The Armenian world was shattered by the 1915 genocide. Not only were thousands of lives lost but families were displaced and the narrative threads that connected them to their own past and homelands were forever severed. Many have been left with only fragments of their family histories: a story of survival passed on by a grandparent who made it through the cataclysm or, if lucky, an old photograph of a distant, silent, ancestor. By contrast the Dildilian family chose to speak. Two generations gave voice to their experience in lengthy written memoirs, in diaries and letters, and most unusually in photographs and drawings. Their descendant Armen T. Marsoobian uses all these resources to tell their story and, in doing so, brings to life the pivotal and often violent moments in Armenian and Ottoman history from the massacres of the late nineteenth century to the final expulsions in the 1920s during the Turkish War of Independence. Unlike most Armenians, the Dildilians were allowed to convert to Islam and stayed behind while their friends, colleagues and other family members perished in the death marches of 1915-1916.Their remarkable story is one of survival against the overwhelming odds and survival in the face of peril.This second expanded paperback edition includes new chapters on the Dildilian family's escape to Greece with the influx of refugees expelled from Ottoman Turkey after the Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922) and how they rebuilt their lives in their adopted homelands in the decades that followed.
Armen T. Marsoobian is Professor of Philosophy at Southern Connecticut State University and a Senior Research Scholar in the Middle East, South Asian, and African Studies Department at Columbia University. He is a descendent of the Dildilian family.
Preface to the Second Paperback EditionIntroduction:I. The Dildilians of SivasII. Prosperity and Loss Soon to be Captured in the Dildilian Camera LensIII: The Childhood Recollections of Aram DildilianIV: The Hamidian Massacres of 1894-96 and their AftermathV: The Dildilians Begin to Take Their Separate PathsVI: The End of a Century and New BeginningsVIII: The Prosperity and Premonitions of the Pre-War YearsIX: The Clouds of War and CatastropheX: The Years After the Great War: Rebuilding Their Shattered LivesXI: Their Days Are Numbered: No Place in Turkey for the DildiliansXII: Expulsion and Resettlement: The Dildilians Begin Again in GreeceXIII: Rebirth and Remembrance: The Dildilians in the DiasporaEpilogue
A formidable work of research that is partly microhistory, partly political history. At times the book reads like a novel.... Marsoobian describes powerfully the struggle to survive and its impact on the human psyche.