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Kurkjian Research into Gesaria Photo Brings Genocide into Focus

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  • Kurkjian Research into Gesaria Photo Brings Genocide into Focus

    Kurkjian Research into Gesaria Photo Brings Genocide into Focus

    COMMUNITY | MAY 2, 2014 11:48 PM
    ________________________________

    By Alin K. Gregorian
    Mirror-Spectator Staff


    BELMONT, Mass. ' A single photo for journalist Stephen Kurkjian has
    been the means to tie together the shredded history of martyred
    Armenians on their ancestral lands, whose descendants, as a result of
    the Armenian Genocide, are scattered around the globe now.

    Kurkjian stumbled upon a photo taken in Gesaria (Kayseri) of Armenian
    men who had been found guilty by Ottoman military courts on a variety
    of trumped-up charges. It is the fate of those 50-odd men in the photo
    that sums up neatly the lives shattered by the Genocide.

    `Our story was made real by this photo,' Kurkjian said.

    The photograph is unique in showing a group of identified men rounded
    up by the authorities, many of whose fates are known.

    Speaking at the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research
    (NAASR) on April 23, Kurkjian noted the message of condolence offered
    by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan that day, calling on
    him to `give those of us to whom he offers condolences for the killing
    of our grandparents, free passage to the villages of our birthrights
    for proper Armenian services for those who were killed.'

    Kurkjian has spent about a decade researching the Gesaria photo,
    finding out the fate of the men as well as contacting descendants.

    `It was not an easy story to do,' he said, as every name led to
    `death, deprivation, defeat and denial.'

    He added, `I keep things at an arm's length when dealing with
    tragedy,' but the distance evaporated quickly when doing this very
    special story, as his own family hails from Gesaria.

    Kurkjian spoke about how Belmont resident Elaine Patapanian contacted
    him about the photo, as her grandfather, Varteres Armenyan, was in it.

    `I spent a lot of time trying to find the secrets behind this
    photograph,' he said, crediting NAASR's Marc Mamigonian for helping
    steer him right as well as Arpie Davis for providing translations.
    Patapanian's grandfather been taken to prison in July 1915 and then on
    to a long march outside Gesaria, toward Sivas. In a final letter to
    his wife, realizing that he should expect the worst, he had written,
    `Kiss my children's eyes for me.'

    It was this phrase that caught Kurkjian's imagination and would not
    release him. `Perhaps it was because I had recently become a
    grandfather but the connection that it made for me was real. And I
    felt perhaps a sense of obligation to tell their story, of what had
    happened to them,' he explained.

    Armenyan was one of 1,100 Armenian men in Gesaria who were tried by a
    military court from mid to late May 1915. In June, the hangings began.
    Most were charged with possession of weapons or membership in one of
    two banned Armenian political parties, the Hunchagian and the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation.

    Interestingly, of all those men, only two were acquitted and one was
    Armenyan. But acquittal did not mean freedom; it meant a death march.

    All in all, of the 1,100 men arrested in Gesaria during this period,
    900 were either hanged or killed during marches.

    Kurkjian explained that this specific photo kept popping up, in a
    Damascus wall calendar. He found the photo also in the archives of
    Vahan Elmayan who was a witness to the killings in Gesaria and wrote
    an account of it in 1920 in an Armenian newspaper published in
    Chicago, called Yeritasard Hayastan. Elmayan also wrote of the events
    in Gesaria in 1965 in a large volume written in Armenian whose title,
    loosely translated, is Fifty Years Since the Great Catastrophe.

    Kurkjian said that his search for answers showed that despite the
    tremendous work of people like Vahakn Dadrian, Taner Akçam and
    Mamigonian, there is still not a `cohesive archive that contains the
    relevant documents that would answer definitively the questions of
    what happened here, and why.'

    He added, `Except for Armenia, no other government has ever supported
    through manpower or finances a comprehensive research effort, like we
    saw with the Nuremberg Trials and related investigations on how the
    Holocaust took place, and who was responsible.'

    The photo, he noted, had survived because of the efforts of Haratoun
    Nakashian, and his daughter, Alice, who had preserved his papers and
    shared them with Kurkjian, helping him piece together much of their
    story.

    Kurkjian said that in Gesaria, Salih Zeki, a regional executive, was
    filled with exceptional bloodlust toward Armenians. An explosion at
    the home of an Armenian gave him the pretext to round up all the
    Armenian men in the district. After the men were arrested and/or
    killed immediately, he went after the women, children and the elderly
    from Gesaria, forcing them on a long death march into the desert. The
    photo, he said, was taken in order for Zeki to ingratiate himself with
    the Enver, Talaat and Cemal triumvirate to prove his zeal in the
    extermination efforts.

    `The Armenian Genocide shredded the tenuous tissue that bonds one
    person to another, families together. With so many villages destroyed
    and people killed, who your neighbor was or who may have been related
    to you by blood or marriage has been lost for most Armenians alive
    today. Certainly lost is the feeling of attachment to the land.
    Because of Turkey's refusal to acknowledge the genocide or apologize
    for what took place, many of the 10 million Armenians in the worldwide
    diaspora are reluctant to go back and visit the villages of their
    ancestors,' Kurkjian said.

    Kurkjian is an acclaimed journalist formerly with the Boston Globe. He
    has won three Pulitzer Prizes for his investigative work with the
    Globe. He is also a NAASR board member.

    - See more at: http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2014/05/02/kurkjian-research-into-gesaria-photo-brings-genocide-into-focus/#sthash.kihRdNfq.dpuf

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