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Obituary in The Times - 20 Sep 07 - Gaspar Aghajanian

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  • Obituary in The Times - 20 Sep 07 - Gaspar Aghajanian

    The Times of London
    September 20, 2007

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obi tuaries/article2491150.ece

    Gaspar Aghajanian

    Middle East expert and magistrate whose turbulent, polyglot life typified
    the dislocations of the Armenian diaspora
    Gaspar Aghajanian was an archetypal member of the Armenian diaspora. His
    life was twice disrupted by political violence - in 1948 in Palestine and
    1974 in Cyprus - but each time, with the courageous support of his wife
    Astrid, herself a survivor of the disasters which befell the Armenians in
    Turkey in 1915, he created a new career in a new country.

    Aghajanian was born in 1911 in Jerusalem, where his family had been part of
    the Armenian community for generations. His most thrilling memory as a boy
    was hearing the rumble of heavy guns outside the city as the Turks, Gaspar's
    conscripted father among them, were pushed north by Allenby's army in 1917.
    Many of Jerusalem's ethnically mixed inhabitants were ambivalent in their
    allegiance to their Ottoman rulers, and British rule, under the mandate of
    the League of Nations, was to start with generally preferred.

    Aghajanian attended Armenian, Italian and English schools, and also spoke
    French, Arabic and Hebrew fluently, as well as a smattering of Greek,
    Turkish and Aramaic. In 1928 he began a legal career as a clerk in the
    Jerusalem law courts and steadily worked his way up, using evening classes
    at the government law school to obtain his diploma. He was appointed notary
    public of Haifa in 1938 and in 1945 chief clerk of the Jerusalem District
    Court. In the war he joined the Palestine Volunteer Defence Force, trained
    with a heavy AA battery and was in action against enemy bombers attacking
    >From Vichy-

    controlled Syria. He was again promoted in 1947 to be magistrate in charge
    of the courts at Tiberias and Safad. His ability to speak and listen to all
    concerned in their own languages proved a huge asset in a society which
    became increasingly polarised as the British Mandate drew to a close.

    There was the occasional lighter moment - on one occasion a complainant
    swore that a donkey in the caravan of a Syrian merchant was his and that it
    had been stolen the previous year. "Who can tell one ass from another?" said
    the merchant dismissively. "Stand back," said Aghajanian, "and give the
    beast space."

    All waited, breathless. The animal meandered about, as though getting its
    bearings, and then trotted straight to the litigant's stable and into its
    old stall. Case proved.

    In March 1948 fighting broke out between Jews and Arabs in Tiberias, and
    Aghajanian sent his wife and their two daughters to safety in Transjordan,
    as it then was. He had married Astrid Topalian in 1942, and for her this was
    a second flight. Her family had lived in the Armenian area of Turkey, and
    when the First World War started the Turkish Government had feared that
    sympathy for the advancing Russians, their fellow Christians, posed a
    security risk, and that the Armenians must be moved. The policy was arguably
    defensible, but the manner of its execution was barbarous. All the menfolk
    in Astrid's family were shot, and the women and children of her village were
    herded on the long trek across the mountains in appalling conditions. When
    the remnants of her group reached what is now Syria they were in a state of
    collapse, dying by the day. In desperation Astrid's mother threw herself on
    a pile of dead bodies, her baby beneath her. The guards gave a few desultory
    pokes with their bayonets and left. Mother and child were succoured by
    wandering Beduin, and eventually reached Jerusalem.

    Aghajanian struggled to keep the administration of justice alive in the
    dying days of the mandate, but a month after his wife's departure he was
    told by the beleaguered British Police that his safety could no longer be
    guaranteed, and he joined his family across the Jordan, where for a time he
    acted as legal representative for the British Council. While in Amman he was
    summoned for an interview with King Abdullah, who offered him a judgeship in
    Transjordan, and it says much for his reputation that when he later met a
    Jewish legal acquaintance in Nicosia he was assured the same offer would
    hold good if he returned to the new state of Israel. Wise in his generation,
    and foreseeing a troubled Middle East, he declined both suggestions.

    He was by now a British citizen, and considered making a legal career in
    London, but the offer of a job with the American radio-monitoring station in
    Cyprus was a bird in the hand which he dared not let go. He was rapidly
    promoted, first to be Middle East unit chief and then to be in charge of
    quality control for the whole station.

    The Aghajanians made a delightful new home in Kyrenia, which they named
    Jerusalem Cottage. Gaspar retired in 1971, and they intended to end their
    days there.

    But in 1974 Turkey, alarmed by the strength of the Enosis movement for union
    with Greece, invaded the north of the island to protect the Turkish
    minority - an action for which Britain, as one of the guarantors of the
    political status quo in Cyprus, bore a grievous responsibility. Despite
    holding British passports, the Aghajanians, mindful of 1915, fled south for
    their lives, leaving all their possessions, convinced that death awaited
    them if they remained. They were flown to Britain by the RAF and once again
    started from scratch.

    Again, Gaspar's gift of languages and deep understanding of Middle East
    politics proved the key. In 1975 he joined the Ministry of Defence and to
    his surprise found that in fact he was working within MI5. He would never
    talk about this work, but he was so valued that he did not fully retire
    until 1983, by when he was well over 70.

    He devoted part of his retirement to a fruitless attempt to obtain
    compensation for his losses in Cyprus, but Turkey refused to acknowledge his
    British citizenship because of his Armenian name, and he found the Foreign
    Office reluctant to make forceful representations on his behalf to a Nato
    ally.

    He and Astrid were eventually able to set up house again, in Sussex, and
    their home became a place of pilgrimage for many friends and relations, who
    by then regarded Gaspar as the family patriarch. He was a man of absolute
    integrity and no small wisdom.

    He is survived by his wife and their two daughters.

    Gaspar Aghajanian, linguist, magistrate and Middle East expert, was born on
    April 16, 1911. He died on August 31, 2007, aged 96
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