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#SaveKessab, #Save Aleppo, and Kim Kardashian: Syria's Rashomon Effe

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  • #SaveKessab, #Save Aleppo, and Kim Kardashian: Syria's Rashomon Effe

    Al-Jadaliyya
    April 24 2014

    #SaveKessab, #Save Aleppo, and Kim Kardashian: Syria's Rashomon Effect

    by Elyse Semerdjian


    A historic Christian Armenian town situated just a mile from the
    Turkish border in northwest Syria, Kessab is now among the war's many
    casualties. On the morning of 21 March, the town was seized by
    opposition fighters from three Islamic militant groups: Jabhat
    al-Nusra, Sham al-Islam, and Ansar al-Sham. For Armenians around the
    world, the event conjured memories of past traumas as one of two
    remaining Armenian areas that survived the Armenian Genocide of 1915
    was depopulated. The last remaining Armenian village in Turkey,
    Vakıflı, located across the border, is now a safe haven for some of
    Kessab's former residents. Three weeks after the capture of Kessab,
    the event continues to take on a life of its own as various factions
    in the conflict seek to instrumentalize the tragedy to construct their
    own versions of reality, a phenomenon that could be called Syria's
    Rashomon effect.

    [View of Kessab and Surrounding Environs (Photo courtesy of Stefan Winter)]

    Kessab was relatively quiet over the last three years but has new
    value as a launching point for an opposition campaign against the
    coastal town of Latakia, which lies within the regime's Alawite
    heartland. Militants call this campaign al-Anfal (`The Spoils'), a
    label taken from a chapter title of the Quran connoting the hope of
    defeating Asad against changing odds after a recent opposition defeat
    in Yabrud near Damascus. Since the uprising, Kessab's grassroots
    militias took up arms to repel militants who sought to enter the
    mountains. The morning of the raid, Turkey opened the border allowing
    militias to cross into Syria perhaps to tip the balance against recent
    Asad gains in the south. However, many Armenians, including the
    Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) and subsequent Armenian
    activists quickly linked Turkey's role in Kessab three weeks ago to
    the 1915 Armenian Genocide'an event commemorated later this month on
    24 April.

    While dismissed by the opposition, Armenian fears are not completely
    baseless. Some Islamist opposition militias carry their own unique
    brand of takfiri sectarianism evidenced by videoed beheadings and
    forced conversions of Shiites and Christians. Events like the
    depopulation of Kessab do little to assuage Armenian fears of
    annihilation that remain alive after a century. Although guerilla
    groups are often in conflict with one another, they have in common
    attacks Christian villages, conversion of churches into militia
    headquarters as in Raqqa, desecration and looting of religious
    objects, kidnapping and forcibly converting Christians to Islam, and
    summarily executing minorities and even fellow Sunni Muslim fighters
    by mistake in the streets. Yet, aside from the removal of a cross from
    a church rooftop, there was no mass destruction in Kessab when it was
    captured.



    [Photo of Alleged Cross Destruction Within a Church in Kessab]

    The Armenian community continues to protest Kessab's capture. The
    #SaveKessab campaign launched via social media contains many important
    facts about Kessab, but the nature of circulation on the internet also
    afforded the spreading of erroneous information. True, the current
    depopulation of Kessab echoes two other evacuations in the last
    century'1909 and 1915'and Turkey was involved in each instance. But
    what has not been clarified is that although eighty people were
    reported as killed in the raid by Asbarez, an Armenian news service,
    only two casualties are confirmed as Armenian to date. While those
    deaths are important, diaspora Armenians continue to publish
    exaggerated articles claiming `a NATO-backed second genocide' is
    taking place in Kessab. Other Armenian news services have offered more
    balanced coverage, The Armenian Weekly focused on the two thousand
    Armenians evacuated to Latakia where they are sheltered in the Virgin
    Mary Mother of God Armenian Church and given humanitarian assistance
    by the Armenian Red Cross. The news service has also focused on the
    search for ten missing Kessab Armenians who never made it to Latakia.

