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The Armenians: A journey to safety and hard work

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  • The Armenians: A journey to safety and hard work

    The Armenians: A journey to safety and hard work
    By Sarah Wolfe/ [email protected]

    CNC
    Friday, April 21, 2006 - Updated: 06:57 PM EST

    On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman Turk Empire attempted to rid Armenia
    of its Christian population. The effort lasted seven years and it is
    estimated 1.5 million Armenians died, with another million displaced.

    This Sunday, Armenians in the Merrimack Valley will be commemorating
    the 91st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide at 3 p.m.

    at the high school. The theme for the observance is "Armenia - The
    Denied Genocide," which refers to the Turkish government's continued
    denial that such an event ever took place.

    To many outside the culture, little is known about the Armenian
    Genocide, or even the country itself. Even more curious is how
    Massachusetts came to have one of the largest Armenian populations
    in the world.

    The following lends some background into the rich history of an
    ancient culture.

    Where is Armenia?

    Armenia is located in Southwestern Asia. The mountainous region
    is a little smaller than Maryland and surrounded by Azerbaijan to
    the east, Azerbaijan-Naxcivan and Iran to the south, Turkey on the
    west and Georgia on the north. Further out is Russia to the north,
    and Syria and Iraq to the south.

    The nation was the first to adopt Christianity as its official
    religion, in 301 A.D. Through the centuries, the land has been occupied
    and divided up under different empires including the Roman, Byzantine,
    Arab, Persian and Ottoman. Russia took it over in 1828 and in 1920 it
    became part of the USSR, until the Soviet Union's fall in 1991. Since
    that time Armenia has been independent.

    http://geography.about.com/library/c ia/blcarmenia.htm What is the
    Armenian Genocide?

    In 1915, the predominantly Muslim Ottoman Turk Empire began a
    campaign to rid Armenia of its Christian population that lasted seven
    years. It's estimated that 1.5 million Armenians died from starvation,
    violence and death marches. Another million were believed to have been
    displaced to other countries. Today, more than half of the world's
    Armenian population lives outside of Armenia.

    In 1990, the Massachusetts Legislature officially designated April 24
    as a Day of Remembrance of the first genocide of the 20th century. The
    Turkish government continues to deny the event.

    "It's been 91 years - the Turkish-Ottoman empire still insists
    it hasn't happened," said local resident and Armenian-American Al
    Movsesian. "Another genocide is happening right now in Darfur [Sudan]
    and Armenians have been sending postcards to the president urging
    him to step in help. The U.N. isn't doing much."

    Nationally, Armenians have been making efforts to get a genocide bill
    passed in Congress declaring "man's inhumanity toward mankind."

    How did Armenians end up in Mass. and the Merrimack Valley?

    The largest concentration of Armenians worldwide immigrated to the
    United States, beginning in the mid-1800s. Towards the turn of the
    century, they were led by Protestant missionaries who had discovered
    displaced Armenians in Turkey. They helped them find work in homes
    as servants, in factories and on farms.

    Movsesian's father came to the U.S. at the turn of the century.

    "My father emigrated from Armenia in 1904 and arrived in Worcester,"
    he said.

    Immigrants were often directed from Ellis Island to Worcester,
    he explained, where there were jobs in wire mills at the start of
    the Industrial Revolution. Watertown was also a popular destination
    because of the Hood Rubber Company.

    Movsesian's father then moved to Haverhill in 1915 to work in the
    shoe factories. Growing up in Bradford, Movsesian was surrounded by
    a large number of immigrants with a variety of languages and beliefs.

    "I was born in the 1920s. When I was in school my classmates were the
    children of immigrants. They were Jewish, Irish, Italian, Polish,
    Lithuanian," he said. "As a result we got to learn about all these
    different cultures."

    Resident Martha Hananian explained that a couple of people from an
    ethnic population, be it Armenian or otherwise, will come to the
    U.S. and then try to make enough money to bring family over.

    That's what happened with an uncle of hers, who helped eight relatives
    escape from Armenia to the U.S. during the 1920s.

    "If they know friends are doing OK they follow them," she said.

    "My uncle opened a shoe factory in Chelsea and then the family
    followed him when he went to Haverhill. [Armenians] are a very
    tight-knit culture."

    Father Vartan Kassabian of North Andover's Armenian Apostolistic
    Church of Merrimack Valley said many Armenians moved to the area,
    including Andover, and became farmers. In Providence, R.I., where
    his father settled, the draw was manufacturing and jewelry.

    "My father was a genocide survivor who lived in an orphanage in Syria,"
    Kassabian said. "He came to the U.S. in 1955, where he worked for
    jewelry manufacturers."

    Armenian Genocide survivor 106-year-old Yeghsapeth Giragosian arrived
    in Boston with her sister with the help of an orphanage in France after
    the two escaped the genocide. Her mother, grandmother and many friends
    perished. Yeghsapeth and her sister joined their father in Boston where
    he'd been trying to make enough money to bring his family to safety.

    "I felt free then," said Giragosian, recalling her first years in
    this country.

    She later moved to Methuen to raise a family and then to North Andover
    after St. Gregory's was established in 1970.

    Movsesian said the Armenians living around him went to other churches
    until another St. Gregory's - in this case St. Gregory The Illuminator
    Armenian Church in Haverhill - opened in 1945. Today, the Merrimack
    Valley has 3,000 Armenians representing Haverhill's St. Gregory The
    Illuminator Armenian Church and Holy Cross Armenian Church of Lawrence,
    which are merging into Armenian Church at Highe Pointe, to be located
    at Ward Hill; St. Artananz Armenian Church in Chelmsford, Ararat
    Armenian Congregational Church in Salem, N.H. and St. Gregory the
    Armenian Apostolistic Church of Merrimack Valley here in North Andover.
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