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‘Operation Nemesis: The Assassination Plot That Avenged the Armenian Genocide’ – The Washington Times

May 13, 2015 By administrator

nemesis.thumbVengeance is born when justice dies. “Operation Nemesis” is the gripping tale of how a small, ruthlessly determined group of Armenians hunted down the architects of the Ottoman Empire’s World War I program of organized mass murder, specifically intended to eliminate a people, the Armenians, who had lived in Anatolia and other parts of the Ottoman Empire for thousands of years.

Many governments, spiritual leaders (including the current pope), and most independent historians and legal analysts agree that what began in Istanbul a century ago on April 24, 1915, was the first modern genocide. By the time it was over, best estimates are that 1 million Ottoman Armenians had been killed, starved or driven to their deaths — as many women and children as able-bodied men. Trials in Istanbul immediately after World War I convicted and condemned to death in absentia key members of the responsible Young Turk leadership, but political upheaval erupted before most sentences could be carried out. While Kemal Ataturk, founder of the modern Turkish republic, personally denounced the mass murder of Armenians as “a shameful act,” his and other successor governments never officially acknowledged what happened. In the perilous early days of the Turkish republic — a poor, war-ravaged country — denial was understandable if not justifiable. The first and only priority was to establish a cohesive Turkish identity to replace the conflicted racial and religious melange that was the Ottoman Empire.

This meant creating a cadre of Muslim Turkish doctors, engineers, artists, intellectuals, architects, bankers and entrepreneurs to replace the Christian Armenians, Greeks and other minorities who had dominated those fields throughout the Ottoman centuries. It also meant avoiding restoration of valuable farmland, commercial property and seized or looted personal wealth to the families of murdered or exiled Armenians at a time when the Turkish economy was struggling to survive. This, in turn, led to rewriting history and demolishing ancient churches and other traces of Armenian civilization that had stood for centuries before the first Turks set foot in Anatolia.

Today, Turkey is a prosperous regional superpower, but its government is still in deep denial. It is as if every postwar German government, from Konrad Adenauer to Angela Merkel, had denied the existence of Nazi atrocities and passed laws banning the discussion of Hitler’s crimes against humanity. Of course, no analogies are perfect. Even as the Young Turk leadership organized and carried out its program of mass extermination, a few Christian Armenians were exempted. A great uncle of mine, a palace architect to the sultan, was already serving as an Ottoman engineer officer when the mass murders — unbeknownst to him — began. His wife, as a senior officer’s spouse, was spared. Uncle Mihran ended up a British POW on the Arab front and would build a new life — and a distinguished architectural career — in America. To his dying day, he had nothing but respect for Kemal Ataturk as a brilliant soldier and nation-builder. Obviously, you wouldn’t have found any Jewish officers in senior German ranks under the Third Reich, and wives of purged Jewish officers would probably have perished in concentration camps.

But that hardly alters the big picture. The mass murders of defenseless Armenian civilians, deportations, abductions of children, unrecompensed confiscation of possessions, and deliberate failure to provide food or medical treatment to Armenian death marchers clearly qualify as genocide. Small wonder then, that in the absence of justice in the early 1920s, a handful of Armenian conspirators took the law into their own hands and hunted down several of the convicted mass murderers living comfortably in cities like Berlin. Sadly, theirs is a story with more villains and victims than heroes. In “Operation Nemesis,” Eric Bogosian, a successful playwright and novelist, portrays the revenge killers warts and all; they included at least one neurotic and one braggart who clearly enjoyed his work a little too much. Worse was to follow. As late as the 1980s, a handful of radical Armenian nationalists with Middle East terrorist links carried out murders of innocent Turkish diplomats, possibly with encouragement from behind the Iron Curtain.

