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  • Going in search of a family history

    Going in search of a family history
    By Georgia Rowe, TIMES CORRESPONDENT

    Contra Costa Times, CA
    June 20 2004

    MICHELINE AHARONIAN MARCOM isn't old enough to remember the horrors
    of the Armenian genocide. But she remembers her grandparents, who
    were survivors.

    "They were melancholy," recalls the Berkeley-based author of "The
    Daydreaming Boy." "There was tremendous sadness. There was anger at
    the Turks, and a lot of that anger came from the fact that Turkey to
    this day has never acknowledged the genocide. Not only have they not
    acknowledged it, they spend a lot of time and resources denying it
    ever happened. And that makes the Armenians crazy."

    Marcom says she inherited a legacy of depression and bitterness from
    the Armenian side of her family, which was shattered in the campaign
    waged against Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish government from 1915
    to 1923.

    It's a legacy she explored in her first novel, "Three Apples Fell
    >>From Heaven." She intends to write three books on the subject, and
    "The Daydreaming Boy" is the second novel of the trilogy.

    Set in Beirut, the new book has a central character in Vahé Tcheubjian,
    an adult survivor of the genocide. On the surface, Vahé is a successful
    businessman. But his internal life is in constant turmoil. Paralyzed
    by memories of a traumatic childhood in a Lebanese orphanage, he spends
    his days in a haze of guilt, loneliness, despair and violent fantasy.

    A refugee's view

    While "Three Apples" told the stories of multiple Armenian characters,
    "The Daydreaming Boy" focuses almost exclusively on Vahé. Marcom,
    who teaches creative writing at Mills College in Oakland, says she
    wanted this book to take a radically different approach.

    In a recent interview in the Berkeley hills home she shares with her
    husband, a software engineer, and their 3-year-old son, the author
    explained that she was particularly interested in the effects of the
    genocide on Armenian children.

    "I wanted to write a book that was spoken through one person," says
    Marcom. "A war orphan, a refugee. Someone who is an extreme creation
    of war."

    The book begins with one of Vahé's earliest childhood memories: the
    day he arrives in Lebanon, one of thousands of orphans shipped into
    exile in cattle cars. The scene was based on a historical account
    Marcom uncovered a few years back.

    "It was written by an American missionary who was at the orphanage in
    Lebanon," she recalls. "He described the trains coming from Turkey,
    how they stopped at the sea and how the boys who had been on the trains
    for weeks -- they were thirsty, tired, hungry -- ran to the sea and
    drank the water. They'd always lived in the interior of the country,
    so they'd never known salt water."

    That scene marks the first of many memories for Vahé. As he relives
    his days in the orphanage -- scenes of hunger, confusion and brutality
    at the hands of his fellow orphans -- the character assumes tragic
    proportions. For Marcom, Vahé represents a generation of survivors.

    "He comes to consciousness in the orphanage," she says, "so he's
    someone who can never really know who his family is. He is a man
    without history, a man adrift."

    War stories

    Marcom was born in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, and spent her early childhood
    in the Middle East. Her businessman father was American, her mother
    was Armenian-Lebanese. When Marcom was 5, the family moved to Los
    Angeles, but in the years before the Lebanese civil war, she spent
    summers in Beirut with her mother's family.

    Growing up, she heard dozens of war stories -- many of them concerning
    members of her own family. Her grandmother, who saved her brothers
    and sisters from the Turks, was a heroine, but her father -- Marcom's
    great-grandfather -- wasn't so lucky. "They came and took him in the
    middle of the night," says the author. "No one ever saw him again."

    Her grandfather's family survived intact, which was unusual. "But
    my grandfather's father could only save his wife and children,"
    says Marcom. "He couldn't save anyone in the extended family. My
    great-grandmother never forgave him. She lived to be 96, and she had
    that bitterness toward her husband to the end."

    For Marcom, growing up with these stories was a heavy burden. "It's
    a lot to live with," she says.

    Her maternal grandmother remains a particularly vivid presence in her
    memory. "She talked about it all the time," says Marcom. "There seem
    to be a couple of responses to genocide -- one is to talk about it all
    the time, like my grandmother. The other is to be completely silent."

    Marcom notes that the family continued to sustain losses throughout her
    own childhood. She mentions her "Uncle" Vahé -- actually her mother's
    first cousin -- who was killed in Beirut during a particularly fierce
    period of ethnic cleansing in the mid-1980s. "The Daydreaming Boy"
    is dedicated to his memory, although Marcom says the character of
    Vahé is not based on him.

    Similar stories

    Marcom did extensive research to prepare for the new book, reading
    about Armenian history, Lebanese culture, the genocide and the orphans
    it produced. The scope of her reading expanded as she went, finally
    including books on Rwanda, Bosnia and other sites of ethnic cleansing.

    "The parallels are horribly similar," she says. "Vahé could be a kid
    now living in Iraq. In war, the details are all different, but some
    things are always the same.

    "I'm now reading about the genocide in Guatemala. It's eerie and
    horrifying. Even the language is the same, the way people everywhere
    call their enemies 'dogs.' The debasement, the sexual humiliation;
    the photos we're seeing from Iraq are probably mild compared to a
    lot of what goes on. It always happens in war."

    Even more upsetting to Marcom is the degree to which the history of
    the Armenian genocide has been erased. Growing up in Los Angeles, she
    studied World War I with no mention of the Armenian experience. Today,
    she continues to be surprised by students, friends and acquaintances
    who know little or nothing about the events of 1915-23, which resulted
    in as many as a million Armenian deaths.

    "We are so un-historied," she says with a sigh. "This is why we're
    so easy to manipulate and so lonely.

    "We don't know our ancestors, we don't know our history. It doesn't
    matter who you are here. You come here as an immigrant, and within
    a generation you become the same way."

    For Marcom, writing "The Daydreaming Boy" was an educational as well
    as an artistic experience. She says she learned a great deal about
    her ancestors from writing the book. But it's clear that the climate
    of her own childhood memories contributed to the story's emotional
    charge. Those memories and the history that inspired them remain
    inextricably linked to her heart.

    "I was very interested in trying to get inside the mind of someone
    like Vahé, who has experienced extreme trauma," she says. "I think
    every day for someone like him is a struggle. Every day you survive
    is an achievement. I've met people who have survived war and genocide,
    and they have said that to me. It's a lifelong inheritance. It never
    goes away.

    "I'm still trying to understand it," she adds. "That's why I'm writing
    these books. I myself knew nothing about being Armenian, nothing about
    the genocide, except that I'd inherited a hell of a lot of depression
    and melancholy."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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