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May 2005 • Vol. 26, No. 4 (90) |
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Author Markar Melkonian on New BookSARAH SOGHOMONIAN “It’s about time that we loudly repudiate the romantic conceit that ‘my pen is my gun.’ Pens are pens and guns are guns. There are more than enough ‘intellectuals’ in the diaspora. What we need are fighters, soldiers, fedaiis.” – Monte Melkonian HAKOP TATARYAN Heroes are like ghosts, many people speak of them, but only few have seen them. On March 15, the Fresno community was given the opportunity to know a fallen hero when they attended a talk by Markar Melkonian. This was understandably one of the bigger talks organized at Fresno State by the Armenian Studies Program. More than a hundred people, ranging from children to the elderly, showed up to hear and meet the author. Melkonian appeared at Fresno State to discuss the biography he wrote about his brother Monte Melkonian called My Brother’s Road: An American’s Fateful Journey to Armenia. Monte was a good student from the San Joaquin Valley, who turned into a rebel, became a commander, and then finally became a world-renowned hero.
He graduated in three years and had a very prolific academic career.
Ultimately, Monte had an indescribable love for the country of Armenia and its people, which led him to the front line of the Nagorno-Karabagh war in the early 1990s.
There were many instances when his death was reported by mistake, but Monte Melkonian died in a battle with Azeris on June 12, 1993.
Melkonian ancestors were among the first settlers in Fresno in 1870. Monte’s great uncle Jacob Seropian, was one of the first settlers. Monte was known by many pseudonyms such as: Saro, Abu Sindi, Timothy McCormick and Avo, but for his great bravery and martyrdom the name Monte Melkonian will always be synonymous with “hero.” Monte Melkonian was born in Visalia, California on November 25, 1957. |
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