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My Turn: The Armenian Genocide, 100 Years Later

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  • My Turn: The Armenian Genocide, 100 Years Later

    MY TURN: THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE, 100 YEARS LATER

    Concord Monitor, New Hampshire
    April 5 2015

    By JANE WINGATE
    Sunday, April 5, 2015

    April 24, 1915: Armenians the world over - those in the diaspora,
    those in Armenia, and even those Armenians in Turkey who survived the
    Ottomans' genocide of the Armenians and became, if only outwardly,
    Turkified - mark that date as the start of the genocide.

    For centuries, the Ottoman Turks had imposed restrictions on Armenians
    and other Christians. In 1894-1896, under Abdul Hamid, 200,000 to
    300,000 Armenians were slaughtered.

    Then in April 1915, Turkey's minister of the interior, Talaat, set
    in motion a plan to rid the Ottoman Empire of all the Armenians. On
    April 24, Talaat rounded up and killed Armenian intellectuals and
    community leaders in Constantinople. Over the next several years,
    half the 3,000,000 Armenians in the empire were killed.

    My father was a first-generation Armenian-American whose parents came
    to this country in the late 19th century, barely escaping the massacres
    of 1894-1896. They settled in Watertown, Mass., along with many other
    Armenians. My grandparents' marriage was arranged by a matchmaker.

    My father married an odar (a stranger, an outsider). My mother was a
    child of French-Canadian immigrants, making her also first generation.

    Both my father and my mother were eager to assimilate us kids, so
    we never learned either French or Armenian. I have no memory of my
    father's father, and only one of my father's mother, from when I was
    six. She (squat, dark, dark clothes, hair in a bun, slightly scary)
    and I were seated next to one another on a sofa. She pinched my cheek
    and said, "You love me, Janie?" I nodded furiously in assent.

    In 1960, 10 percent of my high school class of 350 were Armenians. In
    the main, they were excellent, serious students - pressured by their
    parents to succeed academically, and to further their studies in
    college. I had several Armenian friends, all brainy, but in general,
    I dismissed Armenians as crazy, never able (in my father's words)
    "to shut up about the genocide."

    My father's medical offices were on the ground floor of our three-story
    town house on Mt. Auburn Street, the main drag in Watertown. The
    trolleys droned back and forth along the rails in the middle of the
    street, connecting Harvard Square in Cambridge to Watertown Square.

    The patients' waiting room was not closed off from the two upper floors
    where we lived, so we five kids had to walk right through it, up the
    broad stairway to our living quarters, followed by the patients' eyes.

    When my father held office hours, my mother was constantly telling
    us to be quiet, "because there are patients downstairs" - not that
    we needed reminding. When we could get away with it, we crept down
    the few top steps and stared right back at them.

    My father had a fair number of Armenian patients, some who survived
    the 1915 genocide, others the massacres of 1895. Now and then he would
    talk to them in Armenian, and once in a while I heard him scold them,
    in English, "For Christ's sake, forget about the genocide. You're
    here now."

    I recall just one time he talked about the genocide, referring to
    a photograph that he said hung in many Armenian homes. It was a
    photograph of bodies in one of the killing fields in Turkey. He said
    "An arm there, a leg there, even heads cut from their bodies." In
    later years, I came across that photograph, and it triggered in me
    a need to learn about what happened to my ancestors.

    So I read everything I could find about the genocide, and when I was
    exhausted and could take no more, I wrote a piece that ran in Ararat
    magazine. The piece, "Shallow Roots: The Armenian Disconnection,"
    elicited a number of letters sent to me via the magazine. Many of the
    letters were from first-generation Armenian-Americans, including some
    scholars. One was from a fellow who, like me, was also a half-breed -
    a second-generation Armenian-American, whose mother married an odar.

    He said his grandmother, Harkine Hagopian, a genocide survivor,
    was still living, in Indianapolis, where she and her husband settled
    after coming to this country.

