|
|
|
|
Musa Dagh in the 19th and Early 20th Century |
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
Vahram Shemmassian, Ph.D.
Director of Armenian Studies
Program
California State University, Northridge |
|
|
|
|
|
Armenian Musa Dagh,
overlooking the Mediterranean Sea some 15 miles to the
southwest of the biblical town of Antioch, existed from time
immemorial. Unfortunately, not much is known about its
history prior to the 19th century. In early 20th century,
it encompassed six main Armenian villages, namely, Bitias,
Haji Habibli, Yoghun Oluk, Kheder Beg, Vakef, and Kabusiye,
with a total of more than 6,000 inhabitants, who spoke a
dialect called Kistinik, meaning, the language of
Christians. This article will focus on the 19th and early
20th century, a period that transitioned from obscurity and
ignorance to immortality through resistance to the genocide.
Economy
The
main source of livelihood in pre-WWI Musa Dagh, as in the
entire region of Antioch, was sericulture. Although the
majority of Musa Daghians were self-made experts, some
attended the Seri cultural Institute of Bursa, a technical
school established in 1888 under the direction of Prof.
Kevork Torkomian, a student of Louis Pasteur. But whether
school-educated or self-made, each year many expert
sericulturists and their helpers from Musa Dagh,
constituting almost 10% of the total population, also
supervised the silk farms of rich Turkish landlords in the
general vicinity.
Unfortunately, two factors dealt a heavy blow to the silk
industry--nature's wrath and usurer manipulations. First,
locusts and especially severe winters destroyed the mulberry
leaf crops. During the period between 1864 and 1901, for
instance, nearly one in every four seasons proved
catastrophic. Second, the nature of loan transactions
diminished profits drastically. Poverty compelled many
villagers to borrow money from local or Antioch merchants at
high interest rates, usually 20%-30%. Despite this chronic
economic malaise, some encouraging signs existed. One such
welcome change involved the appointment in 1909 of an
Armenian from Constantinople by the name of Onnig Tosbat as
Director of Silk Control of Aleppo province. Significantly,
Tospat established his headquarters in Antioch, wherefrom he
introduced new regulations, thereby benefiting the
indigenous cultivators.
Agriculture was not developed like sericulture. Because of
its steep and limited terrain, Musa Dagh was ill-suited for
the farming of cereals, compelling the population to import
90% of its wheat. Fruits and vegetables, on the other hand,
grew plentifully, but animal husbandry fell far short of
capacity. Artisanship was similarly neglected, except for
comb making in Yoghun Oluk, where the overwhelming majority
engaged in it. In early twentieth century, the annual
output was estimated between 1 and 1.5 million combs,
exported mostly to Egypt.

The barinak (barons) or aghalar constituted another
impediment to a healthier socio-economic life. There
existed between the Turkish notables of Antioch on the one
hand and the barinak of Musa Dagh on the other a
patron-client relationship which proved disastrous to the
Armenian peasantry as a whole. In order for the barinak to
appease their patrons, they raised bribes through
usurpation. In their eternal rivalries, the Antioch
notables also pitted one barin against the other, who, in
turn, polarized Musa Dagh society or inflamed existing
feuds. The situation worsened by various types of legal and
illegal taxes, which by all indications were very heavy and
collected harshly.
Rampant impoverishment compelled many Musa Daghians to seek
their fortunes elsewhere. The United State became a magnet,
especially after the 1909 massacres. The immigrants settled
mostly in the East Coast, where they worked in silk
factories and operated small businesses. One of the
earliest Musa Dagh settlers on the West Coast, Abraham
Seklemian of Bitias, in 1908 co-founded and became the first
editor of Asbarez newspaper in Fresno, California Most
immigrants would not see Musa Dagh again.
Church
Until
the 1840s all Musa Daghians adhered to the Armenian
Apostolic Church. But beginning with that decade American
Protestant missionaries and later European Capuchin friars
made inroads, forming their separate denominations. As the
Armenian Prelacy of Aleppo underwent a process of
reorganization according to the provisions of the 1860
Armenian National Constitution, so did the Musa Dagh
Apostolic community, albeit in timid steps and with
difficulty. When prelates and/or their representatives
visited Musa Dagh on different occasions to introduce
changes, they encountered persistent ignorance and intrigue
especially when dealing with parish council elections. What
also hindered progress was the status of priests. Most were
illiterate, some were ordained or defrocked based on the
whims of influential notables, and still others were unfit
for spiritual leadership. Indeed, a few exceptions existed.
