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  • Distinguished By The Dead

    DISTINGUISHED BY THE DEAD

    Ha'aretz
    April 8 2010

    Without preaching, pathos or overwhelming guilt, Romanian writer
    Varujan Vosganian has created a powerful portrait of the Armenian
    genocide

    "Cartea soaptelor" ("The Book of Whispers") by Varujan Vosganian,
    Poirom, 528 pages

    No one expected Varujan Vosganian to write the best novel in Romanian
    literature. He was, after all, the finance minister of Romania until
    not very long ago. He is an economist and mathematician by profession,
    a talented rhetorician, a brilliant intellectual, president of the
    Armenians Union of Romania and vice president of the Romanian Writers'
    Union. Advertisement

    Although he has written poetry in the past, this book (which has
    not been translated as yet into English) is entirely different. From
    the first page of his first prose work, "The Book of Whispers," the
    unbelievable happens and the surprise is clear and powerful: This
    is a classic, a true literary celebration. Vosganian's whispers are
    truly mesmerizing. Regardless of cultural status or political-literary
    association, readers bleed with the vanquished, are persecuted and
    flee with them, and become Armenians like them.

    How does Vosganian, an Armenian Romanian, succeed in depicting the
    events and at the same time elevate the reader and deepen his belief
    in and grasp of humanist values? How does he create speech with
    universal validity? Without preaching, without pathos and without
    overwhelming guilt, he lets the facts speak for themselves, at the
    same time becoming a more reliable and convincing narrator who reveals
    the incomprehensible.

    In Vosganian's depiction of events in the history of the Armenian
    people, he awakens our own experiences, our pain, our lives - lived
    at times without shield or armor in the bloody 20th century - our
    vanquished lives. Vanquished, but surviving and reviving, in order
    to allow us to declare: We exist, we have survived and now we must
    also remain human, because of what happened, and despite what happened.

    "We are not distinguished by what we are, but rather by the dead whom
    each of us mourns," says the narrator's grandfather Garabet from the
    small town of Focsani in Moldova. Garabet, who claimed that the best
    taste of all is the taste of wind, and who believed that as long
    as you live you are immortal, found a similarity between Armenian
    carpets and the Bible: "You find everything in both of them - from
    Genesis to our day."

    The grandfather had "an almost Kantian" vision of the world: "The
    roof over your head, the altar before your eyes and the soft carpet
    beneath your feet."

    In truth, "The Book of Whispers" contains another book, consisting
    entirely of this nonchalant grandfather's pearls of wisdom, based on
    his experience: "'Don't rush,' he'd always say. 'The person who has
    won is rarely the real victor. History was made by the vanquished,
    not by the victors. In the end, victory means exiting history' ...

    Precisely for this reason, grandfather Garabet thought the real
    heroes who make history are not the generals but rather the poets,
    and the real battles are not to be sought under the horses' hooves."

    "Victory," says the other grandfather, Starak, from Craiova, "isn't
    the power to spill other people's blood. Victory is the power to
    spill your own blood."

    Every great writer is first of all a poet, and every fiber of
    this novel is rich in metaphor. With verbal thrift and precision
    of language, the novel creates an electrical-emotional tension, as
    though the reader is taking part in what is happening. When a Russian
    soldier threatens the narrator's grandfather and orders him to move
    away, down the street, the narrator writes: "No one would be able
    to say what silence is if he has not heard at his back the rustle
    of a weapon being cocked." In another place the prison is described
    as dampness that comes and goes, "And the moment it penetrates your
    bones you carry it from within."

    Perhaps the book succeeds in sinking into the soul because of the
    richness of the poetic characters, because "the soul cannot think in
    the absence of an image," as Aristotle has taught us.

    'Abandoned path'

    After recounting his memories from his grandfathers' homes (we hardly
    know anything about his parents' homes), the narrator brings alive
    the Armenian folk epic, which survives and abounds in open wounds.

    Nevertheless, he writes, "Every open wound is the start of an abandoned
    path. To the extent that it heals, you are damaged." And the dead? "The
    dead have moved house in the pictures on the shelf." Or: "The picture
    became the request for forgiveness by those who in this hasty century
    left without having time to bid farewell."

    Dante, under instructions by Virgil, built in his poet's imagination
    the sad spaces of hell. Vosganian guides us through the hell of his
    people at the start of the 20th century. He reconstructs this hell
    meticulously, basing it on historical documentation and his own
    intuition as a poet and writer.

    The author does not look back in anger. He is there and he takes us
    with him. It is clear to the reader that, had we been born in another
    place and another time, we could have been those Armenians.

    "More important than death is memory," according to the narrator.

    "Among the many lives I carry inside myself the most real, like a
    bouquet of snakes tied at its end, are the lives I have not lived."

    Every character in "The Book of Whispers" is a unique and actual case.

    Vosganian, who is not of that period, could not have lived those lives,
    but each of the characters he depicts - with his own unique habits,
    dreams and history - joins the other characters to create a bouquet
    of people. These are people connected to one another by the ties and
    tissues of the human catastrophe caused by those who saw the Armenians
    as a human mass that had to be annihilated. Writes Vosganian: "All
    the means they used to kill the Armenians on the roads of Anatolia
    served the Nazis against the Jews, except in the Nazi camps the Jews
    had numbers on their arms."

    It is amazing to find that among the Armenians, too, the generation
    that survived the genocide, and even its children, did not talk about
    the horrors in Anatolia. The generation of survivors has died and its
    memories have been buried with it. Suddenly the third generation has
    discovered it knows nothing about the slaughter of its family and
    people. Is this a trauma that lasts a lifetime? Guilt? Shame?

    David Grossman, who was a guest of honor at the International
    Literature Festival in Berlin in 2007, devoted a large part of his
    speech to this phenomenon. Interestingly, he used the word "whispers"
    in the context of the explanation of why he refused to answer his
    son's question, "What did the Nazis do? I did not want to tell him. I,
    who had grown up within the silence and fragmented whispers that had
    filled me with so many fears and nightmares, who had written a book
    about a boy who almost loses his mind because of his parents' silence,
    suddenly understood my parents and my friends' parents who chose to
    be mute. I felt," said Grossman, "I felt that if I told him, if I
    even so much as cautiously alluded to what had happened over there,
    something in the purity of my 3-year-old son would be polluted; that
    from the moment such possibilities of cruelty were formulated in his
    childlike, innocent consciousness, he would never again be the same
    child. He would no longer be a child at all."

    There isn't a shadow of a doubt that there is a similarity between
    Grossman's silence and broken whispers and those depicted in
    Vosganian's book. Just as a painter mixes many colors together to
    obtain a unique hue, "The Book of Whispers" is full of numbers, data,
    historical facts and literary portraits, bringing us closer and closer
    to a picture of the reality. An ordinary writer might have failed in
    this thicket of exact and meticulous detail, or might have surrendered
    to sentimental, moralizing excess. But Vosganian is not an ordinary
    writer. He knows how to navigate elegantly and skillfully between
    Scylla and Charybdis.
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