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Idyll Banter: Once upon a time, the world knew

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  • Idyll Banter: Once upon a time, the world knew

    BurlingtonFreePress.com
    April 6 2014


    Idyll Banter: Once upon a time, the world knew

    Written by
    Chris Bohjalian
    Idyll Banter

    Filed Under
    Columnists
    Chris Bohjalian


    Later this month -- April 24 -- Armenians around the world will pause to
    mourn the 1.5 million of our ancestors who were systematically
    annihilated by the Ottoman Empire in one of the 20th century's first
    genocides. Under the violence and fog of the First World War, three
    out of every four Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire were killed.
    And while Americans of a certain age (mine) can recall their mothers
    encouraging them to clean their plates by imploring, "Think of the
    starving Armenians!" for most of the country the Genocide is largely
    forgotten. It is, as my narrator Laura Petrosian calls it in "The
    Sandcastle Girls," my 2012 novel about the cataclysm, "the Slaughter
    You Know Next to Nothing About."

    Once upon a time, however, everyone knew. There were bestselling books
    and memoirs. There were movies. There was an endless stream of
    newspaper articles, many on the front pages of the largest papers in
    the country.

    And there were people like Burlington's Ellen Weston Catlin sharing the story.

    I learned about Ellen Catlin from my friend, George Aghjayan. George
    lives just outside of Boston, but when he is not rooting for his
    beloved Patriots, he is researching a history we share -- a history
    most Armenians in our Diaspora share.

    Catlin was born in 1883 and grew up on Pearl Street. She graduated
    from Burlington High School and the University of Vermont, where --
    according to the yearbook - she was a soprano in the Ladies' Glee
    Club. In one UVM yearbook photo, she has wide, beautiful eyes, an
    elegant sundial for a nose, and a swan's neck she has hidden demurely
    behind a high collar. On Sept. 13, 1908, a "red-letter day in
    Burlington," according to the "Missionary Herald," she received her
    commission at First Church on College Street to join a group of
    missionary teachers. She was off to a part of the Ottoman Empire
    called Kharpert, where she would be teaching English at Euphrates
    College.

    Although Kharpert and nearby Van today are inside Turkey, they're part
    of the cradle of Armenian civilization. How extensive was the ethnic
    cleansing there? According to Ottoman census figures, there were
    roughly 204,000 Armenians living in the province of Kharpert in 1915;
    by 1922, there would be only 35,000. And in Van? The Armenian
    population was obliterated, falling from 197,000 in 1915 to 500 in
    1922. Soon after that 1922 census was taken, there would be almost no
    Armenians living in either province.



    Unlike some Western missionaries, Catlin would not witness the worst
    of the slaughter: She sailed home to Burlington in 1913 because her
    health was failing and her father was ill. But she would return to
    Turkey in 1919, after the First World War, and continue her work as a
    missionary there and in Palestine through the mid-1920s. She wrote a
    small book, "Suggestions for Armenian Students of English." (Just for
    the record, I could use a small book, "Suggestions for English
    Students of Armenian.")

    As Aghjayan told me, "I think it's fair to say that the five years she
    spent working with the Armenians of Kharpert had a lasting impression
    on her -- so much so that when her health was better and the
    opportunity presented itself, she returned."

    At least one of her surviving letters is an indication both of this
    country's awareness of the start of the Genocide and the dangers faced
    by the Armenians. In the late spring of 1915, she expressed her fears
    in a letter to James Barton -- originally from Charlotte -- the head of
    the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions in Boston.
    She wrote about the way Turkish soldiers and Kharpert city officials
    had destroyed the United States seal at Euphrates College (where
    Barton had once been President) and ransacked the furniture and desks.
    She wondered whether Armenians were in need of "American protection."

    I can only speculate what it was like for her to be here in America
    when the news got far worse: When the Armenians were being slaughtered
    where they lived or marched into the searing Syrian desert to die.
    What must she have felt when she read that the Armenian faculty at
    Euphrates College had been arrested, and many killed? When the college
    was taken over by the Ottoman Army? It is likely that she was even
    more aghast and more horrified than most Americans. After all, she had
    lived and worked there. She had friends among the Armenian community.
    In my mind, I can see her speaking out at churches in Burlington.
    Sharing her devastation with anyone who would listen.

    And today? Today Euphrates College is gone. Last May, George Aghjayan
    and I walked the earth where it once stood. Like so much of the
    civilization that marked Western Armenia, the ground there is either
    barren or the antiquities have been replaced by modern buildings.

    So the college is but a memory - along with the Armenian world that
    once existed there.

    Once upon a time, however, thanks to the likes of Ellen Catlin, the world knew.




    http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/article/20140406/COLUMNISTS03/304060028/1050/COLUMNISTS/Idyll-Banter-Once-upon-time-world-knew?odyssey=mod%7Chomepromo%7C1&nclick_check=1

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