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  • When family history has to be downloaded

    When family history has to be downloaded

    Chance discovery of a photo on the Internet connects one Armenian to a
    painful past

    By Houry Mayissian
    Special to The Daily Star
    Saturday, April 24, 2004

    I waited impatiently for the picture that was loading, bit by bit, on
    my screen. I felt that it would be a small piece of a big, unsolved
    puzzle - my family's history. After a couple of moments of waiting,
    the picture loaded. There they were: My great-grandmother,Aznive
    Pootchigian at the age of five, with three of her family members in
    Kharpert, Western Armenia, or what is now called Turkey.

    The internet is amazing when it comes to the amount of information it
    can supply. But I never thought I would find a picture of my
    great-grandmother taken in 1912 in her hometown, a couple of years
    before it was raided by the Turks.

    I sat in front of my computer, unable to move, and examined the
    picture -the people in it, the background, the caption - like an
    antique. The picture seemed to be taken in a garden with big trees
    appearing in the background. All four people carried an object I
    couldn't identify: Something like a plant or flower, but yet seems to
    be made up of cloth. My great-grandmother was the youngest in the
    picture. She wore a long dress with small flowers on it. Even though
    all four of them seemed to look straight into the camera at the time
    the picture was taken, my great-grandmother's look was much more
    serious, much more "direct" than the others. It seemed as though she
    was looking at me, right into my eyes, rather than at the camera. She
    didn't smile; she didn't look sad; she just looked serious.

    I kept thinking about the strange coincidence that had led me to her
    picture. I was using the "Google" search engine to look for Armenian
    music. I noticed the family name "Pootchigian" in the description of
    one of the Web sites. I had heard from my grandmother that my
    great-grandmother's maiden name was Pootchigian. I also knew that I
    had relatives by that name in the United States, but that contact
    between our families had long since been lost.

    I immediately clicked on the link that transported me to the Web site
    of the Pootchigian family currently residing in the States. A whole
    "new world" opened in front of me: Pictures, old and new, historic
    data, a family tree, in which my mother, father and even big brother
    were included. My name wasn't there, though. Contact between the
    families had probably been lost before I was born.

    I knew bits of facts about how part of my great-grandmother's family
    had escaped to the US, how she had survived the Armenian genocide. But
    I didn't know all the details. Suddenly I felt the urge to have the
    whole story laid out before me like the picture I was looking at.

    I printed out the photo and took it to my grandmother. I didn't know
    whether she would recognize her mother at the age of five. The moment
    she looked at the picture, however, tears started to come to her eyes.

    "Oh my God ... It's my mom," she exclaimed with a faint voice that
    seemed to be suffocated by her tears. I had never seen my grandmother
    in such a "lost" state. Her eyes were filled with pain, longing and
    confusion. The rosy color of her fleshy cheeks disappeared behind her
    tears.

    "My uncle and his children live in the States. He has many
    grandchildren as well. My mom used to say that my uncle migrated to
    the States to work before the massacres started. She had another
    brother who was hanged by the Turks." And so my grandmother started
    the story. A story every Armenian family has - one which brings tears
    to the eyes of any listener, one which makes people wonder about how
    savage humans can be.

    My great-grandmother was seven years old when the Armenian genocide
    started. It took the lives of more than 1.5 million Armenians and
    deprived the rest of their homeland. During the years 1915-1918, amid
    the confusion of World War I, the Young Turks carried out the
    deliberate deportation and massacre of the entire Armenian population
    of the Ottoman Empire. Most of them were massacred along the
    road. Those who survived scattered across the globe. Almost nine
    decades have passed, but the realization of being descendants of
    genocide survivors remains firm in the minds of new Armenian
    generations.

    My great grandmother was deported with her mother and her two aunts,
    like all the Armenians living in Kharpert.

    "They spent days walking under the sun, barefoot, without food, water
    or proper clothes, stripped of their dignity, stolen of their
    possessions," continued my grandmother.

    My great-grandmother had been separated from her mother in Diyarbekir,
    somewhere along the endless journey. She was adopted by a Turk and
    never saw her mother after that.

    "She used to repeat the story over and over again. She remembered the
    smell of death lingering in the air, the sight of mutilated corpses on
    the sides of the roads they passed by, the savage treatment meted out
    by the Turk gendarmes to those who were no longer able to continue
    walking, the hunger, the thirst, the rapes, everything. Despite that,
    however, despite all the things that terrorized her, as a child at
    least she felt secure that her mother was with her to hold her hand,
    to carry her, to cover her eyes when necessary. A while later,
    however, she lost even that."

    My great-grandmother was raised by the man who adopted her into his
    family."She used to tell me that she secretly kept an Armenian book
    from her school books with her. She used to read it secretly when she
    had time alone so she wouldn't forget her mother tongue," my
    grandmother said. With the help of an Armenian lady, my grandmother
    was married at the age of 14 to an Armenian. Later, they moved from
    Diyarbekir to Aleppo and then Beirut.

    After I heard the story, I went back to the Web site to see the
    pictures of the relatives I never knew about. The Pootchigians are now
    a well-known family in California. One of them, Chuck Pootchigian, is
    a member of the State Senate.

    Yet the most important thing for me remained the picture. As I looked
    at it, I wondered what they knew. Did they have a clue that they would
    be victims of such a great crime? Probably not. But I know, and my
    children will. So will all the new generations of young Armenians. And
    so will the world, despite the ongoing denial by Turkey and the
    failure by the international community to properly condemn this crime
    against humanity.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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