Meanwhile, the bloody shirt of Talaat Pasha, one of the architects of the Armenian genocide — a man who gloated about it and even pressured U.S. Ambassador Henry Morgenthau to turn over any American life insurance benefits paid on the deaths of his victims — was placed on display at the Turkish Army Museum inIstanbul as evidence of Armenian atrocities against Turks; the equivalent would be a contemporary German museum displaying clothing worn by Adolf Eichmann at his execution as evidence of Jewish atrocities against Germans.
Justice has yet to replace revenge, but growing numbers of Turks are seeking — and speaking — the truth, even at the risk of jail. When Hrant Dink, a courageous Turkish-Armenian journalist I was privileged to know, was gunned down by an extreme Turkish nationalist in front of his Istanbul office in 2007, 200,000 mourners, overwhelmingly Muslim Turks, filled the streets carrying signs declaring “We Are All Hrant Dink” and “We Are All Armenians.” What better reminder that the sense of justice is often stronger in ordinary citizens than in politicians?

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: arminian, book, Genocide, Nemesis, operation

Output of the collective book “Genocide of Armenians. A century of research (1915-2015)

May 8, 2015 By administrator

arton111534-240x369The book “The Armenian Genocide. A century of research (1915-2015), “a collective work that integrates dozens of texts related to the Armenian Genocide, signed by dozens of historians including Yves Ternon Annette Becker, Hamit Bozarslan, Vincent Duclert, Gaïdz Minassian, Claire Mouradian , Michael and Raymond Kevorkian Nichanian. “The genocide of Armenians. A century of research (1915-2015) “published in late March by Armand Colin (368 pages, 23 €) with the support of the Mission Centenary, was published on the occasion of the holding in Paris from 25 to 28 March 2015 , the international conference “The Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire in the Great War. 1915-2015: one hundred years of research. “ This important book to learn about advanced research on genocide, brings together scientific contributions presented at the Sorbonne, in the Memorial of the Shoah, in the School of Higher Studies in Social Sciences and the National Library of France. This conference introduced by the President of the Republic is organized by the International Scientific Council for the study of the Armenian Genocide (CSI) chaired by Yves Ternon with the support of the Mission’s centennial in 2015 and many academic institutions.

“A century after the outbreak in Constantinople on 24 April 1915, the extermination of Ottoman Armenians by the Unionist government, international research in this publication demonstrates the extent of scientific knowledge on the first contemporary genocide. This book is part of the motion studies of genocide, in full development in France and in the world. The 1915 centenary marks a turning point in the public resonance of the highest scientific knowledge and the affirmation of international awareness of genocide prevention. “Writes the editor. The book should take place in all the libraries of all those interested in news of the Armenian Genocide.

- “The genocide of Armenians. A century of research (1915-2015) “(Armand Colin, 368 pages, € 23 March 2015).

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, book, Genocide

Origins: Discovery by Len Wicks Armenian genocide BOOK

May 3, 2015 By administrator

Origins-decovery200x304

Origins: Discovery by Len Wicks

Christian Genocide

The Christian Genocide of Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks took place from 1913 until 1925, resulting in the deaths of more than two million people. Estimates of the tragedy place the death tolls at:
1.2 – 1.5 million during the Armenian Genocide (1915-1923);
275,000 – 400,000 during the Assyrian Genocide (1914-1918 and 1922-1925); and
750,000 – 900,000 during the Greek Genocide (1913-1923).

Visit Len Wicks site for more in detail Information  http://originsdiscovery.com/genocide.html

The Christian Genocide took place at a time of incessant wars during the last years of the Ottoman Empire, and the emergence of Turkey after World War I.

Christian missionaries (notably, German Johannes Lepsius and American Clarence Ussher), German military officers such as Otto Liman von Sanders and ambassadors like American Henry Morgenthau and Germans Hans von Wangenheim and Paul Wolff Metternich witnessed and reported the Armenian Genocide as a campaign of race extermination, but Germany and the world did nothing to stop it. Therefore Germany stood by during both World War I
and World War II (the Holocaust) and were complicit in not one, but two genocides.

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Discovery, Genocide, Origins

Armenian genocide: the horror laid bare, Seuil 510 page

April 11, 2015 By administrator

By Jean Sevillia,

PHO04070056-9ccb-11e4-88a9-e18acfe53833-805x453

Seuil, 510 p., 30 €.

