Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Genocide survivor was an 'incredible person'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Genocide survivor was an 'incredible person'

    Gloucestershire Echo, UK
    January 9, 2013 Wednesday
    Edition 2; National Edition


    Genocide survivor was an 'incredible person'

    by Laura Churchill



    ONE of the few remaining survivors of the Armenian genocide died after
    falling over and fracturing her hip.

    Astrid Aghajanian, described as an "incred-ible woman" by her GP, fell
    over at More Hall Convent nursing home in Stroud in April last year.

    The 99-year-old was believed to be Britain's last survivor of the
    Armenian massacres, which saw around 1.5 million people killed between
    1915 and 1923.

    Astrid was aged just two when the Ottoman rulers began the
    annihilation of the Armenians and her father was killed.

    She was deported with her mother and marched into the Deir ez-Zor
    desert with her grandmother and baby brother dying. Her mother refused
    to let Astrid go with officials, who were burning children alive, and
    the pair hid under a pile of corpses for a night before venturing into
    the desert alone. They were found by a Bedouin tribesman, who then
    sold them to another, where they were given shelter, but lived in fear
    until a Turkish officer took them to the city of Deir ez-Zor.

    They made their way to relatives and began rebuilding their lives
    before moving to Jerusalem in the 1920s.

    Astrid became a teacher, married husband Gaspar in 1942 and the pair
    had two daughters before fighting between the Arabs and Jews started.

    The family fled to Cyprus, where she volunteered for the Red Cross and
    ran a kindergarten.

    But the Turkish invasion in 1974 saw the family lose everything again
    and end up in England as refugees.

    At a Gloucester inquest into her death yesterday, her GP Noah Thomson
    said she was in good health before the unwitnessed fall.

    In a statement he wrote: "She was an incredible person I feel humbled
    and honoured to have attended and I wish her family well."

    Deputy Gloucestershire coroner, David Dooley said Astrid, who died at
    Gloucestershire Royal Hospital on May 11, was a "99-year-old with an
    interesting, but traumatic early history".

    He ruled her death an accident.

Working...
X