Speech made in January 2006 with the evangelic church of Issy Moulineaux.
In 1984, the Permanent Court of the People devoted a session to the genocide of the Armenians. Mr. Papken Injarabian, author of the loneliness of the massacres and today centenary, are one of the four survivors of the genocide to have testified in front of the members to the jury.
The exodus is too painful to tell, very little as me survived. Under a heat from 30 to 40 degrees, the deportees famished, assoiffés, stripped and exhausted by walk, fell per thousands A very pleasant young woman telephoned to me and asked to me whether I could testify with the Court People on the Armenian genocide; I answered yes.
After having hung up again, I said myself, but why me; there are other witnesses who can express themselves better than me; I thought that it was perhaps because of my two books (one in Armenian, the other in French) which tell my life. The man who is in front of you is 78 years old; I should have died with the age of 9, 10 or 11 years, but God kept me.
I will briefly tell you my history. I was born in Amassia, i.e. in the south of the Black Sea. In 1915, according to the history of Amassia, there were in this city 38.000 inhabitants of which more than 15.000 were Armenian, approximately 1.000 Greeks, the remainder was Turks of the Kurdish tribes, Abdal, Turkmain, Tatar, Kezelbach, Alévi, Becdachi, all Moslems.
My family was Armenian, we were five children, three boys and two girls. I young person and the most were spoiled. I went to the school, I could read and to write the Armenian and I learned even Turkish. My two sisters taught me French. My father hoped that I become a great man.
My elder brother made his service in the Turkish army. When the war was declared, one mobilized all the Armenians from 18 to approximately 50 years. Thus my second 19 year old brother left without return. A few weeks after, the Turks raflé all the Armenians which they saw in the street, they took them along in prison under pretext that they had hidden of the weapons. All these men disappeared a little later; the remainder of the Armenians accepted the order to leave the city… It was on June 23, 1915, and the beginning of our exodus…
I left Amassia with my sick father, my mother and my two sisters. My parents had taken with them what they could; they had the tears with the eyes while crossing their birthplace. The Turks had prepared their plan very well: they had choked any possibility of revolt while moving away all the valid men. Our caravan thus took its way of cross. The more we advanced, and the more the odor of death increased, because other caravans had preceded us.
The exodus is too painful to tell, very little as me survived. Under a heat from 30 to 40 degrees, the deportees famished, assoiffés, stripped and exhausted by walk, fell per thousands; children from 2 to 3 years abandoned and which could not speak yet tightened their small arms and begged to be taken. A child devoured by clouds of flies. The child drove out them because his/her mother had said to him: my son remains near me, when I rise, I will give you bread and water… A woman precipitated in front of me and threw herself to the river to die further; I saw it carried by the current and hung to heaps of corpses…
I could tell these images of the genocide during hours.
By places, the odor of deaths was so strong that we walk the open mouth to breathe.
During our exodus, one of my sisters was removed by Turks, my father assassinated. At the end of three months of walk, I will never forget this Kurd who separated us from the caravan, far from all, and under the threat of his knife, it stripped us my mother and me and left with my sister that one re-examined forever…
My mother died eight days after, of disease and sorrow, and I opened my eyes of orphan at a Kurd. He lived in a cave; I kept his goats the naked feet, the naked head and badly nourished: I was miserable…
I agreed to become Moslem without including/understanding what it was; all that I knew, it is that one was not going any more to cut me the head. I remained more than four years with the Kurds, and I usually spoke their language. I changed nine times of owners throughout all my slavery which led me until Mésopotamie to keep camels. I never slept on a mattress, nor taken bath. When I intended to say that an orphanage was opened in Ourfa to collect the children survivors, I wanted to escape. I was caught up with by my Master who threatened me of his rifle and said: “you inaccurate dog, you are not even worth two cartridges, the next time I will kill you with only one cartridge”.
But the Lord helped me, and I could escape to me and join the orphanage. I was saved like thousands of Armenian children.
