Matthew Maroot
Staff Writer
"As
Armenians, whether we like it or not, if we donít pursue this [the true
history of the Armenians] the American Government certainly wonít and the
Turkish Government will write something counter-factual about it and we
will be erased from history. History does not write itself."
In this, the third lecture in the Armenian Studies Program's Fall Lecture
Series, Ara Sarafian succinctly defined a key issue facing Armenians and
Armenian scholars alike. Sarafian, a native of Cyprus currently lives
in London and is touring the United States speaking about the publication
of the book Days of Tragedy in Armenia: Personal Experiences in
Harpoot, 1915-1917 by Henry H. Riggs.
Ara Sarafian received his M.A. in History from the University of Michigan
at Ann Arbor and is currently a Ph.D. Candidate. His areas of specialty
in Armenian interest include, the History of Armenia and the Armenian Diaspora
in the 19th and 20th centuries. Sarafian has conducted extensive
archival research in various archives throughout the world including the
Armenian Historical Archives in Yerevan, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Archives in Boston, and the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., as
well as the Prime Ministry Archives in Istanbul.
Ara Sarafian is a co-founder of the new Gomidas Institute, a non-profit
academic organization dedicated to modern and contemporary Armenian Studies
which provides a forum for active scholars to pursue research and publication.
As part of his work with the Gomidas Institute, Sarafian serves as co-editor
of the Armenian Forum, a journal of contemporary affairs.
Sarafian edited the recently published work, Days of Tragedy in Armenia:
Personal Experiences in Harpoot, 1915-1917. This work was originally
written by the Reverend Henry H. Riggs, an American missionary in Armenia.
According to Sarafian, this is probably the most detailed local history
of the Armenian Genocide written in the English language. Reverend
Riggs prepared this work as a manuscript detailing his eyewitness account
of the events of 1915-1917 and submitted it to a United States Government
Commission investigating various aspects of World War I, including the
destruction of Armenian Communities in the Ottoman Empire. But it
wasn't until April of 1997 that this work was published as a book.
Ara Sarafian holds a personal interest in the communal life of Armenians
living before the Genocide in the region of Kharpert. He has traveled
extensively throughout the area of Kharpert and describes it as a beautiful
part of the world which is very rich in agriculture. The focus of
this lecture was on Kharpert as a central theatre of the Armenian Genocide.
Because of Kharpertís central location it presents a very good case study
of the destruction of the Armenian communities during the Genocide.
As well, Armenian caravans also passed through here en route to the deserts
of Syria. A reference to Kharpert may describe neighboring villages,
the Kharpert Plain or the town itself. At the time of the Genocide,
35-40% of the population was Armenian with the remainder being Kurdish
or Turkish. According to Sarafian, today this region is composed
of approximately 80% Kurds and 20% Turks. In 1915, 40,000 Armenians
once inhabited this area.
There were many Americans living in Kharpert up until the start of World
War I. An American colony of Protestants who sought to evangelize
the Armenians was established after the 1850's. The Reverend Henry
H. Riggs was a third generation American involved with the Armenians.
Riggs' own father was born in Turkey. Riggs who spoke Armenian as
well as Kurdish was part of an American population of approximately one
to two dozen families living in the region at the time of the Genocide.
From the 1890's, the United States Government State Department had a Consulate
in Kharpert which was abandoned in 1917 with the onset of World War I.
While the issue of the Armenian Genocide served as the main focus of this
lecture, Ara Sarafian made a point of profound significance. "The
reason we are here," states Sarafian, "is because we were forced from our
land." And while this was the experience of our grandparentís generation,
it led to the creation of a Diaspora in which we live today. Sarafian
also stressed the importance of recognizing the Armenian Genocide on a
documentary level. Because the Genocide is still denied, it is up
to us as Armenians to use primary sources, such as that of Henry H. Riggs,
to cite it's very occurrence.