    So, why did Armenians evacuate Kessab? Here it is useful to examine
    al-Nusra's capture of the Aramaic-speaking town of Maaloula outside
    Damascus in September 2013'a place of little to no strategic military
    value. Symbolism trumped strategy in Maaloula as the Mar Taqla
    monastery, named after an early Christian saint who fled Roman
    persecution interned within its walls, was seized and thirteen of its
    nuns were held captive for three months. The nuns were released on 9
    March after Qatar reportedly ransomed them for sixteen million
    dollars. Over the last two years, the depopulation of Christians in
    Homs (reduced to ten percent of its original prewar size), Maaloula,
    and Kessab have magnified existing fears that Syria's Christians may
    not survive Syria's war.



    [Kessab Armenians attend mass after arrival in Latakia]

    Considering the deep connections between Armenian communities over
    several centuries, many recently exiled residents who fled Kessab were
    internally displaced Armenians from Aleppo who fled the fighting in
    August 2012. Now triple exiled, these refugees huddle in the Armenian
    Church in Latakia on the coast awaiting their fate, joining over seven
    million displaced Syrians internally and regionally. Certainly, the
    disappearance of two thousand Armenians in Kessab may mean little
    numerically in the larger tragedy of 140,000 dead over the last three
    years. What it does offer is another way of viewing a conflict that
    threatens to erase century-old communities that comprise Syria's
    mosaic of over sixteen religious and ethnic communities.

    A Brief History of Syria's Armenians

    When the conflict began three years ago, I was in the process of
    writing a history of Syria's early Armenian community. The Armenian
    community in Syria is divided between a smaller minority of Armenians
    (arman qadim) who arrived during the Cilician Kingdom of Armenia which
    fell in 1375 and a majority of Armenians who are descendants of
    refugees from the Genocide. Aleppo'a major deportation hub during
    World War I'houses most of Syria's Armenian population. Despite the
    ongoing presence of Armenians in Syria Fawwaz Tallo, a Syrian
    opposition figure, erroneously asserted, `Kessab is a Syrian town and
    not Armenian. The Armenians are guests whom we received one hundred
    years ago on our Syrian land, and today we liberate our land.' Tallo's
    claim is pure hyperbole that seeks to alienate Armenians from Syria's
    broader history during a time of national struggle. Historical
    documents tell a different story'Kessab is among the most ancient
    Armenian settlements in the entire region and among the last to
    survive the ethnic cleansing and wars of the last century.

    As I write this essay, placed on my desk are Ottoman fiscal records
    (called Mufassal Tahrir Defteri) that document the steady growth of
    Armenians from the sixteenth century forward as they fled a rebellion
    (celali) in the east where Armenians lived and crop failures brought
    on by the Little Ice Age in the 1590s. The Armenian community was
    quite visible in sixteenth century Aleppo as the historic Christian
    Judayda quarter took shape in the city, eventually housing nearly a
    quarter of the city's population by the eighteenth century. That same
    survey charts Kessab's expansion in the first decades of the sixteenth
    century: 1526: twenty-six families, 1536: thirty families, 1550:
    sixty-one families. As violence intensified in the Ottoman Empire,
    beginning with the Hamidiye Massacres (1894-1896), Armenians fled more
    frequently to nearby Syrian lands.

    During the genocide, Syria housed the killing fields where mass
    unmarked graves can be located along the deportation route in Ras
    al-`Ein, Raqqa, Der ez-Zor, and Shaddadeh. As Der ez-Zor lay in ruin
    after three years of war, it was hard to forget that almost every Deri
    has an Armenian `hababah' (`grandmother' in the local dialect) and
    therefore have familial links to events of 1915. After World War I,
    Syria was overrun with refugees numbering 100,000 Armenians by the
    1920s. Originally refugee camps, Armenian neighborhoods developed in
    Suleymaniyah, Azziziah, and Maydan (Armenian: `Nor Kyugh') in Aleppo,
    while the old harat al-arman outside Bab Sharqi in Damascus still
    sports the original barakat design of the Armenian refugee camp with
    stucco walls and tin roofs.