1915-2015: The centenary of the Armenian genocide spilled much ink. Bringing truthful testimony and reports of time, specialists take us into the heart of a bloody massacre.

April 24, 1915, 600 Armenian notables were killed in Constantinople. This massacre gave the signal for a massacre that would cost lives, in just over a year, to almost 1.3 million people in Asia Minor, or two-thirds of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.

Between 1894 and 1896, from 200,000 to 250,000 Armenians, Ottoman subjects had already been killed, and a million other dispossessed and driven from their land. In 1909, the Young Turks seized power and replaced the Sultan Abdul Hamid I. Mohamed V, which accepted the constitutional dictatorship of the nationalists. Or the Young Turks advocated a policy based on ethnic and cultural homogeneity of Turkey, which implied the removal of Christian minorities. As of April 1909, 30,000 Armenians were killed in Cilicia. In 1914, the Ottomans entered the war on the side of the Central Powers and the first failures of the Turkish army against the Russians provide the trigger of extermination that had been prepared and planned, including the deportation of the populations concerned. Report lefigaro.fr

The book presents the facts, region by region, from contemporary documents. It is a succession of horrors.

On the occasion of the centenary of the Armenian Genocide, many books published in 2015. He just released two specialists, Raymond Kevorkian and Yves Ternon is a real amount. Organized chronologically, the book presents the facts, region by region, from contemporary documents: orders or reports of officers or officials Ottoman witness accounts, including Western religious settled in Turkey, diplomats, reports or foreign journalists. It is a succession of horrors. After the fall of the Young Turks in October 1918, a Turkish captain, enraged against his own country, will discuss “thousands of little children crushed against the walls and stones, girls that are strangling after being raped, men and women whose number reached hundreds of thousands slaughtered in the sword and who, under the blows of the ax, fill the pits and wells. “

Many states have recognized the responsibility of their rulers then in mass crimes committed in the twentieth century. So when Turkey she will refuse to do so?

Memorial of the Armenian Genocide, Raymond H. Kevorkian and Yves Ternon, Seuil, 510 p., 30 €.

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: bare, horror, laid, Sauil

March 26 of the book “Armenia in Heart of Memory” Released Helen Kosséian-Bairamian

March 20, 2015 By administrator

arton109264-307x475In the series of many books that come out in the year of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, note the release on March 26 of the book “The Armenia Heart of Memory” Helen Kosséian-Bairamian. A book that will be released Editions du Rocher (212 pages € 17.90 at Amazon).

Presentation of the book by the publisher:

- “On Saturday 24 April 1915, in Constantinople, 600 Armenian notables are arrested and thrown on the roads of deportation. Thus began the first genocide of the twentieth century. 1.5 million Armenians perished, mainly on their historical lands of Eastern Anatolia. Among those who survived, some will win the ephemeral First Republic of Armenia. Dropped politically encircled militarily, economically strangled, she finally become one of the republics of the Soviet Union. D Armenians win in 1921 for greener shores. Landed in Marseilles, they will constitute a docile workforce ie in France of postwar period. Lorsqu’éclatera and World War II, most of them will not hesitate to fight the occupier, arms in hand, whether in France, in the ranks of the Red Army or elsewhere. C is then that after a long period of silence, shouts s rise in Yerevan April 24, 1965: “Our Land! Justice! Solve the Armenian Question! “Fifty years after the Apocalypse, the residents of the Armenian capital begin the fight for Genocide recognition by States and by the heir to the Ottoman Empire, Turkey. A century later, the author of Armenian origin, delves into the past of Armenia and the painful memories. A test to understand the history and memory of this country, as the debate around the memory of the genocide was much written in France. »

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: Armenia, book, Heart, memory

The book “1915 Armenian Genocide” Hasan Cemal in French released in bookstores on March 19