The first contacts between Protestant missionaries and Musa
Dagh took place in 1840. Seventeen years later, in 1857, a
Protestant church was officially established in Bitias,
followed by that of Yoghun Oluk in 1869 or 1870. As for the
remaining villages, for financial reasons they were treated
as satellite communities dependent on either Bitias or
Yoghun Oluk. Initial persecutions by the Apostolic church,
rampant poverty, lack of seriousness on the part of some
adherents, erratic behavior by a few pastors, threats from
splinter groups, and the inadequacy of church buildings kept
the Protestant community of Musa Dagh wavering between hope
and despair.
This denomination's size varied according to category.
Communicant membership averaged 171 persons, adherents
averaged 577 persons, church attendants on Sundays averaged
401 persons, and Sabbath School goers averaged 382 persons.
Interestingly, each and every communicant member signed an
agreement, whereby he or she promised to follow church rules
and pay membership dues based on income. Those who failed
to fulfill their obligations were suspended and/or expelled.

Capuchin friars founded a mission in Kheder Beg in 1891, and
shortly thereafter they gained a following at Yoghun Oluk as
well, but were less successful in Vakef, Kabusiye and Haji
Habibli. Being a Protestant bastion, Bitias remained out of
Catholic reach. By the start of WWI the Catholics (of the
Latin rite) of Musa Dagh numbered about 500. According to
Capuchin sources, the Musa Daghians converted to Catholicism
first and foremost for socio-economic rather than spiritual
reasons. Extreme poverty, heavy taxation, abuse on the part
of notables, legal wrangling, all contributed to change of
religious affiliation. This situation placed a heavy
financial burden on the Capuchins, who sought funds from
private donors in Europe to augment their meager budget.
But despite their disillusionments, the Capuchins remained
determined to keep the Musa Dagh mission open in hopes that
the younger generations educated in their schools would
become true Catholics.
Education
Educational life in Musa Dagh during the first half of the
19th century could be described with the word “barrenness,”
for hardly could anyone read, write, and or calculate taxes
on paper. This situation changed during the second half of
the century thanks to Protestant and Catholic missionaries,
who not only declared war on illiteracy for its own sake,
but also and foremost for proselytizing purposes. The
Apostolic community lagged behind for many decades because
of utter negligence, before it realized the urgency of
learning to combat the alien inroads and to promote
nationalism.
In 1856, a Protestant missionary made a reference to the
existence of “a small school” in Bitias, which was perhaps
the earliest educational institution in Musa Dagh. Its
curriculum included Reading, Writing, Spelling, Grammar,
Geography, Arithmetic, Turkish, Physiology and Armenian, not
to mention the fact that students had to attend the daily
devotional exercises. Protestant education in Yoghun Oluk
began in earnest in 1880. Short-lived schools were opened
in the other villages as well. Despite the many
difficulties, such as the lack of adequate facilities and
teachers, hardened mentalities that boys had to contribute
to the cottage industries and girls to the house chores at a
young age, and budgetary constraints, some positive aspects
to Protestant education existed. For example, the average
number of students increased from 81 in the 1880s to 102 in
the 1890s to 117 in the 1900s. Girls constituted about
one-third of the total student population. Similarly, the
Protestants were the first to introduce coeducational
schools.
The Capuchin friars, like Protestant missionaries, attached
great importance to education in their overall efforts at
establishing a Catholic community in Musa Dagh. They
inaugurated their first school at Kheder Beg in 1891, and
subsequently four others for both genders in Yoghun Oluk and
Vakef. The curriculum included French, Armenian, and a few
other subjects. Since tuition was free in Catholic schools,
both Protestant and Apostolic schools experienced difficulty
in recruiting students. But some social forces worked
against the Catholics. As one friar lamented, if some
students, “at their leaving the school about the age of 13,
had not submitted to the dissolvent influence of their
surrounding, [that is to] the allurements of the custom of
an incredible religious apathy, [and] if our Catholic girls
would not have married but Catholics, soon Kheder Beg would
be and exemplary mission.”
Information respecting education in the Apostolic community
prior to the 1890s is scanty. At the turn of the century,
some positive developments occurred. Four factors
occasioned this trend. First, the activity of Hnchakian
revolutionaries during the 1890s awakened the national
consciousness of the ignorant peasantry to some extent.
Second, a few visiting clergymen and a relatively
enlightened local priest gave sermons on the virtues of
education. Third, the incumbent locum tenens of Aleppo
seized every opportunity to promote learning and dispatched
teachers to the village communities. Fourth, the
Egypt-based Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) and the
Constantinople-based United Societies coordinated their
efforts in establishing a network of urban and rural schools
that benefited Musa Dagh as well. As a result of these
activities, all six villages of Musa Dagh had a school each,
which, nevertheless, maintained a sporadic existence due to
financial limitations, lack of teachers and textbooks, and
competition from the other denominations.
Since all schools in Musa Dagh were elementary, students who
desired to further their studies traveled primarily to
Aintab, Kesab, and Bursa. Approximately one-third of all
outgoing students enrolled at the Central Turkey College and
the Girls' Seminary, both American missionary institutions
of higher learning in Aintab.