    In 1928, Armenians were naturalized as Syrian citizens by French
    colonial powers with the hope of thwarting nationalist stirrings
    during an election year. The result of French meddling with the
    Armenian minority was a category historian Keith Watenpaugh calls `not
    quite Syrian.' In an environment of colonial `divide and rule'
    policies, Syria's minorities were considered collaborator classes
    while the Sunni bourgeoisie agitated for independence from French
    rule. Early experimentation with liberal democracy showed some signs
    of political inclusion as Armenians were elected to the constituent
    assembly. During the instability of the 1960s and subsequent
    ascendancy of Hafiz al-Asad, Armenians showed a decline in political
    participation that continues today.

    Analyst Andrew Tabler adopted the regime's myths when he told NPR
    `[Syrian Christians get] very good business contracts, positions in
    government and the Syrian military¦.They get preferential treatment
    and protection of their places of worship.' In this line of thinking,
    Armenians and other Christians are protected minorities who reaped
    financial and political benefits from the state. Yet the facts do not
    support this claim entirely. Armenians were seldom elected to
    parliament and when they were present in government they held
    appointed rather than elected positions. As recently as 2012, Bashar
    al-Asad appointed a woman, Dr. Nazira Farah Sarkis, as Minister of the
    Environment. One could read this singular appointment in 2012 as an
    effort to garner the support of Armenians during a period of
    protracted fighting when Armenians took the formal stance of
    neutrality during the uprising.

    The myth of minoritarian rule as beneficial to minorities has had
    devastating effects for everyday Syrians, who are targeted for
    reprisal as the primary collaborators with the Assad regime when, in
    reality, every community has been coopted to some degree within
    complex webs of collaboration that bear a distinct colonial design.
    Importantly, the minority myth detracts from the highest proportional
    beneficiaries of the regime, for, as Bassam Haddad's research has
    shown, Sunni entrepreneurs are the backbone of the new bourgeoisie
    created under Bashar al-Asad's rule over the last decade. Sunni elites
    have historically obtained higher and more influential offices in both
    Asad governments as Defense Minister (Mustafa Tlas), Prime Minister
    (Mustafa Miru), Foreign Minister (Faruq al-Shar'), and Vice-President
    of Foreign Affairs (`Abd al-Halim Khaddam). It is important to bear in
    mind, for every accusation that minorities are regime collaborators,
    Sunni complicity is being erased. To ignore this fact is by omission
    upholding a sectarian discourse.

    The invisibility of Armenians historically in Syrian politics is
    paradoxical considering the century-old durable political
    institutions'clubs, political parties, churches, and social
    committees'that have long survived in the shadows under both Asads.
    One would surmise that Armenians would have been predisposed to
    political participation, but the numbers show that they did not
    flourish under the authoritarian model. Instead, they voted with their
    feet, leaving Syria to avoid conscription and to look for better
    economic opportunities. In fact, historian Simon Payaslian has shown
    that the Armenian population dropped from 100,000 in the 1960s to
    58,000 on the eve of the 2011 uprising underscoring how drastically
    the community has declined under authoritarianism.

    While Hafiz al-Asad was hostile toward Turkey, Bashar al-Asad forged
    close ties that eventually stifled freedom of speech for Armenians on
    the subject of the Armenian Genocide. Those of us on the ground
    experienced intimidation in the form of monitoring our writings and
    emails, the banning and confiscation of books from bookstore shelves,
    and harassment by the secret police of authors who published on the
    Armenian Genocide. Under Hafiz al-Asad, Armenian processions for 24
    April commemorations featured deafening displays of drumming and
    chants, Bashar al-Asad ordered more quiet displays of mourning with a
    quiet procession only within the church walls and Armenian cemetery in
    the years before the uprising. The policies of 2005-2011, stood in
    stark contrast to the encouragement Syria's Armenians now have to
    criticize Turkey showing how Armenian speech is silenced or fostered
    at the whim of Syrian foreign policy.

    Taking cues from the Lebanese civil war, Syria's Armenians have
    maintained an official stance of `positive neutrality' since the
    revolt began in March 2011. This strategy has largely preserved
    Armenian areas of Aleppo while other areas in a state of rebellion
    were flattened by Syrian forces. The strategy saved Armenians in
    Lebanon, but studies have shown that it also marginalized them when it
    came time to forge the Ta'if peace agreement in 1989.