Paris, on April 14, 1984
Papken Injarabian
In 1984, the Permanent Court of the People devoted a session to the genocide of the Armenians. Mr. Papken Injarabian, author of the loneliness of the massacres and today centenary, are one of the four survivors of the genocide to have testified in front of the members to the jury.
The exodus is too painful to tell, very little as me survived. Under a heat from 30 to 40 degrees, the deportees famished, assoiffés, stripped and exhausted by walk, fell per thousands A very pleasant young woman telephoned to me and asked to me whether I could testify with the Court People on the Armenian genocide; I answered yes.
After having hung up again, I said myself, but why me; there are other witnesses who can express themselves better than me; I thought that it was perhaps because of my two books (one in Armenian, the other in French) which tell my life. The man who is in front of you is 78 years old; I should have died with the age of 9, 10 or 11 years, but God kept me.
I will briefly tell you my history. I was born in Amassia, i.e. in the south of the Black Sea. In 1915, according to the history of Amassia, there were in this city 38.000 inhabitants of which more than 15.000 were Armenian, approximately 1.000 Greeks, the remainder was Turks of the Kurdish tribes, Abdal, Turkmain, Tatar, Kezelbach, Alévi, Becdachi, all Moslems.
My family was Armenian, we were five children, three boys and two girls. I young person and the most were spoiled. I went to the school, I could read and to write the Armenian and I learned even Turkish. My two sisters taught me French. My father hoped that I become a great man.
My elder brother made his service in the Turkish army. When the war was declared, one mobilized all the Armenians from 18 to approximately 50 years. Thus my second 19 year old brother left without return. A few weeks after, the Turks raflé all the Armenians which they saw in the street, they took them along in prison under pretext that they had hidden of the weapons. All these men disappeared a little later; the remainder of the Armenians accepted the order to leave the city… It was on June 23, 1915, and the beginning of our exodus…
I left Amassia with my sick father, my mother and my two sisters. My parents had taken with them what they could; they had the tears with the eyes while crossing their birthplace. The Turks had prepared their plan very well: they had choked any possibility of revolt while moving away all the valid men. Our caravan thus took its way of cross. The more we advanced, and the more the odor of death increased, because other caravans had preceded us.
The exodus is too painful to tell, very little as me survived. Under a heat from 30 to 40 degrees, the deportees famished, assoiffés, stripped and exhausted by walk, fell per thousands; children from 2 to 3 years abandoned and which could not speak yet tightened their small arms and begged to be taken. A child devoured by clouds of flies. The child drove out them because his/her mother had said to him: my son remains near me, when I rise, I will give you bread and water… A woman precipitated in front of me and threw herself to the river to die further; I saw it carried by the current and hung to heaps of corpses…
I could tell these images of the genocide during hours.
By places, the odor of deaths was so strong that we walk the open mouth to breathe.
During our exodus, one of my sisters was removed by Turks, my father assassinated. At the end of three months of walk, I will never forget this Kurd who separated us from the caravan, far from all, and under the threat of his knife, it stripped us my mother and me and left with my sister that one re-examined forever…
My mother died eight days after, of disease and sorrow, and I opened my eyes of orphan at a Kurd. He lived in a cave; I kept his goats the naked feet, the naked head and badly nourished: I was miserable…
I agreed to become Moslem without including/understanding what it was; all that I knew, it is that one was not going any more to cut me the head. I remained more than four years with the Kurds, and I usually spoke their language. I changed nine times of owners throughout all my slavery which led me until Mésopotamie to keep camels. I never slept on a mattress, nor taken bath. When I intended to say that an orphanage was opened in Ourfa to collect the children survivors, I wanted to escape. I was caught up with by my Master who threatened me of his rifle and said: “you inaccurate dog, you are not even worth two cartridges, the next time I will kill you with only one cartridge”.
But the Lord helped me, and I could escape to me and join the orphanage. I was saved like thousands of Armenian children.
Paris, on April 14, 1984
Papken Injarabian
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