Despite the numerous impediments, education had made some
strides by World War I. The statistical evidence is clear.
Of people born in Musa Dagh between 1890 and 1900, only 18
percent was literate. However, that figure had increased to
46 percent with the generation born during the following
decade. This upward trend continued at the Port Said
refugee camp between 1915 and 1919 and again in Musa Dagh
during the interwar years
(1919-1939).
Politics
The activity of Armenian revolutionary societies in Musa
Dagh must be viewed within the larger context of Armenian
oppression and suffering in the Ottoman Empire, demands for
reform, protection of life and property, and aspirations for
autonomy and/or outright independence. The Social Democrat
Hnchakian Party, on its way to initiate an uprising at
Zeytun in order to attract European interest to the plight
of Armenians across the empire, penetrated Musa Dagh in
1893, establishing what it termed “absolute monarchy” for
the next three years. Most Musa Daghians, including women,
joined the movement through a variety of methods including
propaganda, indoctrination, and playing on fears. To be
sure, there was some opposition from the conservative and
religious circles, as well as unanimous disapproval on the
part of foreign diplomats and missionaries posted in the
region. While the government reacted to the overall tense
situation by sending reinforcements and a commission of
inquiry, it refrained from the actual use of force for fear
of European intervention. The episode thus ended
peacefully, whereby the revolutionaries surrendered and
ultimately were sent abroad as agreed upon.
The Hnchakian experience left a lasting impact on Musa Dagh
society. From the revolutionaries' standpoint, the Armenian
villagers were now imbued with national awareness. Other
observers, however, saw things differently. The American
missionary C.S. Sanders, for example, wrote in 1906: “These
Christian villages are destroying themselves so terribly has
treachery become a characteristic of them since the regime
of the [Hnchakian] revolutionary party.” An Armenian
reporter, covering Musa Dagh in 1911, likewise attributed
some of the causes of pervasive social malaise to the
Hnchakian era. In the final analysis, the Hnchakian
revolutionaries could not be blamed for feuds commonplace in
Musa Dagh before their arrival. During their tight
governance of public life, however, they failed to create a
lasting civic infrastructure for Musa Dagh society to
function more responsibly after their departure.
The other main political party, the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (ARF/Tashnagtsutiun), was formally organized in
Musa Dagh during summer the summer of 1908 as the Red
Mountain Subcommittee (Garmir Ler Yentagomide). By 1915, it
had three subcommittees--the initial Storm (Potorig) and
later Lightning (Shant) and Vahan the Wolf (Kayl Vahan)--with
a total membership of over fifty youths, who were mostly
literate. Initially, The ARF took cautious steps to make
inroads in Musa Dagh because of opposition from the
conservative segment of society. Once the ARF decided to go
public, however, its members demonstrated a signal resolve
to surmount any opposition, even if it meant rebelling
against their own parents. With a self-imposed discipline,
they eventually gained respect as an organization acting in
the public's interest. And although the degree of influence
they wielded cannot be readily determined, their dominance
in post-WWI Musa Dagh politics hints at some progress that
they had made by the eve of WWI. The third political
society, the Reformed Hnchakian Party (Veragazmial Hnchagian
Gusagtsutiun), penetrated Musa Dagh in 1911, but its
influence was limited to a small circle of adherents in some
of the villages.
If the raison d'etre of Armenian political societies was to
ameliorate the lot of their people in the Ottoman Empire, no
opportunity promised better hope than the Young Turk
Revolution of 1908. But the euphoria was short-lived, as
reactionary forces vented their anger at the Armenians in
Cilicia and north Syria through massacres. Musa Dagh was
spared thanks to a show of force and the timely arrival of a
British battleship. This resolve was repeated during the
genocide, when two-third of Musa Daghians resisted, while
the remainder heeded the government's order of deportation.
The self-defense was later immortalized in Franz Werfel's
novel, The Forty Days of Musa Dagh. Given the deeply
fragmented state of Musa Dagh society in the 19th and early
20th century, the 1915 resistance was a rare instance of
relative unity and cooperation.
|
|

The actual French warship Guichen, pictured above,
participated along with several cruisers in the rescue of
some 4,000 Armenians who had taken shelter on Musa Dagh. |
|
|
|
|
|
Musa Dagh (Musa Ler in
Armenian) was the site of the famed resistance during
the Armenian Genocide. Of the hundreds of villages, towns,
and cities across the Ottoman Empire whose Armenian
population was ordered removed to the Syrian desert, Musa
Dagh was one of only four sites where Armenians organized a
defense of their community against the deportation edicts
issued by the Young Turk regime beginning in April 1915. By
the time the Armenians of the six villages at the base of
Musa Dagh were instructed to evict their homes, the
inhabitants had grown suspicious of the government's
ultimate intentions and chose instead to retreat up the
mountain and to defy the evacuation order. Musa Dagh, or the
Mountain of Moses, stood on the Mediterranean Sea south of
the coastal town of Alexandretta (modern-day Iskenderun) and
west of ancient Antioch.