    Kessab: Syria's Rashomon Effect

    The Opposition's Story

    After capturing Kessab, the conquering militias launched a slick
    public relations campaign uploading numerous videos on YouTube showing
    unscathed Armenian churches and gentle interactions with remaining
    elderly inhabitants. One photo circulated frequently by pro-opposition
    activists on Facebook featured an elderly Kessab Armenian woman
    carried by an opposition fighter captioned `Is this a terrorist?' In
    yet another video, we are given a tour of one of Kessab's churches by
    a man with immaculate English as he imagines how each area of the
    church was used by the vacated residents. At one point, he grabs a
    Bible erroneously telling the viewers that it is written in Aramaic,
    but his larger point is that the Bible has not been destroyed by the
    fighters. The video shows `fixable' damage to the church's plaster
    walls, attributed to the fighting between regime forces and rebels
    currently underway. The tour guide mentions at one point that the
    video was created specially `for Kim,' a reference to American reality
    TV star Kim Kardashian.



    [A Widely-Circulated Image on Social Media Asks: Is This the Face of a
    Terrorist?]

    The Armenian Diaspora's Story

    In an attempt to draw international attention to the plight of Kessab,
    the Armenian diaspora quickly latched onto the #SaveKessab viral
    Twitter and Facebook campaign to place international attention on
    Turkey just weeks before Armenian Genocide commemoration day on 24
    April. After a century of denial by the Turkish government of the
    killing of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians during World War I,
    genocide recognition continues to be the top priority for the Armenian
    Diaspora composed of its victims. While many facts about Kessab were
    correct, amid the internet frenzy, activists circulated erroneous
    photos falsely claiming that a large number of Armenians had been
    murdered in the assault and shared faulty claims by Armenian
    celebrities Kim Kardashian and Cher that a second genocide was taking
    place in the town. Kardashian's perspective on Kessab was amplified by
    the press when she retweeted these charges: `Please let's not let
    history repeat itself!!!!!! Let's get this trending!!!! #SaveKessab
    #ArmenianGenocide' despite the fact that Armenian deaths in Kessab
    remained undocumented at that point. Kardashian's involvement in
    particular put her on the radar of opposition activists who slandered
    her as an Asad supporter although she never made any specific
    reference to the regime. A punned headline from the Daily Beast read
    `Kim Kardashian Butts Into Syria's Civil War,' yet Cher retweeted
    something far more caustic when she wrote `Please check out what's
    going on in Kessab, Syria. Innocent Christians and Armenians being
    killed by Turks #SaveKessab.' None of these high profile figures have
    retracted the misinformation that left opposition activists fuming at
    the double standard of calling what happened in Kessab a genocide
    while staying silent on Aleppo, Homs, and other parts of Syria
    decimated by war.

    In the days after Kessab's capture, an image of a mutilated woman on a
    bed with a cross shoved down her throat that circulated months ago
    among Syrian Christians on Facebook resurfaced during the #SaveKessab
    campaign. Snopes published the image with a clip from the original
    Canadian film by special effects filmmaker Remy Couture to verify that
    the woman featured was a gore film actress not a Kessab Armenian.
    Surely, this was not the first internet hoax, but with distrust of the
    Armenian position in Syria's war, opposition activists quickly rushed
    to discredit what they called `Armenian lies' about Kessab and promote
    their own hashtag #SaveAleppo as a counterpoint to the #SaveKessab
    campaign. At this point there are several emotionally-charged videos
    that capture the civilian toll of ongoing barrel bombings in Syria's
    northern city to deflect attention given to Kessab.



