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Right of Return

Armenia, Colonialism, Genocide, History, Indigenous Land, Religion

Right of Return chronicles a journey of discovery across time and space as we return to my family’s ancestral village in Western Armenia. Growing up in diaspora, in the shadow of a genocide for which there has been no justice, was a powerful experience of loss and disconnection. Our return to the village my family believed destroyed was an empowering experience in the face of the continuing attempt to annihilate Armenians. Many things from childhood suddenly made sense, the words and actions of my grandparents, aunts, uncles, my mother so inexplicable to an American kid. The traditions we carried on, in small ways, as we tried to assimilate ourselves completely into our new home country, suddenly made sense.

We drove through the countryside where Armenians lived for thousands of years. The remaining churches were in ruins. A local man demanded to know if we were there to dig up the gold hidden in the church by fleeing Armenians. Another racial slur against the murdered dead, as if that’s what they would’ve thought to do when the soldiers came for them. Entering our village, what I saw was just as my grandmother described to me. Her stories came alive on the main street where the shopkeepers sat under awnings in the heat. Roads wound up into the hills, the houses were of mudbrick, the mountains rose in the distance, and the church was distinctively Armenian. We wandered the streets for hours looking for houses that might have been ours. We ended up at the Armenian church, a place where sometimes the women and children of the villages were gathered and burned to death in spasms of government-inspired religious hatred. I had read some of my great uncle's letters about the atrocities. I wept. A man came from the municipal building and unlocked the doors. The Kurdish people we met in the once Armenian villages and towns were kind to us. Now they are the disfavored minority. I do not wish to live in our village, but I assert our right to return as reparation for our killing and displacement as indigenous people.

We left the village and headed for the city where my family had fled the Hamidian Massacres. They sought safety in the nearby city of Kharberd, which, ironically, came to be known as the “slaughterhouse province” because of the hundreds of thousands of Armenians murdered there by the Ottoman Turkish government during the Armenian Genocide. We spent the night in Elazig, the city that grew up in the shadow of Kharberd, where my dreams were nightmarish and left me screaming in the dark. In the morning we ventured up the hill to the ancient Armenian fortress town. The fortress of Kharberd is now in ruins and the town has been turned into a grotesque resort. It was a wildly dystopian experience that left us all shaken.

This journey made me realize that neither genocide nor foundational violence is inevitable. The fear and greed of the few impacted the many in horrific ways. I developed a deeper understanding of the viciousness of cultural genocide. I felt sorrow at the missed opportunity to harness the power of both our diversity and shared culture to create a republic that would have been truly unique in the world. The past is both ever with us and behind us. The question is how will we connect with the past to create the future?

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