With a few hundred rifles and
the entire store of provisions from their villages, the
Armenians on Musa Dagh put up a fierce resistance against a
number of attempts by the regular Turkish army to flush them
out. Outnumbered and outgunned, the Armenians had little
expectations of surviving the siege of the mountain when
food stocks were depleted after a month. Their only hope was
a chance rescue by an Allied vessel that might be patrolling
the Mediterranean coast. When two large banners hoisted by
the Armenians were sighted by a passing French warship,
swimmers went out to meet it. Eventually five Allied ships
moved in to transport the entire population of men, women,
and children, more than four thousand in all. The Armenians
of Musa Dagh had endured for fifty three days from July 21
to September 12, 1915. They were disembarked at Port Said in
Egypt and remained in Allied refugee camps until the end of
World War I when they returned to their homes. As part of
the district of Alexandretta, or Hatay, Musa Dagh remained
under French Mandate until 1939. The Musa Dagh Armenians
abandoned their villages for a second, and final, time when
the area was annexed by Turkey.
In the face of the complete
decimation of the Armenian communities of the Ottoman
Empire, Musa Dagh became a symbol of the Armenian will to
survive. Of the three other sites where Armenians defied the
deportation orders, Shabin Karahissar, Urfa, and Van, only
the Armenians of Van were rescued when the siege of their
city was lifted by an advancing Russian army. The Armenians
of Urfa and Shabin Karahissar were either massacred or
deported. Musa Dagh stood as the sole instance where the
Western Allies at war with the Ottomans averted the death of
a community during the Armenian Genocide.
|
|
|
|
|
Armenian Musa Dagh as a Summer Resort in the Sanjak of
Alexandretta
During the 1920s-1930s |
|
|
|
|
|
For a number of
Armenians in Syria estivation offered a respite from
resettlement hardships after the World War I genocide and
the scorching summer heat characteristic to cities and other
habitations. It also constituted a channel for refugees to
reconnect spiritually with their lost village life in the
homeland, by sojourning at Armenian-inhabited hamlets
nestled on hills in the host country. Other Armenians and
ethnically diverse people came from Egypt, France, and
elsewhere. This activity took place mainly in the
autonomous Sanjak (county) of Alexandretta/Iskenderun
(hereafter the Sanjak) in the northwestern corner of Syria,
then under French mandate.
Tourism and estivation in Syria and Lebanon developed with
some success under French mandate. Although political
upheavals during 1925-1927, the world economic depression
later in the decade and in the 1930s, and an aggressive
campaign by other countries in the Eastern Mediterranean
such as Greece, Cyprus, and Turkey to attract travelers had
had an adverse impact on vacationing in French-mandated
territories, still several thousand visitors came
particularly from Egypt, Palestine, and Iraq. The Sanjak
benefited from this trend as well.
Four main areas of Armenian concentration existed in the
Sanjak. The first encompassed the synonymous coastal town
of Alexandretta and several communities perched on the
surrounding uplands. The second included the rural towns of
Kirik Khan and Rihaniye. The third engulfed Musa Dagh and
Antioch city. The fourth consisted of Kesab (Kasab) on
Jabal Aqra/Mount Cassius and its satellite hamlets. Whereas
the hilly habitations around Alexandretta town as well as
Musa Dagh became centers of estivation during the period
under study, Kirik Khan and Rihaniye did not develop as
such. Kesab, on the other hand, emerged as a summer resort
after 1939 especially, when France ceded the Sanjak to
Turkey, with Kesab, despite sustaining territorial losses in
the process, remaining within the redrawn map of Syria.
Transportation
Estivation in Musa Dagh, as elsewhere in the Sanjak, started
slowly, because until the mid-1920s transportation to and
from the Armenian villages was conducted via donkeys,
horses, and mules. In order to modernize communications,
the French authorities attached great importance to the
construction of roads across Syria and Lebanon.
Northwestern Syria thus witnessed a rapid expansion of the
road network. By the summer of 1926 automobiles could
access Kheder Beg by trekking the Antioch-Svedia route.
The Antioch-Svedia road was also important because it
covered two-third of the distance between Antioch and Bitias;
the remaining segment of about 8 kilometers was completed in
1927. Its inauguration took place on Sunday, December 4,
with great fanfare. Armenian, Arabic, and French newspapers
in Antioch, Alexandretta, and Beirut covered the event. The
construction of roads in the region continued for several
more years, connecting Beirut-Latakia-Kesab-Antioch,
Bitias-Kheder Beg, and Aleppo-Antioch. Only Kabusiye
remained inaccessible by car.