    [Facebook Profile Image for the #SaveKessab Campaign]

    The Armenian Catholicos's Story

    On 9 April, the hyper-reality of internet discourse on Kessab was
    corrected by the Armenian Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia his
    holiness Aram I in Antelias, Lebanon. His interview with Civilnet was
    a reissuing of an earlier position formulated by the Armenian leader
    two years ago. He stated, `What happened in Kesab (sic.) must not be
    isolated from the rest of the Syrian conflict.' With this statement,
    his holiness put a kibosh on efforts of the Armenian diaspora to
    situate the events in Kessab only within the realm of Turkish-Armenian
    relations. He added, `Syrian Christians and Muslims have accepted us
    as part of their society, they shared with us their homeland, and we
    became an inseparable part of Syrian society, and in the last decades
    after the Genocide, we actively participated in the building and
    rebuilding of Syrian society...We believe that the Syrian conflict
    must be solved through a political process; the conflict must be
    `Syrianized' and also the process aimed at the solution of this
    conflict must be Syrianized.' His Holiness Aram I reiterated the
    position of `positive neutrality' when he stated, `As a community, we
    should not associate ourselves with any given regime, political
    ideology, or person, they are provisional¦we remain attached to the
    supreme interests of Syria.' The statement was quickly translated into
    Arabic in hope that opposition activists would not prejudge all
    Armenians for the sins of a few.

    The Syrian Regime's Story

    Many Armenians have understood the unleashing of jihadists onto a
    surviving Armenian village a stone's toss across the border as an
    attempt to finish what was started in 1915. Armenian fears were
    aggravated by a recent video showing militias crossing the Turkish
    border absent any Turkish border police. These fears have been
    capitalized on by Syrian state media positioning the regime as
    protector of Armenians. Pro-regime commentators have made overt
    connections between the depopulation of Kessab and the 1915 genocide,
    stating `this attack on Kassab [sic.] is a reflection of Erdogan's
    anger towards Armenia's stand against his terrorism in Syria, and a
    reminder of the 1915 massacres and the historical Turkish animosity
    towards the Armenians.' Such statements have exploited Armenian fears
    for regime support. Even a military-garbed Lebanese artist, Ali
    Barakat, known for his anthems to Hizbullah fighters quickly launched
    a music video to support the regime's campaign called `Seal Your
    Victory in Kessab.' While the song is just a variation of an earlier
    tune he wrote for the campaign in Yabrud, it attempts to harness anger
    and fear over Kessab as the regime works to repel opposition forces
    from Latakia province.

    Turkey's Story

    Armenians cannot take the blame alone for Syria's Rashomon effect, the
    Turkish press presented itself as the rescuers of Kessab's Armenians
    offering them safe haven in Turkey. Hürriyet reported on two sisters,
    Sirpuhi and Satenik Titizyan, both in their eighties who were
    `rescued' claiming `they were now in `paradise.' Escorted by
    opposition fighters into Turkey, the elderly sisters stated, `Farmers
    and officials in the Turkish town are now taking care of their
    guests.' However, a very different account appeared when the women
    were interviewed in the Armenian Istanbul-based Armenian daily Agos.
    After arriving to Vakıflı, the last remaining Armenian village in
    Turkey in the Musa Dagh Mountains'a place known for its heroic
    resistance against deportation during the Armenian Genocide'journalist
    Lora Baytar reported that `ten bearded men entered and ransacked their
    home, saying that they were told not to be frightened and that the men
    were speaking Turkish, not Arabic. The two women reported that they
    were deported to the Turkish border, even though they told the men
    that they wanted to leave for the Syrian port city of Latakia.' As for
    their reaction to living in Turkey, rather than refer to it as
    `paradise' the women offered something less praising saying that `they
    needed to go `somewhere' because nobody was left there (in Kessab).'
    The women then compared relocation to Turkey to a morsel of bread. `If
    there is only one morsel of bread left in the entire world, we will
    eat that too.'

    Instead of a story of rescue Agos told one of two women forcibly
    removed from Syria wherein Turkish-speaking militants played the role
    of perpetrator. In both accounts, the women related handing over their
    house keys to `bearded men' while Agos offered details about the
    ransacking of their home in Kessab. When the Agos interview was
    reprinted in yet another venue, Aydınlık, the interview was reframed
    as `Syrian Armenians Declare War Crimes of ErdoÄ?an' sending a clear
    message, from its perspective, of who was to blame for the
    depopulating of Kessab.

