Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kessab Armenians in Diaspora remember their quaint town in Syria

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Kessab Armenians in Diaspora remember their quaint town in Syria

    Kessab Armenians in Diaspora remember their quaint town in Syria

    15:07, 21 Mar 2015
    Siranush Ghazanchyan


    The Gulf News - It took three years for the conflict in Syria to
    spread to Kessab, a town on the Mediterranean coast by the Turkish
    border near the city of Lattakia. Long enough that its townsfolk
    thought they had been spared by the displacement and dereliction that
    came with the war.

    When the sound of bombs erupted to advance from the outskirts of town
    in the early morning of March 21, 2014 -- Mother's Day -- the town awoke
    in tumult. Where there should have been the sound of store-shutters
    rattling open in the square, and the chug of tractors greeting the
    acres of apricot, apple and plum farms, instead, there was the
    deafening sound of firepower and panic. Terrorists from the Al Nusra
    Front -- an Al Qaida-linked group, had arrived.

    The once lush and intimate town of 2,000 inhabitants, the majority of
    whom were of Armenian ethnicity, is now a charred and desolate
    landscape.

    The townsfolk, who proudly identify themselves as Kessabtzis and even
    tailored a creole language, Kessaberen, intrinsic to the community's
    everyday affairs, were forced to flee from a land they held for
    centuries -- dating back to the period of the Armenian Kingdom of
    Cilicia (1198-1375). Many fled to nearby Syrian cities like Lattakia
    or Tartus or left for Beirut. While some found shelter in their
    relatives' homes, many slept in church halls and school auditoriums.

    However, there were those who chose to stay, finding it too difficult
    to leave behind land inherited through lineage or believed the attack
    to be a transient episode. Those who chose to stay saw their prized
    town plucked, plundered and left in cinders.

    The Jurian family, who have been residents of the town longer than
    they can chart back, are an apt microcosm of the plight endured by the
    Kessabtzis.

    Papken Jurian lost his son, Kevork, after he was gunned down by
    militants for wearing boots.

    'They killed my boy'

    "He died... He was killed on his 24th birthday," Papken said, speaking
    to Gulf News over the phone.

    "When the militants first started attacking the outskirts, Kevork and
    the other Kessabtzi youth drove around the town warning people and
    advising them to evacuate," he said, "he was on his motorcycle."

    The town was evacuated in a few short hours. Papken said that around
    20 people, mostly the elderly, stayed behind.

    "The town was emptied in just a few hours, save for the elderly. I
    stayed behind because we couldn't take my mother, who is in her late
    nineties, with us. And since I stayed, my brother, wife and son stayed
    behind as well.

    "The militants started going from house to house, looting and
    vandalising. When they reached our home, they separated the men from
    the women and took them somewhere else. That is when it happened. When
    they killed my boy," he said.

    Upon noticing Kevork's boots, they asked whether he was affiliated to
    the Syrian army. "They saw my rifle above the mantelpiece. I assured
    them it was only a hunting rifle, every family in Kessab owns at least
    one. But then they noticed Kevork was wearing boots. He often wore
    them. It was good footwear for the work on the farm. They thought he
    was a soldier. I tried telling them he wasn't a soldier, he was my
    only son. Sole sons do not need to serve in the Syrian army. But they
    didn't listen. They shot him point-blank."

    Papken and his brother, Asped, were then manhandled out of the house.

    "I still remember seeing him there on the floor. His head cocked back,
    eyes open to the ceiling. They wouldn't let me bury him. I begged them
    to let me bury him, they didn't listen. We left him like that, on the
    floor. They pushed us out with their guns

    "We were taken to another house, where all the prisoners had been
    gathered. My wife and mother were there already. My wife asked me
    where her son was. I couldn't tell her the truth. I told her they had
    taken him somewhere else."

    Papken recalls seeing the town enveloped in black smoke.

    "There were pickup cars everywhere, filled to the brim with the town's
    belongings, clothes, jewellery, washing machines, gas stoves, they
    took anything and everything. The town's churches were being
    desecrated. The market square was burning and buildings that are over
    a century old turned to cinders. It was too much."

    When asked whether they were fed by the militants, Papken said: "Yes,
    yes they offered us food. But who had the appetite to eat? Kevork's
    mother, my wife, kept asking me if they were feeding our son and if he
    was safe. How could I tell her that her only son was dead? I simply
    said he was fine."

    Three days later, Papken and Asped managed to convince the militants
    to take them back home to bury Kevork.

    "Four of them escorted us back to the house. Kevork was still there,
    lying on the floor, eyes open. They told us to 'get it over with.' We
    dug a hole in the backyard as fast as we could with their guns drawn
    on us. After we were finished, I unhinged a door to mark his grave."

    The Jurian family was then taken to the Turkish city of Iskenderun,
    where they stayed until Kessab was vacated by the militants in June.

    "I still hadn't told my wife about Kevork. While we were there, my
    daughter, who was staying in Aleppo with her husband, called. She had
    been trying to find out what happened to Kevork. I should've told them
    earlier, but I just couldn't. She called saying that a few men
    contacted her offering to return Kevork for $25,000 ([Dh91,828.] These
    fake offers were fairly common. People would approach families,
    offering the return of their loved ones for outrageous sums."

    It was then that Papken told his family about what had happened to their son.

    "I took the phone and told my daughter not to value these offers. I
    told her I had buried her brother with my own hands. I told my wife
    that her son died in my hands..."

    On June 14, 2014, the townsfolk of Kessab returned to their homes to
    find their schools in shambles, churches burnt and homes plundered and
    upended. Many found the sight too much to bear and returned to the
    cities and towns they sought refuge in. Today, only a small fraction
    of the town's population resides there, mainly the very young and the
    very old.

    'Barbaric'

    "It was barbaric," Papken's brother, Asped, said, "there were
    scimitars and malicious messages spray-painted on the walls. The
    church pews were destroyed. Houses and buildings that stood for the
    town's history were decimated. Centuries were lost in months."

    On social media, Kessabtzis, scattered across the globe, post images
    of the town in its heyday, wondering if it would ever become the cosy,
    personal town it was loved for.

    "Kevork's friends still post pictures of him online," Asped said,
    "It's unreal to think that little over a year ago, these boys were
    sitting in our kitchens, bantering and teasing each other. There was a
    saying in Kessab: One would find the true essence of community in the
    marriages and funerals of Kessab. Kevork never got a proper funeral.
    We moved him to the graveyard after we came back but it was not a
    proper funeral. Then again, there are thousands of families in the
    country who are suffering from similar woes."


    http://gulfnews.com/news/mena/syria/kassabtzis-in-diaspora-remember-their-quaint-town-in-syria-1.1474199

    http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/03/21/kessab-armenians-in-diaspora-remember-their-quaint-town-in-syria/

Working...
X