Portrait of Diana Agabeg Apar taken in Yokohama,
Japan, c. 1922-1923. Photo courtesy of Lucille
Apcar, granddaughter of Diana Apcar.
By Isabel Kaprielian
with Chad Kirkorian
Note: My attempts to learn more about Diana Apcar met with total
failure, until a friend, Richard Kloian, gave me a list of her descendants
in the United States. Diana Apcar's family has graciously provided
me with very valuable information about this remarkable woman, and I am
grateful for their cooperation.
Luckily, this term, I have been working with a promising young historian,
Chad Kirkorian, who has assisted me in researching the life and ideas of
Diana Apcar. The following is a brief account of some of our findings.
I.K.
To understand the background
of the Agabeg and Apcar families, it is necessary to refer to the relocation
of Armenians from Julfa, Armenia, to New Julfa (Iran) by Shah Abbas in
the early 17th century. Armenian merchants in New Julfa engaged in the
lucrative trade from the Far East to Europe. Successive shahs provided
Armenian merchants with special concessions, and the merchants, in
turn, brought fabulous wealth to Iran. However, later shahs were not so
favorably inclined to this non-Moslem, non-Persian, minority and imposed
heavy restrictions. Consequently many Armenians emigrated from Iran
and a large number settled in India, primarily in Madras and Calcutta where
they established churches, schools, and newspapers. Among those immigrants
were the Agabeg and Apcar families.
Diana Agabeg was born
October 12, 1859 in Rangoon, which at that time was called Burma Territory,
then part of British East India, currently called Myanmar. The Agabegs
owned a flourishing dairy business. Diana attended a convent school
in Calcutta where she learned English fluently; and when she graduated,
an uncle - perhaps her favorite uncle Alexander, a prominent criminal lawyer-
gave her a piece of prophetic advice, "Now that you have graduated from
school, Diana, your real education will begin."
She probably met Apcar Michael
Apcar in Calcutta. Born in New Julfa, Persia (present day Iran) he
emigrated to India to join a large and renowned clan of Apcars who were
already well-established in business including shipping, import/export
enterprises, and rice farming in the Dutch East Indies. After pursuing
Diana for several years, Michael Apcar finally convinced her to be his
wife. They married in 1888 or 1889, perhaps in Rangoon, but more
likely in Calcutta, and sailed to Japan for their honeymoon, probably aboard
an Apcar Line vessel. They decided to emigrate to Japan, and settled
eventually in Yokohama, where Michael opened an import-export business,
A. M. Apcar and Co. Diana and Michael had three children, Rose, Michael,
and Ruth. Around 1906, Michael Sr. died and Diana, who had probably
been involved in the family business before that time, operated it on her
own, until young Michael was old enough to take the reins of authority.
Mrs. Apcar knew English,
Armenian, Japanese, and Hindustani. She had a keen mind, an astute grasp
of world politics, and uncanny foresight. A brilliant conversationalist,
articulate and convincing, she gave lectures in Japan and wrote extensively
on the Armenian Question, diligently trying to bring the world's attention
to the fate of the Armenian people.
For many years, she carried on correspondence with political, religious,
and educational leaders throughout the world. Her books, pamphlets,
and articles reveal a person of firm convictions, "passionately pro-Armenian."
Some of her books include:
Betrayed Armenia: These are They Which Came Out of Great Tribulation (1910),
Peace and No Peace (1911), The Peace Problem (1912), The Great Evil (1914),
and On the Cross of Europe's Imperialism: Armenia Crucified. Apcar's
pamphlets include: "The Anguish of the Near East" (1912), "The Armenian
Massacres" (1912), "Armenia's Needs" (1920), "The Armenian Republic" (1920),
and "The American Mandate for Armenia" (1920). Apcar attempted to promote
the Armenian cause throughout the world, especially in Europe, and pleaded
for support on behalf of her people. Her main concern was that in order
to protect their economic interests, the imperialistic European powers
would betray the Armenians under Turkish domination. She was well
aware of British imperialistic drives in India. Her anti-imperialism
is clearly expressed in The Great Evil, where she responded to Rudyard
Kiplings words"
"O thou, whose wounds are
never healed
Whose weary race is never
run.
O Cromwell's England, must
thou yield,
For every foot of ground,
a son?"
The answer to this rattle
of Kiplingism is - Why make the wounds? Why attempt the race?
Why steal the foot of ground, which demands the toll of a son?
Even before 1915, Apcar was convinced that the Armenians in the Ottoman
Empire were in danger of yet another holocaust.
She believed that although liberty, justice, and equality were the basis
of the Young Turk party ideology, the liberal faction was only a small
minority, and the evil influences of chauvinism would eventually take power.
When the Turkish government launched the Genocide against the Armenians,
Apcar appealed to civilized Christian nations to intervene to prevent further
slaughter of Armenians and appealed to the United States, in particular,
to adopt the mandate for Armenia. In On the Cross of Europe's Imperialism,
she wrote: "Armenians have contributed their share [to the war effort];
they have fought suffered and died; they are fighting, suffering, and dying
still: they cannot do more..."
"It has been clear for a
longer time that without the co-operation of the United States there can
not be Stable Peace in Europe. Having entered actively into the war, and
having not put aside or been compelled to put aside the old policy of non-interference
in European affairs, shall we not hope that the great American people will
carry the work to a finish , and assume a Protectorate over an Autonomous
Armenia?"
The mandate was defeated
in the US Congress. Economic interests and commercial relations with
Turkey took precedence over promises to the "little ally" Armenia. The
ancient homeland was emptied of Armenians - one and a half million abducted
or massacred-and the remnants struggling in desperate conditions in neighboring
countries.
