Survivors stories |
STORY OF VERONIKA BERBERYAN
Yozghantsi Veronika Berberyan (born 1907) recalls the Turkish recruitment: “…Towards the evening on Saturday they gathered all the men to send them to the Turkish army, but there they separated Armenians from Turks.
My grandpa, Priest Hakob Berberyan, who was entrusted to protect the rights of the Armenians, seeing that Armenian and Turkish soldiers were being separated, asked “Why do you single out the Armenians?” The Turkish commander answered, “Papaz (priest) efendi, Armenians are to go work on road construction, and Turks are going to the Russian front”.
The next day was Sunday. My grandfather had just arrived at home after serving mass. Immediately, we learned about the horrible news. Artin Agha’s son was a miller. He woke up in the morning, went to work and there saw severed human heads and limbs near the mill. Shocked by the horror, he hurried to the house panting, and described what he had seen. Artin Agha and his son came and told my grandfather, “They have butchered the men they had called soldiers yesterday”. My grandfather instructed him, “Go, complain to the ghaymagham (governor)”. Artin Agha went to the ghaymagham to complain, but the latter had not returned home that night.
The next day, Monday, two Turkish gendarmes came with clubs. On previous occasions when gendarmes had come to our house, they had politely asked the priest efendi to get dressed and go with them. This time they came and rudely commanded, “Haide, kalkn” (now get up). They took my grandfather to the ghaymagham. With my grandfather they also took the local distinguished figures, tradesmen and the intellectuals. A Turk said to my grandfather, “Papaz efendi, your last hour is here, what do you have to say?” My grandfather fell on his knees and began to pray. A Turkish soldier then swung an axe and beheaded the priest. The soldiers then started to play football with the head of my grandfather…”
Verjine Svazlian. The Armenian Genocide: Testimonies of the Eyewitness Survivors. Yerevan, 2000, Testimony214, pp.353-354.
|
|
DONATE |
TO KEEP THE MEMORY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ALIVE
Special Projects Implemented by the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation
|
COPYRIGHT |
|
AGMI BOOKSTORE |
The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute’s “World of Books”
|
TESTIMONIAL OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SURVIVORS |
THE AGMI COLLECTION OF UNPUBLISHED MEMOIRS
|
ONLINE EXHIBITION |
SELF-DEFENSE IN CILICIA DURING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
DEDICATED TO THE CENTENNIAL OF THE SELF-DEFENSE BATTLES OF MARASH, HADJIN, AINTAB
|
LEMKIN SCHOLARSHIP |
AGMI ANNOUNCES 2024 LEMKIN SCHOLARSHIP FOR FOREIGN STUDENTS
|
TRANSFER YOUR MEMORY |
Share your family story,
Transfer your memory to generations.
On the eve of April 24, the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute undertakes an initiative “transfer your memory”.
|
|