Showing posts with label #ArmenianHistory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #ArmenianHistory. Show all posts

Sunday, September 10, 2017

My Cousin Harry Meneshian

Young Harry Meneshian
A good study of Harry
I want to tell the story of my dear cousin, Harry Meneshian.  Harry passed away on August 31, 2017, after an unfortunate illness.

Harry came into our lives when my grandmother (his aunt) sponsored him to immigrate to the U.S. from Jerusalem where he was born.

It was unusual then for a 17 yr old student from Jerusalem to arrive in the U.S. to study so our local newspaper, The Fresno Bee, did an article on him dated 1957.

There were a few bumps in the road, but Harry acclimated to life in the United States.  He eventually went to the Los Angeles area where he married the love of his life, Maggie, and together they had two children.

I saw Harry on and off through the years, but the most important time was when I decided to do my family history after my mother had passed away in 1999.  I had so many unanswered questions and kicked myself for not paying attention or asking more questions when my mother was still alive.  She had tried so hard to have her families' histories written down and recorded.

Harry found out about my interest so he provided me with a family tree of the Meneshian side of our family.  That was like gold in my hands, I was so thankful.  After that, I proceeded to ask his help translating letters and notes that I found in my mother's things.

It turns out Harry spoke not only Armenian, but the nearly outdated language of Ottoman Turkish which Armenians in Turkey used but wrote in Armenian characters.  If Harry hadn't been the willing participant to translate these old documents and letters, I wouldn't know 80 percent of what I know now.  For that I will be forever thankful and grateful.

We had fun working on this history and uncovering things as we went along. It was like being in a gold mine and uncovering one nugget at a time.  Each nugget became a cause for celebration.

Harry was the nicest person that I have come to know.  I will miss him and his joyful and happy attitude that permeated his whole life.  I am sad to lose my history compatriot, but I know he is in a happy place where he belongs and I'm sure he and my mother are exchanging stories even right now.

Visiting Harry in 2006.  L-R Avedis and Anahid Titoian (Harry's sister and her husband), me, Maggie and Harry, my two daughters, Windy and Katrina.

Harry - I will see you soon enough.  Until then...

Thursday, April 21, 2016

April 24th - the Day a Nation Died


Art by Rosanne Haddad

In commemoration of the Armenian Genocide which is observed on April 24th, I am posting an excellent summary of the genocide by http://silencethelies.com/history/

Summary of the Armenian Genocide of 1915

The Genocide of the Armenians by the Turkish government during World War I represents a major tragedy of the modern age. In this the first Genocide of the 20th century, almost an entire nation was destroyed. The Armenian people were effectively eliminated from the homeland they had occupied for nearly three thousand years. This annihilation was premeditated and planned to be carried out under the cover of war.

During the night of April 23-24, 1915, Armenian political, religious, educational, and intellectual leaders in Istanbul were arrested, deported to the interior, and mercilessly put to death. Next, the Turkish government ordered the deportation of the Armenian people to “relocation centers” – actually to the barren deserts of Syria and Mesopotamia. The Armenians were driven out brutally from the length and breadth of the empire. Secrecy, surprise, deception, torture, dehumanization, rape and pillage were all a part of the process. The whole of Asia Minor was put in motion.

The greatest torment was reserved for the women and children, who were driven for months over mountains and deserts [see map], often dehumanized by being stripped naked and repeatedly preyed upon and abused. Intentionally deprived of food and water, they fell by the hundreds of thousands along the routes to the desert.

There were some survivors scattered throughout the Middle East and Transcaucasia. Thousands of them, refugees here and there, were to die of starvation, epidemics, and exposure. Even the memory of the nation was intended for obliteration. The former existence of Armenians in Turkey was denied. Maps and history were rewritten. Churches, schools, and cultural monuments were desecrated and misnamed. Small children, snatched from their parents, were renamed and farmed out to be raised as Turks. The Turks “annexed” ancestors of the area in ancient times to claim falsely, by such deception, that they inhabited this region from ancient days. A small remnant of the Armenian homeland remained devastated by war and populated largely by starving refugees, only to be subsequently overrun by the Bolshevik Red Army and incorporated into the Soviet Union for seven decades, until its breakup in 1990. The word ” genocide” had not yet been coined. Nonetheless, at the time, many governmental spokesmen and statesmen decried the mass murder of the Armenians as crimes against humanity, and murder of a nation.

Reports of the atrocities gradually came out and were eventually disseminated the world over by newspapers, journals, and eyewitness accounts. In the United States a number of prominent leaders and organizations established fundraising drives for the remnants of the “Starving Armenians”. In Europe the Allied Powers gave public notice that they would hold personally responsible all members of the Turkish government and others who had planned or participated in the massacres. Yet, within a few years, these same governments and statesmen turned away from the Armenians in total disregard of their pledges. Soon the Armenian genocide had become the “Forgotten Genocide”.

In effect, the Turkish government had succeeded in its diabolical plan to exterminate the Armenian population from what is now Turkey. The failure of the international community to remember, or to honor their promises to punish the perpetrators, or to cause Turkey to indemnify the survivors helped convince Adolph Hitler some 20 years later to carry out a similar policy of extermination against the Jews and certain other non-Aryan populations of Europe.

http://silencethelies.com/history/

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Yes! Sultan in UAE Fixing History Books






More recognition:

Interesting tidbit here on the ancient city of Julfar - now in the UAE - was founded by Armenians who were on the run from Persia during the Mongol invasion.  There is still a heavy presence of Armenians in the UAE

http://www.peopleofar.com/2014/11/11/the-city-of-ras-al-khaimah-was-founded-by-armenians/

 http://www.peopleofar.com/wp-content/uploads/ras-al-khaimah-in-the-emirates-2.jpg