Living with the Curse of the Armenians

by Nurcan Baysal

Translated from Turkish by Nathalie Alyon

My great grandmother Ayşe Teyfur—my “Nene”—passed away in October 2014, at the age of 104. Despite growing up with her, I couldn’t communicate with my Nene in conventional ways—she didn’t speak Turkish and I didn’t speak Kurdish.

My great grandmother and I spoke through song instead. We both liked music. Like thousands of other Kurdish children who never learn their mother tongue, I knew many Kurdish songs by heart, despite never understanding the lyrics. The truth is that I didn’t need to know the language to understand what Nene’s ballads conveyed—most Kurdish songs narrate cruelty, death, and war.

As my Nene sang to me, her century-old existence found voice in her ballads, and I got to know her through music.

I would learn much later, as an adult, that my Nene sang some of her ballads for her Armenian neighbors:

It was a quiet day in the village of Sheik Selamet—or, as it is better known since the September 12, 1980, military coup that Turkified the name—“Dedeköy.”[1] Unable to communicate, my great grandmother and I sat in silence on the divan. Perched on top of the highest hill, our house had a full view of the entire village—trees, gardens, and vineyards—our village built at the edge of rocky mountains and steep cliffs.

My Nene broke the silence. She chanted a ballad, and as she sang it was as if a hundred-year-old past appeared before her. After finishing her song, she pointed over her eyes. She wanted to tell me something. When my mother entered the room a few minutes later, she explained that my Nene’s ballad paid homage to an Armenian boy she knew a long time ago. Until that moment, no one had ever told me that our village had also been home to Armenians.

As I later learned in detail, a hundred years ago Armenians and Kurds had lived together in our village of Sheik Selamet, in the township of Dicle, in Diyarbakır Province. During the genocide the soldiers stormed into the village, gathered its Armenians, and took them to their deaths. Nene seemed to remember everything as if it had all happened yesterday:

The soldiers took our neighbors one by one. I was just a little girl, standing next to my uncle, when our Armenian neighbor approached him:

“Why are you letting them take us?” he asked my uncle.

“They are the authorities, what can we do?”

“Armenians and Kurds are like needle and thread. The thread always follows the needle.”

My Nene shivered as she recalled the boy she honored in her elegy: There was a young Armenian boy. All the children admired him. He had beautiful dark eyes, as if he had blackened them with kohl. One day they came for him. They took him. So we followed them. They took him on top of that hill over there. And from the hill they threw him down. They gathered the boys and threw them off the hill, pushing them with shovels, pounding them with rams . . .

Almost a hundred years had passed, but my Nene still saw that boy’s black eyes.

I heard similar stories in the villages of the Kavar basin in Tatvan, where I worked implementing rural development projects over many years.[2] Most of the villages and fields in the Kavar basin were once home to Armenians. Whenever I spoke with Kavarian Kurds about their history, the topic would always find its way to the Armenians, and the Kavarians would recount how the barbaric massacre befell them.

As I learned while working in Kavar, at the turn of the twentieth century, Armenians were slain in the very same mountains of Kavar where Kurdish guerillas had set up camp since the 1990s. In the 1990s Kavar shared the fate of thousands of other Kurdish villages whose inhabitants the Turkish government subjected to forced migration.[3] Some villages in Kavar accepted the village guard system enforced by the Turkish government,[4] but the villages that refused the imposed system were forcibly depopulated, and one was burned to the ground. Driven away from their homes, the Kavarians spread out, moving to big cities. Only now, after a fifteen- to twenty-year exile, have they begun to return to Kavar.

Villagers from Kavar recognize the Armenian Genocide and express immense shame for their grandparents’ participation in the massacres. They connect the injustices that they face as a result of their Kurdish identity—from the ban on their mother tongue to the burning of their villages and the forced migrations they have endured—to the participation of their ancestors in the Armenian Genocide. When they speak about the past, they frequently speak of an Armenian curse that lingers on, that “the curse of the Armenians has stuck.”

An elderly villager I interviewed explained it this way: All the Armenian place names have been changed. In fact, nothing from the Armenians remains, only their curse. . . . For this reason, my dear girl, those who live in the lands that once housed the Armenians will never make ends meet. He who torments will be tormented.