    While #SaveKessab intended to draw attention to the dramatic
    depopulation of Kesab and Turkey's role in the event, as a social
    media campaign, it fell prey to `hoaxes' that typically spread viral
    on the internet'think Bonzai Kitten. Making Kardashian the fall girl
    for misinforming the public about Kessab merely highlighted the way in
    which celebrities rather than experts are looked to as purveyors of
    knowledge in an environment of anti-intellectualism. After all, the
    mainstream media quoted Twitter, Facebook pages of pro-opposition
    activists, lobbyists, and celebrities in search of the Kessab story
    which is hardly rigorous journalism.

    While the internet has its own ability to produce gullible consumers,
    history shows there is a reason why such fears are easily stoked
    within the Armenian community. Images of sectarian murder have spread
    virally on state and social media paralyzing minority communities into
    submission to not only the Asad regime but to political interests more
    broadly. Turkey also got involved in the game'as did opposition
    activists'to dismiss sectarian concerns that were chalked up to mere
    hype. There was little effort to acknowledge what the loss of Kessab
    meant to the Armenian community and why its capture would produce such
    internet hysteria. The state sought to capitalize on the outrage over
    Kessab as it launches its campaign against opposition forces in
    Latakia province. Kessab is yet another manifestation of the Syria
    conflict's Rashomon effect as each faction works to produce their own
    reality to gain support amid a hopeless political stalemate.

    The Lambs of Kessab: A Requiem

    Kessab is a place where Syria's Armenians including myself summered
    for the celebration of the Virgin Mary during the heady days of
    August. I remember the lines of lambs outside a small chapel in a
    field in one of Kessab's villages where people assembled for the
    sacrifices to the Virgin. Forty slaughtered lambs were converted into
    ten cauldrons of piping lamb and wheat porridge called `harisa' cooked
    over open wood fires and spooned out to the community. The long nights
    of celebration until daylight infused with nostalgia'a word that
    unites the Greek word for `homecoming' with that of `pain''the longing
    for village life in Turkey lost to a crippling diaspora. Centered on
    the church, the heart of the summer ritual was the blessing of the
    grapes performed by the Armenian Archbishop of Aleppo. The grapes were
    symbolically harvested by the Archbishop while Kessab's Armenians
    returned to their homes to cut their own vines after the ceremony.

    During my last visit to Kessab during the celebration of St. Mary, we
    danced to the cool breeze late night in the fields near blood-stained
    front steps of the church where lambs were slaughtered earlier that
    day. Bits of a tail, tufts of wool, and pools of blood were left to
    soak into the soil before the Virgin's chapel in a field near Kesab's
    Eskuren village. The zurna, a double-reed wind instrument, hummed a
    familiar tune and the drum kept us on step as Armenians from all parts
    of Syria gathered hands, or more specifically pinkies, in a circle
    dance. Over the last decade, Kessab was noticeably overrun by Saudi
    tourists who summered there to escape the summer heat in the Gulf. We
    all noticed the two Saudi men, visibly without their families'a sign
    they thought the gathering inappropriate for loved ones'appear in the
    circle to dance with us. One man kept bullying the zurna player to
    play debka, an Arabic circle dance with a very different beat. Even
    though the instrument was familiar to the man, the rhythm, an Armenian
    tamzara, was completely foreign to him. The musicians refused to
    comply and kept playing Armenian tunes anyway.

    I think about that episode today, the power dynamics laid bare in the
    exchange that seem more meaningful today: the failure on the part of
    the Armenian musician to accommodate the demands of outsiders
    suggesting he thought they should not be there, and the inability of
    the Saudi men to understand just what they were witnessing beside the
    church that night. For both parties, there was a failure to recognize
    the other. To the Armenians, the men were invaders and a threat to
    ritual. To the Saudi men, we were just a group of Armenians dancing in
    a field in Kessab. But to us, Kessab held intangible value as an
    artifact from a medieval Armenian kingdom that once ruled over this
    place and memory of village life before the great catastrophe that we
    reenacted every August.

    http://voxpop.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/17442/

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