide against their invaders.

    By early September, they were poised to retake the town, and its large
    Greek population -- along with Armenian refugees who had been fleeing
    the Turks -- was incapable of defending itself. Corning boarded an
    American destroyer in Constantinople(now Istanbul)and headed for
    Smyrna. Once ashore, she and two others opened a clinic to tend to
    the sick and wounded. Turkish soldiers, now in control of the city,
    closed it down and told the relief workers to move on. Their second
    clinic met a similar fate. This time the Turkish soldiers advised the
    team to leave, or risk their lives. "After that, the city was looted,
    then they began to burn it down," Corning wrote years later in her
    high-school alumni newsletter. "Many refugees [jumped into the water
    and] drowned rather than be burned."

    In the midst of the mayhem, Corning made her way to an orphanage
    run by an American nurse, and was amazed to find everyone safe --
    though she knew that could change at any moment. Guiding small
    groups of children(most were under 12 years old, and almost all were
    female)through the turmoil and the slaughter in the burning city,
    Corning delivered them to the harbour, where American sailors rowed
    them out to waiting destroyers. No record remains of the time required
    to evacuate the orphans, but when the operation was complete, more
    than 5,000 children had been rescued.

    Corning travelled with the children to Greece, where she established an
    orphanage for those whom war, famine and disease had not only deprived
    of parents, but of a country. It was there that Corning arranged the
    children to spell out the Biblical reference that reads, in part,
    "For we would not have you ignorant of our trouble which came to
    us in Asia, that we were burdened beyond measure, above strength,
    insomuch that we despaired even of life."

    Summoning Corning to Athens in June 1923, King George II of Greece
    awarded her the Silver Cross Medal of the Order of the Saviour,
    an honour comparable to the Order of Canada. Corning worked at
    the orphanage until 1924, when she returned to Turkey to work in
    a residential training school. Upon retirement, she returned to
    Cheggogin, where she lived in the home in which she had been raised,
    until her death in 1969 at age 97. The epitaph on her headstone:
    "She lived to serve others."

    http://www.horizonweekly.ca/news/details/50239




    From: A. Papazian
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