March 18, 2015 By administrator

arton109213-151x229The best-selling book “Armenian Genocide in 1915,” the Turkish journalist Hasan Cemal, grand son of Cemal (Cemal) Pasha one of three Young Turk leaders who committed the genocide of the Armenians has been translated into French notify us Armenian newspaper “Agos” in Istanbul. It will be released tomorrow, 19 March bookstore editions Ordinaries Prairies with the title “1915 Armenian genocide” (288 pages, 23 €). Hasan Cemal’s book appeared in Turkish in 2012 to “Everest” editions. Last year it was translated into Armenian and presented in Yerevan by the author. With a controversy during the presentation in Armenia. The Armenian translation had been amputated some passages relating to criticism of the author on the Armenian terrorism and the war of liberation of Karabakh.

Below is the summary of French book by the editor:
- “The deportation and massacre of Armenians in 1915, the question of their recognition and debate about the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, this time of the First World War when the imperial lands have undergone joint attacks by the allies and tsarist Russia have continued to agitate Turkey since its foundation. In 2005, contradictory versions of history face when a group of Turkish intellectuals stands for the recognition of the genocide. Among them, Hasan Cemal, grand-son of the last Minister of Marine and governor of Syria in 1916-1918, Jemal Pasha (1872-1922), considered one of the instigators of the genocide. He chose to recount here the individual and family experience. This book, which caused a stir in Turkey, also traces the journey of a man of the left, which Yerevan in the United States via France, in the Armenian diaspora, wants to reach out and pay tribute to his friend Hrant Dink, the journalist behind the process, who was assassinated in 2007. A key test in a process he inaugurated a decade ago and who intends to consider the Armenian part of the people of Turkey. “

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, book, France, Hasan Cemal

The islamized Armenians of Der Zor & Syria

March 14, 2015 By administrator

By Bardig Kouyoumdjian,

 DEIR ES ZOR (French) Paperback – Aug 16 2006 by CHRISTINE SIMEONE (Author)


DEIR ES ZOR (French) Paperback – Aug 16 2006 by CHRISTINE SIMEONE (Author)

In 2001 photographer Bardig Kouyoumdjian returned to the Syrian desert, where hundreds of thousands of Ottoman Armenians found their final destination. During their deportation a few of the young men and women were lucky and survived the ordeal, defeating both starvation and disease; some others even managed to escape the cruel massacres. However, the great majority perished. This desert was literally the end of the road; the threshold to the world of the dead.

Bardig made an unparalleled journey to these forgotten places, the centers of deportation in Aleppo, Meskene, Rakka, and Deir-Zor. He also managed to find the main sites of the massacres at Shaddade, Markade, Ras-ul-Ain or Suwar. These lands carry, ninety years later on, the remains of the dead and the offspring of those who survived.

Bardig Kouyoumdjian is a photographer based in Paris. He is the grandchild of a survivor of the Armenian Genocide.

The following is an excerpt from the book ”Deir Zor – on the trail of The Armenian Genocide 1915” by  Bardig Kouyoumdjian and Christine Simeone (translated by Mckay Aynesworth). This is the story of the offsprings of those armenians who converted to islam to escape death and torture.

* * *

… Many children of the desert saw their fate altered as a result of this policy : their lives diverted, they were saved so as better to deny the existence of their people. Like the lines on a hand, the stories of these children cross and collide, disappearing into the shadows of a hollow only to reappear in the light of a future that is cobbled together at the whim of circumstance. Who will remain Armenian, who will become Muslim, who will die, who will live, who will forget, who will remember.

Arouch Moutafian was one of those little Armenians who became de facto nomads. After the murder of her husband, Anna Moutafian left Garmoush with her mother, her sister, and her two sons, Arouch and Hagop, walking in the autumn cold all the way to Rakka. Her mother watched over the family while the children slept, for fear they might be taken. Two weeks after their arrival in Rakka, Anna and her family were led to Suwar. Their feet swollen, waking each morning under a layer of frost, the Moutafians advanced under the blows of gendarmes. Anna finally gave her son Arouch to a Bedouin who was looking for a child to adopt. Mad, cruel hope that she might save her younger son by giving away the older, believing that he would have a better chance of surviving without her. When her group reached Ain Khazel, between Mosul and Telahfeli, the Turkish soldiers abandoned the exhausted deportees there, feeling their mission was accomplished. Death was supposed to finish the job, naturally, but it did not have time to do its work with the Moutafians.