Sources of Attraction
Several factors propelled Musa Dagh in general and Bitias in
particular into prominence as a summer resort. First and
foremost, the name Musa Dagh evoked romanticism, pride,
admiration, and a sense of indebtedness, all inextricably
associated with the heroic exploit of its people against the
Ottoman Turkish genocidal campaign in 1915. Indeed, the
publication of Franz Werfel's The Forty Days of Musa Dagh in
1933 and its subsequent rendition from the original German
into numerous languages captured the imagination of the
international readership, making Musa Dagh a household name
in various parts of the world. Second, for Armenian
estivators especially, this “little Armenia,” i.e. Bitias,
with its dialect, customs, folklore, and hospitality,
epitomized the traditional village in the Armenian homeland
now vanished as a result of the genocide. Third, Musa
Dagh's beautiful landscape, water springs and streams, and
salubrious climate offered urbanites a much needed respite
from the relatively hectic and stressful life and excessive
summer heat in the cities. Fourth, the proximity of the
larger towns, especially Aleppo, made it possible for
working fathers to visit their families over weekends.
Fifth, life was inexpensive; locally produced vegetables,
fruits, dairy products, and other foodstuffs were cheaper
than those sold in the cities.
In addition, certain individuals and groups visited Musa
Dagh as part of archeological expeditions to the historical
sites abounding the general vicinity, from Antioch to the
Seleucid ruins scattered along the Mediterranean coast.
Although no agencies or tour guides existed to organize
excursions for the general public, Movses Der Kalusdian,
Serop Sherbetjian, and Fr. Benoit, the resident Capuchin
missionary at Kheder Beg, furnished useful information for
curious tourists.
Vacationers
The improvements effected in transportation and the
heightened public awareness about Musa Dagh as a viable
resort spurred a surge in the number of visitors after the
mid-1920s. Not only did this “growing development” lure
Armenians from Aleppo, Beirut, Alexandretta, Egypt, Iraq,
and the Sudan, but also Arabs, Turks, Jews, and Frenchmen.
Some members of the Aleppo Armenian elite, particularly from
the Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Tashnagtsutiun (ARF)
circle, often visited or summered at Bitias, and two ARF
general congresses of Syria and Lebanon convened there.
Here, too, camped boy scouts from the Aleppo and Kirik Khan
branches of the Armenian General Athletic Association (Hay
Marmnamarzagan Enthanur Miutiun). In addition, guest
physicians, often acting on behalf of the Syrian Armenian
Relief Cross (Suriahay Oknutian Khach), rendered free health
services to estivators and natives alike. Among the
non-Armenian vacationers mention is made of the governor of
Aleppo, the mayors of Antioch and Alexandretta, the
commander-in-chief of French troops in north Syria and other
French military officers, and several prominent Antioch
families. While certain individuals and groups spent
limited time at Bitias, families staying the entire summer
season constituted the bulk of vacationers, their number
growing from eighty households in the late 1920s to 400
households by 1937.
Lodging and Other Services
The demand for accommodation was commensurate with the
increase in the number of vacationers each summer. Three
hotels in Bitias satisfied partially this need. Taniel
Chaparian's inn, originally a two-story silk house,
consisted of several renovated rooms with comfortable
European-style beds, a restaurant, a bath, and a covered
dance floor in the backyard where many soirees took place.
The second inn emerged as follows. The local Church Lovers'
Association (Yegeghetsasirats Miutiun), in search of a
suitable parochial school facility, leased a religious
endowment to Aharon Izmirlian, a restaurateur from Antioch,
with the understanding that he would build a hotel on the
land, operate it for ten years without rent, and turn it
over to the parish council during off season to be used as
school.
Around 1930, Nasib Khuri, the owner of Hotel Silpius in
Antioch, forged a partnership with the brothers Garabed and
Serop Keoseian of Bitias, whereby the latter made their
two-story, ten-room house available to Khuri, who furnished
it (moderately) as a hotel. After a year the Keoseians paid
their partner off and became the sole owners of Hotel Khuri,
renaming it Hotel Jabal Musa. The hotel fee of 6 Syrian
pounds per customer per day covered three meals as well,
served table d'h?te, that is, with a fixed menu and at
scheduled times. Breakfast included milk, eggs, jam,
butter, olives, and five kinds of cheese to choose from;
lunch consisted of five entrees, fruit, and coffee; and
dinner comprised four entrees, soup, fruit, and coffee.
Drinks cost extra. Since on any given day most customers
were the families of French military and civilian officials,
chefs Iskender Khamisian and Setrak Libaridian prepared
mainly European dishes. In the absence of electricity and
refrigerators, ice in the form of frozen snow gathered
during winter and preserved by a company in Antioch was
utilized to keep perishable edibles fresh.