I believe that the thirty-year-old war between the Turkish state and the PKK in Turkish Kurdistan and the tyranny under which Kurds in Turkey have lived opened a discourse of reappraisal with respect to the Armenians—not only among the Kurds in Kavar but in Kurdistan in general. The transformation of the Kurdish movement and the adoption of a discourse that champions the “brotherhood of peoples” had an effect on Kurds’ critical reflection and reassessment regarding the Armenian Genocide. Many Kurds have openly expressed their shame at having been accomplices in this genocide and have asked for forgiveness from the Armenians.

This is not a phenomenon specific to an educated urban population. Go to any Kurdish village today, and people will express their sorrow over the violence and barbarity that befell the Armenians. The villagers in Kavar are so ashamed of their ancestors’ role in the genocide that they make exaggerated efforts in praise of Armenians: They were so beautiful that everyone admired them with awe. . . . They were such good people that they fed all orphans. . . . They were so talented that they chiseled the hardest of rocks. . . . Anything beautiful you see around here was left by the Armenians.

Starting in the early 2000s, the Kurdish political movement garnered municipal victories in Kurdish areas across eastern Turkey. One of the first items on the agenda of the new municipalities included the restoration and rehabilitation of buildings with Armenian heritage. One of the most well known of these projects is the Surp Giragos Armenian Church in Suriçi, Diyarbakır. With the support of hundreds of Armenians scattered around the world, the Diyarbakır municipality completed the restoration and opened the church for worship in a stately ceremony in 2011.

The resurrection of this solemn house of worship in Anatolia united Armenians with their historic church, and the church itself served as a physical place of memory and a symbol of the people of Diyarbakır’s reappraisal of their homeland’s Armenian past. I watched Surp Giragos Armenian Church become, within just a few years, a space that residents of Diyarbakır frequent to face their past.

As I write these words (December 2015) a “curfew” has taken hold in the heart of my city of Suriçi.[5] Helicopters circle above my roof; bombs and guns explode outside my window. The curfew that the government enforced in the center of Diyarbakır in Suriçi on December 2, 2015, has continued unabated for twenty-three days, except for one seventeen-hour break. With its 100,000 residents, Suriçi is not just the homeland of Kurds but also of Armenians, Chaldeans, and Assyrians. With tanks and shells and helicopters, the state is bombing Suriçi. As people are massacred, the 5,000-year-old city that has been home to over thirty different tribes and civilizations—Diyarbakır-Amed-Amida-Dikranagerd—is burning. Security forces shelled the 500-year-old Kurşunlu Mosque. The bombardments have broken the windows of the Surp Giragos Armenian Church to pieces, the church that after a hundred years of neglect was restored. We can’t get any information regarding the extent of the damage inside. Suriçi is under blockade. Nobody can enter, nobody can leave, and the Armenian spirits in Surp Giragos fight for their existence in the narrow streets of Dikranagerd.

During the nights, the state’s armored vehicles patrol Suriçi. They announce from their loudspeakers: “You are all Armenian, you are all Armenian bastards.” Exactly a hundred years after the genocide, Armenians cannot achieve a status beyond “bastard” in the mouth of the Turkish state. The language of hatred against the Armenians meets the hatred hurled at the Kurds. And in sharing the status of bastard, Kurds and Armenians become brothers.

Even after all these years of oppression, these pitiful policemen believe that they insult the Kurds with their announcements. They still don’t understand the people they continue to slay. They don’t know about the guilt and remorse Kurds feel for having taken part in the genocide of the Armenians. They don’t realize that Kurds hope for equality and freedom, not just for themselves, but for all the people living in Mesopotamia.

Yes, we are all Armenian! And we can only be proud to be Armenian. From our Armenian brothers, we beg forgiveness for having been accomplices in their extermination one hundred years ago. If only they could forgive us.

Yes, we are Armenian, but who are you? Who are you who tyrannize the people of these lands for hundreds of years, who can’t walk in public for fear of repercussions for all your atrocities, who patrol in your TOMAs[6] releasing pepper spray upon people, who hide behind military barriers to shoot at civilians, who kill a seventy-five-year-old man carrying bread, who slay babies in their mother’s wombs, who let children’s bodies rot in the streets, who bomb homes and kill civilians in their sleep, who shell Diyarbakır-Amed-Amida-Dikranagerd, the homeland of Kurds, Armenians, and other communities—who are you?

My Nene Ayşe, that mighty walnut tree,[7] witnessed a 100-year-old tyranny; I experienced one for forty years. Today my children, Bawer and Aras, are the young eyes of its continuation.