Anna and her sister followed some men who had come from the Sinjar region in the Jezira plain, where the Turkish and Iraqi Kurdistan territories overlap. They were looking for two servants for the head of their Kurdish village. During this time Arouch was growing up with the Mrech-el-Khabour in the Djbour tribe, calling himself Khalaf from then on. Growing up, life was hard; Khalaf almost died of dysentery, thrown into a hole by his adoptive mother. He had to fight to eat. The day the sheik killed a camel, the forty adults in the family were able to indulge themselves, but the children had to wait until they could retrieve the bones to gnaw on. Two years later, by a chance encounter, Anna learned that Arouch was indeed alive. The sheik demanded an exorbitant price, ten pieces of Ottoman gold, in exchange for the boy. Anna waited until the armistice to rescue him with the help of some English soldiers. Arouch-Khalaf once again saw his little brother Hagop. One spoke Arabic and the other Kurdish, one was accustomed to a sedentary life, the other, a nomad, was nostalgic for life in a tent. The family then went to live for another four years in Garmoush, after which the Turks chased them out once and for all. I photographed the three sons of Hagop at Deir-Zor. As for Arouch, the family is reticent about his fate. Married to a Christian Arab, he is no longer in Deir-Zor, and that is all I shall know about him.

BadrasI also met a man whose life history definitively changed course in the nomads’ tents. Born Hagop Dogramadjian at the beginning of the twentieth century, he died with the name Abdallah Talal nearly a century later in the vicinity of Tel Abiad near the Turkish border. Hagop remembered that his mother had abandoned him. She had probably hoped to save him by giving him to a Bedouin before marrying a sheik, whom she left when the armistice was declared. Years later she underwent a search to find her son Hagop again; she recognized him thanks to a birthmark on his back. Hagop-Abdallah, owning land and animals, was a successful Bedouin in one of the most barren places in that desert region. One of his sons was raised as an Armenian in Aleppo by Hagop’s mother. I saw a tear roll down his face, a drop of the past coming back to him, and carrying away with it all the words that could have informed me about his childhood. Here, the villages dot the roads, with their little houses every few kilometers. The families have one building for the women and another for receiving visitors. One enters a large rectangular room where the ground is covered by a khsir serving as a mat. With one’s back against the wall, seated on the ground Roman-style or with one’s legs crossed, on long woolen rugs that line the edges of the main room, one savors the tea that the women have placed at the entrance before running off. The women, a scarf over their heads, covered down to their ankles, live apart. One must hurry to photograph them, permission is always an exception, they owe this to an “Armenian” come from afar. The granddaughter of Ali Vannes, twenty-two years old, confided in me that she felt Armenian and especially different when she strolled with her girlfriends along main street of the village of Hawayej Diab. Different and proud to have Armenian blood. The grandchildren of Ali Vannes asked me for books to learn about the history of their grandfather and that of Armenia. This man, born Hovannes, became Ali when he was taken in by the sheik Assad el Bachir, and Vannes is the Arabic pronunciation of his Armenian given name. I am the first Armenian to have visited this family since the 1950s.

In Marat, near Deir-Zor, the Wafik Abbouds are well known as the descendants of Serpouhie, a little girl who survived the genocide. Serpouhie’s family was deported from western Turkey. Having left from Tekirdagh, her family arrived in Deir-Zor stripped of all their belongings. Serpouhie’s mother died there. Her father, who had been employed as a gravedigger in Meskene, ended his journey as a deportee with his two sons in Markade, where they were finished off. Serpouhie, a Christian, was taken in by a family of Bedouins and set up house with a Muslim. Her son Abdel Samed Wafik Abboud knows that he is the child of a Christian turned Muslim. Upon her death in 1998, he gathered together the two kilos of gold that she owned to have a mosque built in her memory. The locals call it the mosque of Um Serbille (Serpouhie Mayrig in Armenian; that is, Mother Serpouhie).

