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  • Sacred Justice

    SACRED JUSTICE

    Huffington Post
    Feb 10 2015

    Marian Mesrobian MacCurdy , Writer, professor, singer, author of three
    books--Sacred Justice, The Mind's Eye, and Writing and Healing--and
    essays,articles, and poems.

    Posted: 02/10/2015 9:57 am EST

    The year 2015 is the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in
    which over a million Armenians were murdered by the Ottoman Turks. We
    are already seeing articles that commemorate the Genocide, but one
    story essential to understanding the Armenian response remains to be
    told--that of the leadership of Operation Nemesis, a clandestine effort
    to carry out the death sentences given to the Turkish architects of
    the Genocide who had escaped punishment.

    I grew up in my maternal grandparents' small two-story frame house in
    Syracuse, New York where heated, weighty conversations about Armenian
    history and culture took place, but I knew nothing about Operation
    Nemesis. I heard my how grandmother Eliza loaded rifles to protect the
    town in the siege of Dortyol during the 1909 Adana massacres in which
    30,000 Armenians were murdered; how her brother, Mihran stole past
    Turkish guns to destroy the dam the Turks built to cripple the town's
    water supply. After the foreign consuls intervened to end the siege
    Mihran was arrested and tortured for his efforts to save his people.

    His Turkish jailors brought his bloody underwear home for his mother
    to wash. My grandmother said she washed her son's underwear with
    her tears. When Eliza exhorted me to eat every last pea on my plate,
    saying, "remember the starving Armenians," it had more than rhetorical
    power. I was raised on my grandmother's stories of resistance, but my
    grandfather never spoke of those days, and I, unconsciously respecting
    his silence, never asked.

    Aaron, my grandfather, spent most of his days in his red leather
    chair near the wooden radio he listened to every day, silently
    smoking his Camels with shaking fingers, perhaps from undiagnosed
    Parkinsons that would, years later, steal my mother's smile and cause
    her shuffling gait. But when I was three, four, five, my medz-hairig
    (grandfather), this quiet man who wore a three-piece suit nearly every
    day of his life, who had private sessions with visiting dignitaries
    and battle heroes like General Dro (Drastamat Kanayan), bounced me on
    his foreleg, carried me through the doorways on his shoulders like
    a coronated queen, and took me outside at dusk to survey the peach,
    pear, apple orchards and the grape arbor beyond our back door. When my
    grandmother and I made our weekly trip to Abajian Cleaners, I carried
    his wool coat, hugging it to my chest, saying, "I love my medz-hairig.

    I wish he would live forever." My grandfather lived to 84, the last
    few years in mental and visual darkness, his eyesight failing, his
    prodigious brain's neurons deadened from a series of strokes. No
    one in our family knew until close to 25 years after his death that
    my grandfather was the bursar and logistical leader of the covert
    operation to assassinate the Turks responsible for the Armenian
    Genocide. In 1990 tucked away in my grandfather's files in the
    upstairs study, the room I slept in as a small child, we found his
    correspondence, some written in code, with his Nemesis comrades,
    including Soghomon Tehlirian who shot Talaat Pasha, the primary
    architect of the Genocide. Between 1920 and 1922 at least eight
    perpetrators responsible for the genocide were killed. The men of
    Operation Nemesis saw this effort as "a sacred work of justice"
    as Shahan Natalie, one of the three leaders, described it.

    When I was a small child our social life was organized around Armenian
    events. The "vakh" vakh," ladies, as we children called them, elderly
    women dressed in black, who did not dance or laugh, whose signature
    action was to wring their hands as they echoed the "vakh vahk" that so
    defined them, were part of our landscape. As a child, I shrank from
    these women. I knew they lived in an inner world that I did not want
    to know. As children, we absorbed the meaning of the words "vakh vakh"
    without being told: the phrase means "what a shame, what a pity." But
    I did not know then that "vakh" in Armenian means fear. We children
    feared these women because we knew instinctively that we could become
    them. The effects of genocide do not disappear by an act of will.

    Researchers have shown that three quarters of Armenian survivors
    interviewed asserted that they did not talk to anyone about their
    experiences of the Genocide for fear of persecution and to protect
    their children. But silence can exacerbate the effects of trauma,
    which children can sense. Experiences as well as epigenetics--genetic
    changes in response to traumatic life events--may affect our behavior
    and perhaps that of our children. Perpetrators as well as victims
    may also be affected by these problematic epigenetic changes. We
    are left with the unsettling premise that not only the sins of the
    fathers may be visited upon their children, but their responses from
    being sinned against as well. If so, this means that the Genocide is
    still happening--to both perpetrators and their victims.

    At a lecture in Cambridge, MA on January 13, 2015 Turkish scholar
    Taner Akcam was asked why he does the difficult work of telling
    the story of the Armenian Genocide and its aftermath. He talked of
    his family's dedication to supporting human rights in Turkey and the
    prison terms that generated. He spoke of his brother's jailors sending
    home his bloody underwear. Turk or Armenian--bloody underwear is the
    same. His words remind me of those of Chief Seattle after the United
    States government stole his people's land, exiling them. With his
    hand on the short governor's head, the white conquerors around him,
    and his people before him he said, "Tribe follows tribe, and nation
    follows nation.... We may be brothers after all. We will see." Let
    us hope in this year of the centennial the door to truth and freedom
    begins to open--for both Armenians and Turks.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marian-mesrobian-maccurdy/sacred-justice_b_6647388.html

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