A hundred years ago the internal enemy of the state was the Armenians; today it is the Kurds. One hundred years ago the state exiled the Armenians from their homeland. Today it is the Kurds who are being exiled. In a speech reminiscent of the language used by the Committee of Union and Progress in 1915, two days ago Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu said, “We will search and clean home after home.”[8]

Who knows—maybe the curse of the Armenians really does linger on these lands. But I want this curse to die. I want the Armenians to forgive us so that Kurds, Armenians, and all the peoples of these lands can build a new life characterized by equality and freedom.

You left, and we became less!

Revival Of The Mind

According to psychologists who have agreed upon the fact that each person has about ten thousand thoughts per day, we have at least a one in ten thousand chance of having a good thought every day. Though much of the whole thought process remains a mystery, we know one thing for sure: How we think does affect our day. And it pretty much determines our level of resilience throughout the entire day.

The human mind is going to set itself on something. The question is on what? Our thoughts can carry us to better circumstances as we are willing to get rid of negativities like ongoing complaining, anger, and unforgiveness, to name a few.

Darkness is a golden invitation to further misery. If we continue to harbor ill feelings over something or someone, not only are we sabotaging the outcome, but we are also opening the door to many other unpleasant circumstances. In other words, we have no one to blame but ourselves for the countless hardships that could have been prevented.

So just like a surgeon who needs clean hands right before performing a surgery, we too need to have clean minds to chisel and shape our daily performances. We must learn to transform our thought life, maybe not overnight, but perhaps one thought at a time.

A healthy mind does not belong in the gutter. It is up to us to resist bad thoughts, unhealthy ideas, and last but not least, the mode of retaliation. That battle between good and evil is not ours to fight to begin with. Remember this: Healthy in the mind means a healthier life.

Blessings…

The Goodness Of God

Some of the miracles I have witnessed lately are awe-inspiring, to say the least, as if God, in His ultimate grace and mercy, is trying to get our attention. The urgency is quite undeniable. And the message is always the same: Nothing is too difficult for our sovereign God whose mighty power created the heavens and the earth (Jeremiah 32: 17)

Diane, a friend of mine, 78, laid in a pool of blood as her head hit the corner of their concrete patio. The paramedics arrived forty-five minutes later, only to determine she had to be air-lifted. She was discharged the very next morning with some blood thinners, since it was the blood clots in her brain that had caused her to black-out in the first place. What a miracle!

Tom, another friend of mine, a picture of health at 65, just died without any symptoms of having twelve tumors in the brain, five of which were bleeding. He never suffered during those final stages of brain cancer, which is another miracle from God.

We often depend on each other for prayers which is something that pleases God. However, not every prayer is being answered the way we expect or predict. Sometimes, God’s answer might be ‘no.’

The only thing I learned from God’s promises is this: PRAY and BELIEVE that God can, EXPECT that God will, yet continue to TRUST Him even if He decides not to perform the miracle we’re so desperately waiting to receive. Though we don’t always understand or appreciate, God’s ways are always right.

Blessings…

Loving God

God is the only constant in my life, even when I didn’t even know He existed. I grew up within a culture where God was a punishment tool, used only when the parent was too tired to lift a hand to beat you to oblivion.

No adult ever sat down and taught a child something of value, lest they would have one less reason to abuse the weak. Their idea of having children was more about themselves and less and less about trying to leave the world a better place.

Yet, even when the world gave me plenty of excuses to hate this awful punishing god, I somehow knew, deep down inside, that He wasn’t the monster as others chose to believe. And the more consequences I ended up suffering through due to my own ignorance, the closer God allowed me to get, fitting perfectly right under His loving and forgiving presence.

I have learned to love God back, maybe not to the extent that He so easily does with each and every one of us, but pretty close. I love Him, for He is the glue that holds me together, while He shapes and molds me to be the best that I can be for each day. I can’t function without Him, nor could I even breathe. God is my everything. I just felt led to share my heart with you this morning…

Blessings…

Flirting With Christianity

I used to host a Bible Study group in my apartment every Tuesday, from 10am to 12pm, for about seven years, give or take. My main desire was to bring the Bible to my mom who was living with me at the time. And I had arranged, through the Pentecostal Church I was attending at the time, for this wonderful elderly teacher to come and lead the class. I believed my mom would respect her teachings more than anyone else’s.

And everything went as planned. Mom looked forward to the lessons, kept asking questions, and looked like she really wanted to soak it all in. But the rest of the ladies looked and sounded like they were in it for the social gathering, the coffee and the goodies. The more I studied their interactions and their occasional distasteful gossips, the more I realized they simply enjoyed flirting with the idea of Christianity, without having the desire to take on any of its responsibilities.