    Things happened quickly after that: I flew from Maryland to
    Indianapolis twice, was picked up at the airport by one of Harkine's
    daughters, and brought to meet Harkine Pilibosian Hagopian, and over
    the course of nine hours, I recorded her account of her deportation.

    Harkine's story

    As a girl of 12, living a comfortable middle-class life with her
    extended family over her father's barbershop and dentistry practice,
    Harkine was about to graduate from junior high in Adabazar, Turkey,
    80 miles east of Constantinople. Then word came down from Talaat
    that all Armenians were to leave their homes, and be ready to do so
    in three days, taking only what they could carry with them.

    It was a moving - and humbling - experience, listening to Harkine
    talking about her 2,000-mile deportation into the Syrian desert,
    impressively remembering all the stops her convoy made along the way.

    First they were rammed into cattle cars, then let out at Konia, where
    there were other raggedy, desperate deportees, camping in wretched
    little tents, the overwhelming stench of feces everywhere.

    Then the Turks moved them on, mostly on foot. As long as he had
    money, Harkine's father, Garabed, could buy them rides in ox carts,
    or on donkeys. But soon all were walking. Many ended up in Raqqa,
    which Harkine called "the last stop before Deir el Zor." (Raqqa,
    then a dusty desert town, is now claimed by ISIL as its capital.) In
    Deir el Zor, the final killing fields for those who survived the long
    marches, thousands were crammed into caves and burned alive.

    It was in Raqqa that Harkine, along with her sister, her father,
    and her grandmother were "saved" by an Arab, Mehmoud Ali, who offered
    them protection, provided Harkine's sister, Arshaloys, agreed to be
    the third wife in his harem. Even though unwilling, Arshaloys agreed,
    and was called Jemileh - "Beautiful" - by Mehmoud Ali.

    During the deportation, Harkine's mother and her uncle died. Harkine
    and her father contracted typhus, and barely survived. And later,
    in Raqqa, her sister died from syphilis. Before that, Harkine was
    married off to Misak Hagopian, an older man from Everek, whose wife
    and children were killed in the genocide. He owned the town's oven,
    and baked bread free for the town's Muktar (mayor), who in return
    took Misak under his wing. Harkine, then only 15, resisted Misak's
    proposal, but seeing no other alternative, she agreed, and they were
    hastily married at night, in the dark of Misak's lodgings. Harkine
    had a baby by Misak, and shortly after her sister died, Harkine's
    baby died, likely in the 1918 flu pandemic.

    Reawakening

    I laid aside the nine hours of tapes, not sure what to do with the rich
    material. Finally, in the late 1990s, I turned Harkine's story into
    a screenplay, first calling it Aksor (Exile), then The Luckiest One,
    and then set about trying to find an agent. In time, the Charlotte
    Gusay agency expressed strong interest, even calling a couple of
    times to let me know it was still under consideration.

    Eventually, without explaining why, they dropped it. Discouraged,
    I laid aside the script and turned to other projects.

    In the late 1980s and into the 1990s, Leo Hamalian - then editor of
    Ararat magazine - and I had a running snail-mail correspondence. Leo,
    a generous, patient teacher and fine editor, gave me writing tips,
    and always let me have the final word in all the pieces I sent him.

    In one of his last letters, Leo said Armenian culture and literature
    were about to explode. He was right about that, and now we are seeing
    a huge surge, since this April marks the 100th anniversary of the
    start of the genocide.

    In a speech in which she talks about this revival of interest,
    the Armenian-American filmmaker, Carol Garapedian (Screamers),
    says that this reawakening is now possible because the second and
    third generations of Armenians have established themselves, have
    made a name for themselves, are now secure and confident, and able
    to address the genocide through the arts.

    And they are eager to do so, acutely aware that Turkey still denies
    the genocide, and that our Congress, knuckling under to Turkey, our
    "strategic" ally, has yet to officially recognize it.

    We shall see what April brings.

    (Jane Wingate lives in Farmington.)

    http://www.concordmonitor.com/opinion/16322456-95/my-turn-the-armenian-genocide-100-years-later

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