I asked Abdel if he had any objects to show me. He took out a photo of his parents and made me the priceless gift of Serpouhie’s snuffbox. “This snuffbox contains the breath of my mother,” he said, “and I would like for it to return to an Armenian family.” I was not expecting this. These people were giving me a precious treasure, a part of themselves. Abdel feels Armenian, he knows his origins, he is married to an Armenian, and no one can take away the fact that his mother is Armenian. Abdel’s son says, “I too am Armenian,” but he knows that he has become the prisoner of an identity that is foreign to his origins, too far removed from the Armenians living in town. One day Mazen, Serpouhie’s great-grandson, came up to me to tug on my sleeve and say, “Listen, I also am Armenian, and not just half, because my mother is also Armenian.” Several times I ran across Arabs who were proud to announce an Armenianness that one could not guess from their daily lives, happy to encounter at last “an uncle,” a way of clinging to a branch of a people they would like to know more about. In this there is neither provocation nor derision nor confusion, but, doubtless, a need to signal a break in the thread of history. Armenian, Bedouin, Ali, Hagop, Abdallah, the names become tangles, the paths become confused; who are the hybrids, descendants of the planet of horror and the barbarism so dear to humanity? Bedouins of today, they know they were Armenians yesterday; Muslims bending before Allah, they once joined their hands and raised their eyes to heaven to beg Christ’s mercy, and in this unchanging world of nomadism, the sons of Allah are suspicious of them, and the sons of Christ have abandoned them. These children of Christians turned Muslim are accepted neither by the Bedouins who are native to the desert nor by the Armenians who have preserved their Christian heritage.

Today Armenians and Arabs pay homage to the Bedouins who “saved the lives” of those children, even organizing thank-you gatherings. Life after the genocide had to be put in quotation marks in order to smooth over the stumbling blocks of history on these arid plains. Survivors of the genocide such as Hagop-Abdallah were twenty years old in the 1930s when the searches for survivors in the villages around Deir-Zor ceased. Being Armenian no longer had much meaning for them, and leaving the Bedouins would have plunged them once more into the unknown. Did they ever have a chance to denounce, debate, or interrogate someone about what happened to their relatives? What was said about the ambiguity of the situation in these families who chanced to take them in, whether to protect them or to use them? Did these children have the possibility of repeating their own history to themselves, for themselves, deep down inside? Very often they know nothing of their origins, their name, their birthday, or their parentage. Their children and grandchildren are trying to take up the thread again.

When Ait Badras saw me arrive one day in June 2002, he pointed his finger at me and said, “You, you abandoned us in the desert.” He knew that I was looking for Armenians and had agreed to receive me, along with the priest of Deir-Zor. Ait is Armenian; both his father and his mother were Armenian. Regarding his mother Khatoum, he knows little, just that his parents entrusted him to some Bedouins, beseeching them to teach him to eat with the spoon they gave him. Ait belongs to that generation of Armenian children whom the nomads tried to marry to each other. The Badras family, with its nine sons and daughters, lives in a stone house in a little village neighboring Deir-Zor, near Hatla, in a rather verdant but dusty landscape. Wheat fields lie next to pastures for sheep, whose wool piles up in enormous jute bags near the houses. Ait’s daughter studies at the university in Deir-Zor, and at the time of our meeting, she was doing research on her family. The Badras family knows almost nothing about the genocide, just that “they” were adopted. Strange expression, this idea of adoption as an act of destiny applied to some unknown and ill defined “they,” as if all their descendants felt thus adopted, attached by chance to a family and to an Arabic way of life. Ait remembers only two words in Armenian, which his father Bedros Mgrditch David Tchaouchian must have taught him, “hats” (bread) and “tchour” (water). He repeated these two words for me like a child that is proud of showing off what he has just learned, at the same time hoping he is not getting it wrong. Ait the Muslim feels cut off from a kindred people whom he does not know in any case. “Why can’t you accept us as Muslim Armenians, can’t there be Muslim Armenians?” he asked me in desperation. He wants to be recognized for what he is today, just as his father was before. I answered that I did accept him as he was, and he retorted, “Religion, you know, is personal, and I am truly Armenian.”

