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  • Mooradian comments

    Mooradian comments

    April issue
    macomb observer

    By Mitch Kehetian

    DETROIT -- For Tom Mooradian, Armenia's apology for the cruel
    treatment of "Armenian repatriats" during the post-World War II years
    of 1946-48 was a positive sign that Yerevan seeks to correct the
    disastrous repatriation drive.
    Mooradian was a 19-year-old teenager from Detroit when he
    witnessed the cruel punishment endured by thousands of repatriats to
    Soviet Armenia in 1947. He was one of several hundred American
    Armenians who went to then communist-controlled Armenia.
    "It took 13 years to get the Soviets to let me return to America.
    I still feel the pain of that self-imposed exile," author Mooradian
    repeats at book signings of "The Repatriat, Love, Basketball and the
    KGB."
    Mooradian, now 79, applauds Armenia's minister of diaspora
    affairs, Hranush Hakobian, for having publicly apologized at last
    December's international diaspora conference in Yerevan . In
    addressing the Dec. 13-14 conference Hakobian extended the
    government's apology to all the repatriats and their families for what
    she had termed as being a botched attempt by the Soviet Union at
    repatriating Armenians to the small Soviet Armenian republic.
    News reports from Armenia on the public apology said Hakobian was
    visibly shaken in her remarks, and took special note that her apology
    about the suffering was also the first time that a ranking government
    official had acknowleged the cruel life repatriats were forced to
    endure.
    She also confirmed that many of the repatriats were exiled to
    Siberia on suspicion of taking anti-Soviet positions, heightened by
    Stalin's edicts that saboteurs had infiltrated the ranks of the more
    than 100,000 repatriats who came to Armenia from the Middle East,
    Greece, Romania, and the United States.
    During book signings at two of Detroit's large Armenian church
    communities, St. John and St. Sarkis, Mooradian said "when my ship,
    the Rossia, pulled out of New York harbor in November, 1947 with 150
    other American Armenians reality sunk in my teenage brain. When I
    applied for my Soviet entrance visa I had unknowingly applied for
    Soviet citizenship. BY my own stupidity I was also relinquishing my
    American citizenship. I spent the next 13 years trying to get back to
    my home in Detroit. My prayers were answered on July 31, 1960 when the
    Soviets granted me an exit visa."
    In an interview with Vaughan Masropian, director of the Armenian
    Radio Hour in Detroit, Mooradian said the recent positive economic
    ranking Armenia received from The Wall Street Journal and The American
    Heritage Foundation in their annual 2009 Economic Freedom report was a
    healthy free enterprise sign for Armenia's future.
    "When I was there we stood in line for bread, and thankful for
    what we got - which was barely enough to survive," said Mooradian, now
    a retired suburban Detroit newspaper reporter.
    In his memoir "The Repatriat," now in its second printing since
    last October when the powerful paperback was published, Mooadian
    admits that basketball "kept me alive with the ability to survive 13
    years trapped behind the Iron Curtain."
    When quizzed at a meeting of the St. Sarkis Fellowship Club,
    Mooradian said his "nighmare" experience was brought on by a foolish
    young activist who only had himself to blame . "I am just thankful I
    survived. when I hear someone bad mouth America, I cringe because the
    freedom we have as Americans is priceless. I know. I learned with 13
    years of my life."
    At a meeting of the Detroit Armenian Women's Club, Mooradian also
    shared the pain and suffering repatriats with small children were
    forced to live in then Soviet Armenia while fearful "a knock on the
    door at night meant they were being taken away for speaking out
    against the communist-run country."
    While at an afterglow book signing at Edgar Hagopian's popular
    World of Hagopian Rugs outlet in suburban Birmingham, Mooradian said
    his skill on the basketball court is what saved him, mentally and
    physically. "After we beat the highly touted team from Red China, I
    was placed on the national Soviet team."
    As a high school basketball star at Detroit Southwestern,
    Mooradian was captain of his team that won the public school crown in
    1946. His goal as a repatriat was to go to college in Armenia and
    introduce the American style of basketball. "But it was basketball
    that saved me in a society that denied people their civil rights," he
    told the Detroit Armenian community in a series of talks about "life
    behind the Iron Curtain."
    Though present-day Armenia, free of communist rule since the 1991
    collapse of the Soviet Union is but 12,000 square miles with a
    population numbering over three million, Mooradian said the districts
    of Kars and Ardahan that Turkey seized from the independent Armenian
    republic of 1918 should be returned to the Armenians. "Those lands
    belong to Armenia and were so recognized in 1920 by the United States
    and President Woodrow Wilson. "
    When asked if he ever plans to visit Arrmenia now that it is free,
    and practicing economic freedom, Mooradian smiled: "Hey, the Armenians
    are great. They also suffered under the tyranny of Lenin and
    Stalin. But today they are free to guide their own destiny. As for
    going to Armenia, if I did, I would go as a tourist, with a round-trip
    ticket and never surrender my American passport," he stressed
    adamantly.
    When told the diaspora conference in Yerevan also deliberated on
    the feasibility to conduct another large repatriation movement to
    Armenia, Mooradian was blunt: "Look, I love the Armenian people. If
    you want to help Armenia you do it with support for groups dedicated
    to help Armenia. You send money, medical supplies and make sure the
    U.S. Congress supports Armenia's foreign policy - and tells the Turks
    to condemn the Ottoman government of the 1915 Armenian genocide."
    Mooradian, a graduate of Wayne State University, and his wife,
    Jan, a retired Detroit public school teacher, now live in upstate
    Hubbard Lake. "The Repatriat" is available from Wayne State
    University Press, Amazon.com, and from the website
    _www.tommooradian.com_ (http://www.tommooradian.com)

    (Editor's Note:Mitch Kehetian is a contributing columnist for
    Observer-Fracassa Publications in Detroit and retired editor of the
    Macomb Daily.)
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