The three hotels alone could not accommodate the numerous
visitors seeking lodging. The solution rested in the
unfurnished and furnished housing provided by the natives
themselves. Accordingly, virtually every household in
Bitias was converted into some kind of a pension. Finding
vacancies on the spot without advanced booking sometimes
proved difficult. In order to facilitate the search for
available lodging, a special village committee assigned one
or two men (usually the municipal guards) to await the
arrival of cars at the parking lot near Hetum's Cafe, guide
the passengers to available guest rooms for a commission,
and mediate disputes arising between homeowners and
tenants. Sometimes street-smart lads upstaged the official
middlemen to earn pocket money.
Income from the sale of homegrown and/or homemade food and
other commodities augmented the revenues from rents. Many
households kept a few goats and/or cows, chickens, and
beehives to produce milk, yogurt, cheese, other dairy
products, eggs, and honey for personal consumption as well
as to generate extra cash. They also grew vegetables and
fruits which were sold fresh, dried, or cooked. For
example, vacationers purchased sun-dried eggplants,
zucchini, and peppers, tomato and pepper paste, and jam for
winter rations. Tonir (hearth) bread was likewise in great
demand, as were wooden combs, ladles, and charcoal produced
by local manufacturers. The vacationers similarly
frequented a daily bazaar of fresh produce at a neighborhood
called Kabirlik In addition to the home industries and the
bazaar, there existed a number of businesses to satisfy
similar and other needs.
The importance of tourism in Musa Dagh was also underscored
by the relocation of the district's governorship from its
seat at Kheder Beg to Bitias during the summer season
beginning with 1927. This move must also be credited for
the introduction of public services not available before.
For example, uniformed municipal guards watched security,
lit “Lux” lamps on street corners from sunset until
midnight, and visited the daily bazaar at Kabirlik to tax
vendors (usually Alawi farmers from neighboring villages)
and to make sure consumers were not ripped off. They
similarly collected garbage, swept the streets with bellan
bushes, and sprayed water to settle dust. Last but not
least, the Bitias municipality, located at the house of
Sargis Sherpetjian (“Khashtakints”) next to Hotel Aharon,
established a central telephone and telegraph system and
initiated a regular postal service between Antioch and
Bitias. These modernizing measures, however elementary,
simple, and/or limited in scope and application, improved
the overall standard of living.
Pastime Activities
The atmosphere in Bitias during the summer months could be
characterized as festive. Hiking, camping, picnicking,
flower and thyme picking, promenading, and serenading by
amorous couples in nature's bosom occurred daily. After
dark, families visited each other, chit-chatted, drank
spirits, and sang folk, love, and patriotic songs. In turn,
children improvised toys from rudiments, played “Lido,”
watched water crabs, threw stones at walnut trees in hopes
of obtaining some walnuts, climbed trees, or simply
frolicked carefree. They likewise joined adults in swimming
outings.
Other sorts of entertainment added to the merriment.
Armenian classical music, interpreted by violinist Hagop
Nalbandian and vocalist Hovsep Seraydarian on
businessman-producer Khachadur Shahin's “Odeon” records
filled the air. Kemanchisd Rupen (Sapszian) in 1930 gave a
solo concert with his traditional folk instrument. To the
natives' delight, composer-songwriter Parsegh Ganachian in
1933 arranged the popular local folksong “Hele-Hele Ninnoye”
and presented it for the first time as part of his choral
repertoire in a concert at Hotel Aharon. In the same vein,
actor-director Parsegh Apovian in the summer of 1931 toured
Musa Dagh staging “Ashkharhi tadasdane” (The Judgment of the
World) at Bitias and Kabusiye, and “Ashik Gharib” (The
Amorous Stranger or Minstrel) at Kheder Beg. Another
servant of the theater, known by the singular name of
Chaprast, produced his own shows.
Two Armenian religious-national holidays attracted thousands
of celebrants to Bitias and Damlajik, a central spot on Musa
Dagh where the 1915 resistance had taken place. The first
event, held in mid-August, was dedicated to Surp
Asdvadzadzin (Holy Mother of God). After collecting
donations of sacrificial lambs, wheat, salt, and wood from
the natives, the parish council oversaw the cooking of the
traditional food of harisa in large copper kettles in
ceremonious rituals that lasted from Saturday evening until
Sunday morning. Following mass, the priest blessed the
harisa before it was distributed to impatient congregants
pushing and shoving each other to fill their plates.