Ait Badras’s daughter is determined to learn Armenian, and her son dreams of pursuing his studies in Armenia. I wondered why the Armenian community of Deir-Zor did nothing to pass on its culture to families with the same origins. The priest who accompanied me quickly put the brakes to my enthusiasm. According to him, that would cause many problems with local Arab populations and would be seen as an attempt to convert Muslims to the Apostolic rite. “Anyway,” he added, “suppose a Bedouin becomes Armenian again and wants to marry an Armenian; no young woman of Deir-Zor would want him, for he would be seen as a Bedouin in the pejorative sense of the term.” These desert people do not belong anywhere.

Married to each other in the beginning, later to Arabs, today they find that the genocide’s offspring who remained Christian make no effort to cultivate relations with their Muslim brothers. Ait’s provocative remark when I arrived reveals this feeling of abandonment. Before I left he asked me to look for other Tchaouchians elsewhere. Similarly, the Mohammed Moussa Artine family, originally from Mreïhieh, walked kilometers to give me their contact information in the hope of rediscovering some relatives.

Like an abandoned child, Ait is completely in the dark as to his parents’ background. Family culture and traditions have been lost, though not by choice; he knows they existed, but he knows nothing of them, as if he had been engendered by the void. This is characteristic of those children brought up for better or for worse with the Bedouins, with no family surviving elsewhere, and for whom humanitarian organizations, as well as the good souls who got it into their heads to find young Armenians among the nomads, have arrived too late.

 

You can buy the french version of the book online from Amazon

http://www.amazon.ca/DEIR-ES-ZOR-Simeone-Christine/dp/2742755225

 

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: Armenians, book, Islamized

Carpinteria, CA. New Children’s Picture Book Celebrates Armenian Easter Traditions

February 24, 2015 By administrator

pressrelease_337721_1424469208As the world reflects on the Armenian tragedy of 1915, Pomegranate Publishing has released a new children’s picture book, Mariam’s Easter Parade, which celebrates the traditions of the Armenian culture. Written by Marianne Markarian and illustrated by Margaret Markarian Wasielewski, Mariam’s Easter Parade is a light-hearted story of young girl who might be too small to help with the Easter preparations, but she is clever enough to celebrate with her own special parade!
Carpinteria, CA, February 23, 2015 –(PR.com)– As the world reflects on the Armenian tragedy of 1915, Pomegranate Publishing has released a new children’s picture book, Mariam’s Easter Parade, which celebrates the traditions of the Armenian culture. This April marks the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide in which four million Armenian residents are estimated to have died in Ottoman Turkey.

Written by Marianne Markarian and illustrated by Margaret Markarian Wasielewski, Mariam’s Easter Parade is a light-hearted story of young girl who might be too small to help with the Easter preparations, but she is clever enough to celebrate with her own special parade!

“While it’s important to acknowledge and remember the lives lost to the genocide, it’s also important to celebrate the traditions of the Armenian culture, which continues to thrive in a diaspora that extends from the former Soviet Republic to the United States and Canada,” said publisher Marianne McCarthy.

Armenians celebrate the Easter holiday with faith, food, festivities—and egg-cracking contests! The book includes a recipe for dying Easter eggs with onion skins and instructions for the Armenian egg-cracking game.
Markarian is a second-generation Armenian-American who used her grandmother’s life in the “old country” of the Ottoman Empire as inspiration. Her first book, The Pesky Bird, was a ForeWord Book of the Year finalist.

The illustrator is an award-winning artist and member of the Cincinnati Art Club and the Woman’s Art Club of Cincinnati. Her work has been exhibited in New York, Detroit, Cincinnati, Florida, and Chicago. Her vivid pastel illustrations portray the beautiful countryside and colorful dress of the Armenian people in the early 1900s.

