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Book Review: Skylark Farm

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  • Book Review: Skylark Farm

    The New York Times
    February 4, 2007 Sunday
    Late Edition - Final

    The Terminated

    By CHRISTOPHER DE BELLAIGUE.

    Christopher de Bellaigue is the author of ''In the Rose Garden of the
    Martyrs: A Memoir of Iran.'' He is currently writing a book on
    eastern Turkey.

    SKYLARK FARM
    By Antonia Arslan.
    Translated by Geoffrey Brock.
    275 pp. Alfred A. Knopf. $23.95.

    After a silence dictated by shame, pain and politics that lasted the
    better part of a century, the suffering of Armenians massacred by the
    Ottoman Turks and their Kurdish allies during World War I has
    recently become an urgent issue. The parliaments of several countries
    in the European Union, a club Turkey wants to join, have labeled the
    massacres genocide. The Turks refuse to do so. Of all those involved
    in this slow, bitter process of remembering, it is writers and
    journalists, not politicians, who have touched the rawest nerves. On
    Jan. 19, Hrant Dink, a prominent Turkish-Armenian who had promoted
    both reconciliation and an honest appraisal of the past, was
    murdered, apparently by a Turkish nationalist. Earlier, Orhan Pamuk's
    reference to the massacres in an interview and an allusion to the
    Armenian ''genocide'' in a novel by Elif Shafak led to the
    prosecution of both on charges of ''insulting Turkishness.'' Neither
    was convicted (unlike Dink, who received a suspended sentence on the
    same charge) but the country's reputation has suffered.

    The Italian writer Antonia Arslan's first novel, ''Skylark Farm,'' is
    based -- how closely, we are not told -- on the experiences of her
    Armenian grandfather's family during those massacres. The farm of the
    title is, in fact, a country house that Sempad, a well-to-do Armenian
    pharmacist living in a town somewhere in Anatolia, is trying to
    complete in time for the visit of his brother, Yerwant, who emigrated
    years earlier to make his fortune in Italy. Absorbed in their
    domestic affairs, Sempad and his family are oblivious to the signs,
    unmistakable in hindsight, that Turkey's government is preparing to
    get rid of a minority population it suspects of abetting the empire's
    Russian enemies.

    May 1915 comes around and what follows is, for any Armenian, a
    dismally familiar story. Out at the farm, Sempad and his male
    relations are murdered by Turkish soldiers. His wife, their daughters
    and hundreds more women from the same town are then forced to walk
    many miles through hostile country to Syria, where death camps await.
    The marchers are ''escorted'' by guards who connive with marauding
    Kurdish tribesmen to take first the women's possessions, then their
    honor and finally -- in many cases -- their lives. It's a despicable
    story, and one that has been told, in Armenian and other languages,
    in countless memoirs and histories.

    In Arslan's hands, the gruesome details of this tragedy are palliated
    by an old-fashioned story of redemption. After the marchers set off,
    Nazim, a Muslim beggar who used to inform on the Armenians for the
    authorities, joins forces with a Greek woman to shadow them, slipping
    them food and dressing their wounds at night, before finally using
    guile and gems to buy the survivors' release in Aleppo. As it
    happens, the unappealing Turkish suitor of one of the family's young
    women has been posted to Syria. Once he regarded most Armenians as
    worthy of elimination, but by the end of the book, even though his
    sweetheart has died, he undergoes a conversion of his own, using
    connections to secure passports for the surviving members of the
    family so they can join Yerwant in Italy.

    Although history keeps wrenching her back into shocking events,
    Arslan seems instinctively a writer of magic and intuition.
    Premonitions, dreams and religious faith provide her characters with
    respite from the horror. A bereaved mother dies by allowing her heart
    to break; a decent German official becomes an angel; and there is a
    delightful image of those medieval knights-errant ''for whom
    hospitable Anatolia, with its small courts rich in flowing water and
    lovely maidens, proved more pleasing than their gloomy, distant
    northern lands.''

    Arslan reports dialogues involving the architects of the
    deportations, including the interior minister, Talat Pasha, who
    writes in a telegram: ''No mercy for women, old men or children. If
    even one Armenian were to survive, he would later want revenge.''
    This is a prophetic reference to Talat's murder in exile at the hands
    of an Armenian who chanced upon him in a Berlin street.

    ''Skylark Farm,'' is an affecting book, and sensitively translated by
    Geoffrey Brock, but it is marred by uneven writing. Arslan's habit of
    flashing forward at moments of happiness to the wretched times that
    lie ahead detracts from the novel's intensity without adding to its
    resonance. And some of her deadpan descriptions of hideous events --
    ''This was sufficient time for the young bride Hripsime to recover
    from her delivery and to see her baby die, skewered on a bayonet and
    held aloft'' -- slue into bathos.

    Putting down this book, it's worth trying to separate Arslan the
    promising novelist from Arslan the iffy historian. She describes the
    Armenians as a ''gentle, daydreaming people'' who would like nothing
    more than to share their ancestral homeland, a platitude that ignores
    the existence of Armenian political groups seeking independence from
    the Turks. And in a novel containing footnotes to explain historical
    events, readers might mistakenly assume Arslan's Talat telegram is
    irreproachably historical. The lack of a universally authenticated
    document implicating the Ottoman leadership in a plan to kill the
    Armenians is a central part of the Turks' argument that the massacres
    were not a premeditated genocide but a tragic and unintended
    consequence of war.
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