The second feast, commemorating Musa Dagh's successful
resistance to the Turkish genocide in 1915, took place at
Damlajik, where a pile of rocks had served as a makeshift
altar during the actual fights. For almost a decade mass
was celebrated at this site, and requiem for the repose of
those who had fallen in the battlefield was conducted in a
nearby lot where eighteen wooden crosses were stuck into the
ground. But in 1932 this rough arrangement was replaced by
a more fitting graveyard that included eighteen tombstones,
each inscribed with the name of a fallen fighter. The
celebrants, including natives and vacationers alike,
congregated at Damlajik from Saturday until Sunday
afternoon, making their way on foot in several hours through
difficult terrain. Once there, they hoisted the Armenian
and French tricolors and indulged themselves in feasting,
fireworks, singing and dancing, reciting poetry, and
reminiscing myriad details pertaining to the resistance.
Sunday morning was reserved for the official program
consisting of mass, requiem, and speeches by Armenian and
French dignitaries. The organizers likewise sent telegrams
to the French Minister of the Marine and the High
Commissioner of Syria and Lebanon to express their
appreciation and gratitude for the French goodwill vis-?-vis
the Armenians of Musa Dagh.
The seventeenth anniversary celebrations took place on 18
September 1932 with pomp and circumstance as a new monument
glorifying the resistance was unveiled. The inauguration
began with the “Marseillaise,” after which Movses Der
Kalusdian thanked and praised “magnificent France” for using
its weapons not to destroy, but rather to safeguard peace.
Sarkis Tosunian, chairman of the monument building
committee, delivered “a beautiful address” in French.
Speaking on behalf of the High Commissioner, Colonel
Huguenet surveyed amicable Franco-Armenian bonds through the
course of history, considering the French assistance in 1915
a natural continuation of that close relationship. Finally,
Admiral Joubert, commander of the Eastern Mediterranean
Fleet, paid homage to the Armenian martyrs. The
celebrations continued with an official banquet held in the
shade of the centuries-old plane tree of Kheder Beg.
Outdoor cafes were popular pastime spots. There were six
cafes in Bitias, all established near waters. One of them,
that of Hetum Filian, was arranged around a large pool built
by a retired British diplomat called John Barker (The Frank,
i.e., European) a century before. This cafe, like the rest,
offered coffee, hookahs, and lokhum (a sweet), in addition
to a pleasant ambience in which families and friends
gathered together to have fun, chit-chat, knit, play cards
and backgammon, and listen to music broadcast via a “His
Master's Voice” gramophone.
Conclusion
Ominous political clouds marred the 1938 vacation season.
Referring to the new Franco- Turkish regime in the Sanjak,
now called the Republic of Hatay, an Armenian newspaper
asked: “Who can think about estivation in this political
turmoil when the general mood is one of changing places,
that is, leaving the Sanjak altogether?” Despite the nice
weather and the abundance and affordability of fruits, the
number of vacationers dropped by 75 percent, from 400
families in the previous year to 100 families. In addition
to voluntary restraints, there existed official
restrictions. And in the following summer most Armenians
and other ethnicities exited the Sanjak fearful of direct
Turkish rule (to be established on 23 July 1939).
As the Armenians of Musa Dagh resettled in Lebanon's Bekaa
Valley, their new home, called Anjar, emerged gradually as a
summer resort for a number of Lebanese and Syrian
Armenians. This reincarnation has retained some of the
features characteristic to the bygone days in Bitias and
Musa Dagh in general.
|
|
|
|
|
Vakef of Musa Dagh: The Sole Armenian Village Left in Turkey |
|
|
|
|
|

The Armenian
village of Vakef (Vakifli or Vakifkoy) in Musa Dagh is
situated in the Samandai district of the southern Turkish
province of Hatay (formerly the Sanjak of Alexandretta). The
word “vakif” is the Turkish version of the Arabic “waqf,”
which means, among other things, religious foundation or
endowment. Where did the Armenian village of Vakef--also
pronounced as Maqf by the natives--derive its name from?
According to oral tradition, the original settlers of Vakef
were a few families from the Armenian villages of Yoghun
Oluk and Kheder Beg who used to cultivate religious
properties adjoining the Alawi village of Kurtderesi. As
those households reestablished themselves in Musa Dagh
permanently, they named their new habitat Vakef. Since,
however, the village lands were in part charitable holdings,
it can be surmised with relative certainty that Vakef's name
reflected the nature of its actual site.
According to a Turkish source, until the beginning of the
19th century Vakef belonged to Yoghun Oluk. During the reign
of Sultan Mehmed II (1808-1839), however, its ownership was
transferred to a Christian Arab by the name of Muhayyile (Mukhayel).
This story does not explain why Vakef changed hands, nor
does it say how it was reverted to the Armenians. In any
case, it can be maintained with relative certainty that
Vakef emerged as a viable village in the 1880s. As such, it
was the smallest of the six main Armenian villages of Musa
Dagh, containing four quarters, namely, Aste Qarshen, Ante
Qarshen, Hajjelak, and Manjelak, and a satellite
neighborhood called Nerke Izzir.