When I brought this up to the teacher’s attention, she said, “All we can do is tell them the Good News of the Bible, why Jesus came and died on the Cross, and let each individual apply it to his or her own life. We can’t force them to believe everything at once, just like God doesn’t force Himself on us. He waits for us to come to Him. Spiritual growth is a personal journey. You need to learn how to appreciate God’s patience with each and every one of us.”

“Fair enough,” I thought. It was only then that I understood why I had been so unusually on fire for Christ and why that selfless and sacrificial love of His had been so very important to me. It was just like those third world countries where the more desperate people are, the more they are desperate for Salvation through Christ. I, too, had been needing guidance and approval for the longest time. So the minute I realized Jesus loved me no matter what, even at my worst, I had decided to follow Him, whenever He called my name or wherever He intended to take me. My life was His to have.

And it was also then that I finally understood how some people haven’t been desperate enough to cling to Jesus’ love as a life vest. Therefore, they would have no idea what kind of gift they’ve received, even while holding it within the palm of their hands. Nor would they have a way to figure out how priceless and matchless Jesus’ love is for them until their sense of worth depends on it.

I don’t wish that each and every one of us is that desperate some day. But knowing how awesome it feels to have my eyes opened to the reality of God’s Truth and the Good News of the Gospel, I truly pray we all get to taste His love, sooner than later.

Blessings…

Curiosity

The world is full of people who desire to get more out of life. They want more monetary possessions to prove themselves to the world. They work hard to earn the ability to express their innermost ambitions. Not only do they seek more power to be above average, but some also demand more authority with which to rule the others.

That’s exactly who Zacchaeus was during Jesus’ times. He had plenty of rank, power, and position within the society. And yet, he was also extremely curious about why so many people were talking about this Jesus character. He wanted to know who this ‘street walking’ and ‘miracle working’ preacher was. What kind of a strange individual could possibly have the audacity to ‘heal the sick’ and ‘forgive the sinner,’ both of which belonged to the God of Israel, and to Him only?

So, Zacchaeus, being very short, decided to run ahead and climbed up into a sycamore tree to see Jesus. By then, he was curious enough that he knew he needed to do something to see Him. That simple determination was all the faith he had at the time. And it sure was all he needed, because Jesus, who had instantaneously noticed Zacchaeus’ efforts, said, “Zacchaeus, make haste and come down, for today I must stay at your house.”

That is the exact scene ‘the prodigal son’ portrays where, the minute the father sees his estranged son from a distance, starts running to hug his neck and welcome him, no questions asked.

And that’s all God expects from each and every one of us: TALK ABOUT JESUS. The rest is up to the Holy Spirit. We don’t need to preach to others. Nor do we need to shame or guilt them into receiving Jesus as their Lord and Savior. We simply need to tell one another how and why believing in Jesus made a difference in our lives. Others always hear. And those who are ready to hear, will listen…

Blessings…

Have Come A Long Way

I grew up in the Middle East area, where kids were to be seen, and not heard. Which makes it very hard for a young mind, full of curiosity as well as imagination, who hasn’t been given the permission to exercise its innermost rights to understand and to learn about things within its reach.

And we’re not even talking about science or chemistry here. Just the basic stuff like a radio. I was bound and determined to prove my parents wrong, because I knew there were people hidden in that radio of ours. I could hear them, day in and day out. But the only words I kept receiving were, “Leave the damn radio alone. You’re going to break it some day. THERE ARE NO PEOPLE IN IT!”

Yet, the minute I was alone in the room, I would grab the radio, turning it upside down where the holes faced the floor, giving it a good shaking, and expecting for miniature characters to hit the ground. And without fail, there were never any people dangling from it, or trying to be rescued from this viciously stubborn little girl who was in need of a decent explanation.

Then came teenage years when I finally managed to have a subscription for a few magazines. It was time to learn a thing or two, since my parents were adamant about keeping me in the dark. And guess what? My magazines either came with perfectly cut squares missing from them or, in most cases, some of the entire pages were missing.

So, today, I take the time to give my grandson a satisfactory answer to all of his questions, because it is our duty, as mature adults, to teach the next generation or two how to reason and start making sound decisions. It is our responsibility to help them learn how to stand on their own two feet before forcing them to fly. And it is our fault if and when they happen to fall, due to our negligence or plain ignorance. We must keep nurturing those minds until they are wise enough to come up with sound judgments and choices.

Blessings…