The book is available at Amazon.com as well as independent bookstores throughout the country. For more information, visit the company’s website at https://pomegranatepublishing.wordpress.com/.

Based in Southern California, Pomegranate Publishing is an independent publishing company that explores cultural integrity through books.

Contact Information
Pomegranate Publishing
Marianne McCarthy
805-684-9570

Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: Armenian, book, Carpinteria, Children's

The Prince in Switzerland love story book” Centuries of Armenian history and culture”

February 23, 2015 By administrator

By Wally Sarkeesian

The-Prince-in-Switzerland, By Dalita I. Alex

The-Prince-in-Switzerland,
By Dalita I. Alex

Author Dalita Alex

“A wonderful love story book, the author glides us through centuries of
Armenian history and culture. highly recommend it.”

Hrant, a young Swiss man working in finance, meets on a train a very
prominent Swiss historian, who is very much interested in his Armenian
heritage and his family’s past experiences of migration, survival and
integration. Hrant decides to further enlighten the professor about the
Armenian people’s struggle, past and present, for recognition and respect.
He belongs, on his father’s side, to a very important Armenian aristocracy,
the Bagraduni and Hetoumian dynasties that belonged to the kingdoms of
Cilicia, Armenia and Georgia during the Middle Ages. These dynasties were
the foundation, the source of his bloodline, lineage and history. Hrant is
very proud of his legacy. He eventually falls in love with a French-Armenian
girl, Sara, but their relationship is difficult, since she resides in Paris, while
he lives in Zurich. Eventually love triumphs, and Sara leaves her homeland
to marry Hrant, the Armenian Prince in Switzerland. Full of true historical
recollections, it is the love story between two people, and the love of proud
people towards their legacy. The story of faith, hope and love with all its
facets, engulfs compassion, friendship and beauty.

To Order contact the following:
Best Pearl

Dalita I. Alex
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Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: Armenian, book, culture, love, story, Switzerland

‘US Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story’ Named Book of the Month

February 20, 2015 By administrator

'Ambassador Morgenthau's Story' by Henry Morgenthau

‘Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story’ by Henry Morgenthau

YEREVAN (Armenpress)—As the centennial of the Armenian Genocide approaches, the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute in Yerevan has launched a “Book of the Month” initiative. The Museum says it will carefully select a book about the Armenian Genocide to be featured each month.

The books must be the memoirs of Armenian Genocide survivors or witnesses, research papers, or other publications of great importance. The aim of this project is to introduce readers to rare and still unknown works related to the topic in order to raise awareness of the subject and provide an in-depth knowledge about the Armenian Genocide.

The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute (AGMI) selected “Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story” to be the Book of the Month for February. These memoirs have the significance of being a unique primary source for the history of the Armenian Genocide, particularly for how it documents the unraveling of the Genocide, determined and planned by the Turkish government, and for how it identifies and explores the thoughts of the Turkish criminal regime of that time. The memoir of U.S. Ambassador Morgenthau is a monumental work indeed, where the represented facts and testimonies undeniably prove that the Armenian Genocide was planned and premeditated.

Morgenthau gives deep analysis of the situation reinforcing it by information from official sources. Moreover, he describes the process of decision-making, the intrigues of the Young Turks government, as well as introduces the reader to the German propaganda policy, which made Turkey involved in World War I. The story of Ambassador Henry Morgenthau, presented in accuracy of an eyewitness and an analyst, is an important primary source against the policy of denial in Turkish modern historiography.

“When the Turkish authorities gave the orders for these deportations, they were merely giving the death warrant to a whole race; they understood this well, and, in their conversations with me, they made no particular attempt to conceal the fact. . . I am confident that the whole history of the human race contains no such horrible episode as this. The great massacres and persecutions of the past seem almost insignificant when compared to the sufferings of the Armenian race in 1915,” Morgenthau wrote in his memoirs.

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: Ambassador-Morgenthau, armenian genocide, book, story

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