In "recognition of her devotion
to her fellow nationals, thousands of whom she helped during the World
War, and of her high intellectual attainments and political ability," the
government of the Republic of Armenia named her consul between 1918 and
1921. Diana Apcar is probably the first woman ever appointed as consul
by any government. This appointment gave official status to a woman
who had already been assisting destitute Armenian survivors. The
appointment facilitated her efforts to help the refugees, for she could
confer with foreign diplomatic representatives in an official capacity.
She intervened on behalf of the refugees to furnish them with proper visas
and other necessary papers. This action was of critical importance,
since most, perhaps all the refugees were without bona fide passports or
identity papers at a time when governments, including the American government,
were clamping down on immigration (1920s).
The refugees she assisted
had fled ravage and murder in their homes in the Ottoman empire and had
traveled weeks and months across Russia, during the height of the Russian
civil war. Finally exhausted and weary, they finally made it to Harbin
and Vladivostok. Those who wished to travel to the United States,
particularly those who had relatives in America, sought out Diana Apcar,
in Yokohama, Japan. She did not turn them away, but worked tirelessly
on their behalf. Using her knowledge of many languages and her contacts
with steamship companies, government authorities, and other officials,
she succeeded in making diplomatic and passage arrangements for her charges.
As she was known, respected, and loved in Japan, she was able to intervene
to assist these forlorn and stateless survivors start a new life.
Information about her efforts,
scarce though they are, reveal a true humanitarian. At her own expense,
Mrs. Apcar provided the refugees with lodgings, food, and health care,
often in the refugee houses she maintained in Yokohama. She also
arranged for children to attend school. George Goshgarian, Hamilton, Canada,
was proud that he could still count to 10 in Japanese. He was delighted
to show the little card on which were printed the numbers 1-10 in Japanese
and in Armenian - the only memento of a six year old boy's school experience
in Japan.
Diana Apcar did not request
reimbursement, but some refugees repaid her out of their first earnings
in the United States. Others received funds from relatives abroad.
Alice Bedrosian, Fresno, for instance, relates that members of her family
landed in Yokohama. Because her father, Paul Michigian, was already in
the United States and sent funds to Japan, the whole group managed to pay
their own way. It was, however, through Diana Apcar's mediation that
they received proper visas and passage arrangements.
Many survivors of the Genocide
have written their memoirs. Those that passed through Japan remember
the "little mother of Yokohama:"
"Now we numbered about forty of us. We boarded a ship in Vladivostok
to go to Yokohama. . . . Mrs. Apcar, among other virtues, was a philanthropist.
She was always ready to lend a helping hand to those in need, and solved
many of their problems."
"This wonderful woman used
to work miracles, helping poor strangers in difficult situations, especially
when women and children were involved. . . . She was a woman of faith and
prayer and a woman of positive action. She wrote letters to contemporary
kings, queens and governments, about the plight and persecutions, the ruthless
murders. The genocide of her race, and the prevailing poverty of
the remnants in all parts of Turkey, pleading with a deaf, blind world...
" (manuscript written by Krikor Yeghoian, donated by Bryan Bedrosian)
"Taking the train from Moscow
we journeyed across the frozen wastes of Asia on the Trans-Siberian Railroad
to Vladivostok. We remained in Vladivostok for several days waiting
for a ship to take us to Yokohama. I waited forty days in Yokohama, meanwhile
corresponding with my father-in-law to receive necessary funds to continue
our journey.
"We met Mrs. Diana Apkarian,
who was the organizer and director of a Refugee Aid Organization, whose
purpose was to help emigrants with paper work, ordering food, finding lodging
and in funding their travel to America. She helped me also.
She loaned me forty yen. I returned twenty-five dollars to her when
I reached the United States."" (Bob Der Mugrdechian, Anoushavan:
the Intrepid Survivor, p. 115)
"From Vladivostok we boarded
a rather large boat and came on to Japan. Here in Japan there was a woman
named Agabeg Apcar. . . . She would find a large house and put a
family on each floor. We rented the upstairs and the other family
had the downstairs. Another house, nearby had three families in it.
She would arrange for the Armenians to be near one another so they would
feel a little better about being here. If one could not afford the
rent, she would help them. She helped the needy financially (From
the memoirs of Verkin Saroukeshishian Manoogian, courtesy Nancy Sanoian).
Mrs. Apcar was a pious woman
who said her prayers, read her Bible, and sang her hymns every day.
In 1920, she wrote to the Primate of the Armenian Apostolic Church in the
United States how she had lived in a distant land for 29 years, and how
she greatly longed for her church. She had not found another church
with the same dynamic spirit as the Armenian church, with such prayers
to comfort one's soul, with such a Mass to exalt one's spirit. "I
don't know whether the day will come," she concluded, "when I will be worthy
to enter, once again, my church and to join in the Holy Mass, to hear,
once again, those prayers that will uplift my soul".
Her fondest wish was not
realized. She died in 1937, never having left the land of her
adoption, never having stepped inside her beloved Armenian church again,
but at least she was spared seeing the violence which befell her family
during World War II.
We
welcome any further information about Diana Apcar. Please call (559)
278-6493, or send material either to the History Department at California
State University, Fresno, 5340 N. Campus Dr, 93740 M/S SS21, c/o I. Kaprielian,
or the Armenian Studies Program, at California State University, Fresno,
5245 N. Backer Ave. M/S PB4, 93740-8001 c/o I. Kaprielian.