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Dark Times: Area Armenians Urge Officials To Condemn 1915 Mass Killi

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  • Dark Times: Area Armenians Urge Officials To Condemn 1915 Mass Killi

    DARK TIMES: AREA ARMENIANS URGE OFFICIALS TO CONDEMN 1915 MASS KILLINGS
    By Carol Azizian

    MLive.com, MI
    Oct 29 2007

    Once while giving her mother, Varsenig Gholdoian, a bath after she'd
    had a stroke, Rose Byder of Grand Blanc noticed something she hadn't
    seen before. It horrified her. "She had indentations or grooves on
    her back," Byder said. "It wasn't something a person would inflict on
    (herself)." Then she recalled the story that her mother, an Armenian,
    had told her about surviving a "death march" in 1915 in Turkey. "All
    the (Turkish) soldiers carried bayonets," said Byder, who's lived in
    Grand Blanc since 1972. "If you didn't move along, you were hit by
    a rifle butt."

    Some 1.5 million Armenians living in Turkey during the time of the
    Ottoman Empire were killed in 1915. Many scholars call the mass
    killings a "genocide." The term was defined by Raphael Lemkin,
    a Polish-Jewish jurist, in his 1944 book, "Axis Rule in Occupied
    Europe," as "the destruction of a nation or of an ethnic group."

    Earlier this month, a U.S. House committee voted to condemn the mass
    killings as genocide, "rebuffing an intense campaign by the White
    House and warnings from Turkey's government that the vote would
    gravely strain its relations with the United States," the New York
    Times reported. Last week, House sponsors of the resolution asked
    Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a strong supporter, to delay a vote on the
    measure because they feared it would fail. Support for the resolution
    deteriorated this month after Turkey recalled its U.S. ambassador in
    protest. Turks acknowledge that hundreds of thousands of Armenians
    died nearly a century ago, but contend the deaths resulted from
    the war that ended with the creation of modern Turkey in 1923, the
    Times said. The Armenian genocide has been officially recognized,
    through legislation or proclamation, by 40 states and also by a growing
    number of countries, including Canada, France, Italy, Sweden, Belgium,
    Argentina, Russia and Switzerland. Byder said she called U.S. Rep. Dale
    Kildee's office to request that he support the resolution. "I told
    his office that I felt it was about time Americans recognize the
    Armenian genocide," she said. "I mentioned that my mother was one
    of the few survivors of the death march." Gary Keoleian, a surgeon
    with the Michigan Eye Institute of Flint Township and an Armenian,
    said he is pleased "that the primary goal has been met - at least
    it's reached the national stage and it's in people's awareness and
    part of people's discussion. "The dialogue of the genocide is on
    people's minds." Keoleian said he grew up listening to tales of his
    great-grandparents' and grandparents' escapes from Turkey. One of
    his great-grandmothers lived on a farm in eastern Turkey. Turkish
    soldiers came to her house and executed her brothers and father,
    Keoleian said. "The Turks were doing a sweep of the towns to get rid
    of able-bodied Armenian males," he said. "She (his great-grandmother)
    high-tailed it out with her son - my grandfather - and they hid
    in the hay in the barn for a long period of time. She could hear
    the screams and the gunfire. "After nightfall, she made her way
    to a friend's house," he added. "They got to a port town, got on a
    boat and made their way to Marseilles, France." Byder's mother was
    the youngest of nine born in the village of Yalova, near Istanbul,
    Turkey. Gholdoian's father was a farmer and a businessman.

    "Her family was wealthy enough to hire people to do the farm
    labor," Byder said. "She (Gholdoian) was sent to boarding school in
    Constantinople (now Istanbul)." During the week of April 24, 1915,
    Gholdoian, then 15, decided to come home to visit her family. The
    timing was unfortunate. That same week, Turkish soldiers knocked on
    their door and gave the family 24 hours to vacate their home. "They
    could take only things they could carry," said Byder. "When my
    grandmother asked why, the soldiers said 'it's only a temporary
    leave.' That's been imprinted in my memory (ever since). No reason was
    given." Gholdoian and her family members were sent on a "death march"
    across Turkey that lasted for months. "She cried a lot, especially
    when she saw people she grew up with being killed," Byder said. "You
    had to keep moving because if you fell, you were left to die or
    they killed you." At 4-feet-9, her mother was a petite, but feisty
    woman, Byder said. "She had a high IQ. She also made sure she didn't
    antagonize the soldiers." Still, she was subjected to many beatings,
    Byder said. Along the way, some Turkish villagers gave the deported
    Armenians food and water, Byder said. Byder's great-grandmother died
    in her daughter's arms. "She (Gholdoian) was devastated because her
    mother was her closest friend." Her father had died two months before
    she was born and most of her brothers and sisters were married and
    living elsewhere. Once, Gholdoian was in such despair that she threw
    herself into a river, hoping to drown. A Kurdish person rescued her,
    Byder said. "My mother kept saying, 'What's my crime? What did I do to
    deserve this?' That was her litany." Gholdoian ended up in Aleppo (in
    present-day Syria) and worked as a "slave" for a Turkish family. She'd
    heard that British soldiers were in the city. One night, she and
    a friend snuck out of the house and persuaded a couple of soldiers
    to help free them. The soldiers later arranged her escape to Paris,
    where she temporarily stayed with an aunt, Byder said. Eventually,
    Gholdoian agreed to an arranged marriage with an American-Armenian
    man who was a foundry worker in Detroit. They were married in 1921
    and had three children.

    "My mother always said that it was important to learn English,"
    recalled Byder whose late husband, John, was a senior vice-president
    of Braun & Braun Insurance Agency. "She went to night school to learn
    English and become a citizen," Byder added. "She was proud that she
    could vote and felt we all should be grateful to live in America."

    Writer Carol Azizian's grandmother, great-aunts and great-uncle also
    survived the Armenian genocide.

    ***http://www.mlive.com/entertainment/f lintjournal/index.ssf?/base/features-6/11936676281 76460.xml&coll=5

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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