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How Kim Kardashianan's Ancestors Escaped The Armenian Genocide - Pho

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  • How Kim Kardashianan's Ancestors Escaped The Armenian Genocide - Pho

    HOW KIM KARDASHIANAN'S ANCESTORS ESCAPED THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE - PHOTOS

    13:51, 06 Feb 2015
    Siranush Ghazanchyan

    The extraordinary escape from the Armenian Genocide of Kim Kardashian's
    ancestors - thanks to a 'prophet' who urged them to uproot to America -
    can be revealed today for the first time.

    The Daily Mail presents images showing the reality TV star's ethnic
    Armenian forebears who fled the tsarist Russian empire in the early
    20th century, many of whom obeyed the advice of the sage.

    Known at the time as the Kardaschoffs, in Russian style, the family
    made their way from their home village of Karakale in the late 19th
    Century to German ports. From there, they travelled to a new life in
    America on the passenger vessels SS Brandenberg and SS Koln.

    By doing so, they escaped the triple horror of the First World War
    from 1914-18, the Armenian Genocide starting in 1915 - exactly a
    century ago this year - and the Russian Revolution in 1917.

    History: Kim Kardashian's great great grandparents Hovhannes Miroyan
    (left, front row) and Luciag Chorbajian (second from left, front row)
    fled Armenia in the early 1900s with their daughter Vartanoosh Miroyan
    (second from right in back row)

    Belief: Kim's great great grandmother Luciag (seated) was part of
    the Molokan faith. It means 'milk drinkers' because followers of the
    Christian sect drank milk on traditional Russian Orthodox fast days

    Meet the family: Luciag (centre in front row) and Hovhannes took
    their daughter Vartanoosh Miroyan (first on the left in back row)
    to America, where their legacy has thrived

    Glamorous: It is quite possible that Kim Kardashian got her star
    power from her 'dynamic' grandmother Helen (daughter of Vartanoosh)
    who is pictured left on her wedding day

    One hundred years after the deadly holocaust decimated their ancestral
    home, the Kardashians have become one of the most influential families
    in America.

    The most famous of which is Kim who has chosen this year, on the
    hundredth anniversary of the atrocity, to visit Armenia for the
    first time.

    But her lavish lifestyle, the expensive houses, an army of followers
    who hang on her every tweet, the marriage to a musical superstar
    would not exist if her ancestors had ignored the warning of a child
    'prophet'.

    Among those fleeing Erzurum - then in Armenia, and ruled by last
    Russian Tsar Nicholas II was family patriarch Hovhannes Miroyan and
    Kim's great great grandfather, born in 1844. He married the doughty
    Luciag Chorbajian, born in 1853.

    The couple wed in Erzurum, which is now in Turkey, in 1867 but escaped
    along with their daughter Vartanoosh Mironyan, born in 1886, in the
    early 20th century.

    Vartanoosh's distinctly blonde daughter Haigoohi Arakelian - known
    as Helen, born in America in 1917, the year the Bolshevik Revolution
    rocked the Russian Empire - was Kim's grandmother, who later married
    into the Kardashian clan.

    The glamorous and 'dynamic' Helen wed Arthur who ran the largest
    meat-packing business in southern California.

    Helen's son Robert, a celebrity lawyer who died of oesophageal cancer
    in 2003, married Kris Houghton and fathered the 21st Century's biggest
    reality TV stars Kourtney, Khloe, Robert Jr and most famous of all
    - Kim.

    Ties that bind: The Kardashian family tree that traces back to two
    Molokan Armenian families

    Family tree: Luciag's (centre in a dark dress) daughter Vartanoosh
    Miroyan (left, front row) eventually gave birth to Helen Arakelian,
    whose own marriage joined two immigrant families who fled the same
    atrocity

    Slaughter: Many Armenians who refused to heed the warnings of impending
    war and revolution were killed

    Flight: Luciag (pictured, centre) and Hovhannes wed in Erzurum,
    which is now in Turkey, in 1867 but escaped along with their daughter
    Vartanoosh Mironyan, born in 1886, in the early 20th century

    Their mother Kris eventually married Olympic gold medalist Bruce Jenner
    and together they raised two more TV personalities, Kendall and Kylie.

    The flight to freedom of Arthur's parents and grandparents from
    the village of Karakale - today a snow-covered and entirely Muslim
    outpost in eastern Turkey where the stone ruins of the old Armenian
    homes still stand - came later than many in this community.

    It was as if they had sought to cling on against the rising ethnic
    violence and persecution.

    The Kardashians - or Kardaschoffs - like other branches of Kim's
    paternal kith and kin were ethnic Armenian, but they were also
    religious rebels, at odds with the orthodox faith in their homeland.

    They had already fled persecution once before, from another location
    deeper in Armenia.

    'The village bullies harassed and insulted them, dug into their tombs
    and (violated) the corpses of the deceased - hanging them on trees,'
    explained Joyce Keosababian-Bivin, whose ancestors also came from
    Karalala, and whose family is linked by marriage to the Kardashians.

    'Because of that they wrote a letter of complaint to Nicholas II.'

    The tsar decreed that they could move to Karakale, close to the
    Russian military settlement, where initially they were safe in what
    was 'a modern village, with beautiful buildings and wide streets'.

    Here, they became close to incoming Russian protestants against the
    Russian Orthodox Church.

    They were a sect called the Molokans, literally translated as
    'milk-lovers', so-called because they drank milk, and other banned
    foods, on fast days.

    Some were known as Jumpers, who leapt in the air, raising their hands
    high, during church services. They were pacifists and, crucially,
    adhered to the power of prophecy.

    Safe: Vartanoosh Miroyan (back row, left) married Arakel Arakelian
    (back row, right). Their daughter Helen (front, centre), was born
    in America in 1917, the year the Bolshevik Revolution rocked the
    Russian Empire

    Destiny: By leaving their native Armenia, Vartanoosh (front, left),
    Arakel Arakelian (front, right) and their daughter Helen (second
    from right, back row) escaped the triple horror of the First World
    War from 1914-18, the 'Armenian Genocide' starting in 1915, exactly
    a century ago this year, and the Russian Revolution

    The legend has it that in the 1850s, an 11-year-old Efil Klubnikin
    penned an apocalyptic forecast despite being apparently illiterate.

    'Those who believe in this will go on a journey to a far land, while
    the unbelievers will remain in place,' the boy prophesied. 'Our people
    will go on a long journey over the great and deep waters...people
    from all countries will go there.

    'There will be a great war. All kings will shed blood like great
    rivers. Two steamships will leave to cross the impassable ocean.'

    In the first years of the 20th century, Efim renewed the warning
    that he made to stunned believers in Karakale as a child, saying his
    premonition was now coming to pass.

    'Efim called a meeting, he invited the elders from all the Molokan
    villages including the two elders of the Armenian Molokan church. He
    prophesied this was the time for them to leave Russia as there
    were terrible times coming, especially for the Armenians,' said Ms
    Keosababian-Bivin.

    Images he scrawled led locals to believe they should cross the
    Atlantic to the United States, but this young diviner also indicated
    they should not stop there, but trek to the west coast. He pointed
    them towards Los Angeles.

    http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/02/06/how-kim-kardashianans-ancestors-escaped-the-armenian-genocide/

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