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Book Review: Survival story

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  • Book Review: Survival story

    Chicago Sun-Times, IL
    Oct 28 2007

    Survival story
    MEMOIR | Author tells of her mother's triumph over Armenian genocide

    October 28, 2007
    BY HEDY WEISS


    On the final page of The Knock at the Door -- Margaret Ajemian
    Ahnert's deeply personal evocation of the slaughter of the Armenians
    by Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1917 -- there is a photograph of
    the author's mother, Ester Minerajian Ahronian Ajemian.

    Ester died in 1999, just a few weeks short of her 99th birthday. But
    she might very easily have perished while still a teenager. This book
    is a daughter's tribute to her mother -- the story of how Ester not
    only escaped death, but triumphed over hatred and violence, and how
    she eventually began her life all over again in this country. In
    addition, it suggests why, nearly a century after the slaughter,
    passions remain so high.

    Of course Ahnert's book has arrives at a fortuitous moment. There is
    great controversy swirling around the resolution now making its way
    through Congress -- a bill that would officially designate the
    Armenian slaughter a "genocide" (and surely generate some additional
    tension in U.S.-Turkish relations). And within Turkey, highly
    respected writers and scholars who recently have attempted to raise
    questions about this ethnic catastrophe have felt the heat.

    When, in 2005, the highly regarded Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk
    (recipient of the 2006 Nobel Prize for Literature) commented to a
    foreign newspaper interviewer about the mass killings of Armenians
    and Kurds in Anatolia, criminal charges were pressed against him
    (though subsequently dropped). As Pamuk noted: "Thirty thousand
    Kurds, and a million Armenians were killed in these lands and nobody
    dares to talk about it."

    What makes The Knock at the Door so compelling is its eye-witness
    quality. Though Ahnert makes it clear she based her story on
    interviews with her mother over a period of many years, and that she
    went on to shape the "words and the voice" heard in the book from her
    own imagination, there is an authentic ring about it all.

    What also rings true to anyone who has read about the Holocaust, or
    about the more recent atrocities in Bosnia and Rwanda, is the way
    those who were once neighbors -- and seemed to have carved out some
    form of multicultural coexistence -- quite suddenly became the most
    bitter of enemies.

    The scenario is familiar: Word of hangings in other towns, the
    disappearance of Ester's father; a mass flight set in motion that
    would result in an ethnic cleansing of Christian Armenians. Though
    some Armenians converted to Islam in an effort to remain unharmed,
    most refused. Fleeing long-established homes and businesses, they
    were either rounded up, murdered and tossed into mass graves, or died
    of starvation as they marched to what they hoped might be a place of
    refuge.

    Ester was just 15 when she and members of her family set out to
    escape. Ultimately, she was the only one to survive, but along the
    way she endured rape, a forced marriage, beatings, isolation and much
    more.

    Ahnert, who struggles to come to terms with this history herself,
    intersperses the chapters that recount her mother's ordeal with more
    contemporary sections that capture Ester's final years spent at an
    Armenian home for the aged in New York. To the very end, Ester showed
    no sign of bitterness, believing it was "God's job to judge."

    Hedy Weiss is the Sun-Times theater and dance critic.


    THE KNOCK AT THE DOOR
    A JOURNEY THROUGH THE DARKNESS OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Margaret Ajemian Ahnert
    Beaufort Books, 204 pages, $24.95

    http://www.suntimes.com/entertainment/weis s/623331,CST-BOOKS-ahnert28.article
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