At the time of the annexation of the autonomous Syrian
county or Sanjak of Alexandrettra by Turkey in 1939, the
overwhelming majority of Armenians living there opted to
migrate to other parts of Syria as well as to Lebanon. But a
small number of Armenians preferred to stay. The reason why
some Musa Daghians refused to leave is three-fold. First,
they belonged to that segment of society which had failed to
break the Armenian Revolutionary Federation's (ARF) hold on
the governance of Musa Dagh. Therefore, when in the summer
of 1938 the Sanjak of Alexandretta, now called Republic of
Hatay, entered a one-year transitional phase in its march
toward unification with Turkey thanks to French duplicity,
those disgruntled Armenians saw a window of opportunity to
wrest power from the ARF. They thus began to collaborate
with the emergent Turkish regime, first secretly then
openly. One of them, Tateos Babigian, even became
sub-district governor of Musa Dagh in April 1939 as an
appointee of the Turkish government at Antioch. Second,
those who stayed behind believed that they could live
peacefully and harmoniously in republican Turkey, which,
according to them, had come a long way in dissociating
itself from the bloody Ottoman Empire and charting a new
course. Intense Turkish propaganda aided in shaping this
favorable opinion. Third, it was emotionally and
psychologically difficult to abandon ancestral lands. The
prospects of acquiring additional real estate also loomed on
the horizon.
Population
Those who stayed behind in Musa Dagh and nearby Zeytuniye in
the plain of Svedia numbered 68 families or 384 persons, who
constituted about 6 percent of Musa Dagh's total population.
The breakdown was as follows: Bitias, 4 families or 12
persons; Haji Habibli 1 family or 8 persons; Yoghun Oluk, 4
families or 28 persons; Kheder Beg, 4 families or 27 person;
Kabusiye 3 families or 15 persons; Zeytuniye, 11 families or
64 persons; and Vakef, 41 families or 232 persons. In March
1940, the government took a census of Vakef and granted
Turkish citizenship to its inhabitants. On this occasion,
many last names were Turkified. Thus, Manjian became Manca,
Babigian became Babek, Janian became Canoilu, Kartunian
became Kartun, Silahlian became Silahli, Shemmassian became
Aydin, etc. Only a few surnames retained somehow their
Armenian “ian” or “yan” ending such as Kadiyan and Emlikian.
Similarly, 23 individuals, having regretted leaving Musa
Dagh in 1939, returned within a year, as follows: 13 from
Vakef; 7 from Yoghun Oluk; and 1 from Bitias, Haji Habibli,
and Kabusiye each. However, with the exception of two
mothers, 21 had once again left for Syria and Lebanon by
1945. During the 1946-1947 relocation of Armenians from the
Diaspora to Soviet Armenia, the inhabitants of Vakef
petitioned to go to Syria and Lebanon in hopes of joining
Armenia-bound caravans. Although the Turkish government was
not opposed to such a move, nothing was heard from the
organizers of repatriation. This issue requires further
inquiry.
In 1964, that is, a quarter century after 1939, the number
of Armenians still living in Vakef amounted to 66 families
with a total of 291 members, of whom 158 female and 133
male. Nearly 80 percent of the residents were young, under
43 years of age. Twenty-three years later, in 1987, the
number of Armenians living in the district had dwindled to
40 families or 169 individuals, as follows: in Bitias, 1
family with 5 members; Zeytuniye, 15 families with 59
members; and Vakef, 24 families with 105 members. The rest
had migrated to the following destinations: Istanbul, 47
families or 165 persons; Iskenderun, 10 families or 40
persons; Antakya, 4 families or 20 persons; Ankara, 1 family
or 13 persons; Soviet Armenia, 5 families or 19 persons;
Lebanon, 4 families or 20 persons; and Europe and the United
States, 15 families or 60 persons, for a total of 86
families or 337 persons. Recent estimates of Armenians found
in Vakef during fall, winter, and spring vary between 25 and
38 families or between 135 and 150 individuals, mostly
middle-aged and old. During the summer season, thanks to
families returning to visit relatives, the numbers rise to
250-300 persons.
Church
The Surp Asdvadzadzin (Holy Mother of God) Armenian
Apostolic Church of Vakef was established in 1910. For the
past seven decades, it has had two resident priests, both
native sons: Fr. Ghevont Kartun and Fr. Serovpe Gulian, who
passed away in 2002. The parishioners have since petitioned
the Patriarch of Istanbul for a replacement, which request
he has been unable to satisfy because of the lack of
sufficient clergymen to even occupy some of the vacant
pulpits in the many Armenian churches of Istanbul. As a
result, a visiting priest celebrates mass in Vakef only
occasionally. The church and community are run by a parish
council, a council of elders, and the Church-Loving Women's
Guild.
Vakef has remained within the radar of successive patriarchs
of Istanbul, who have paid periodic pastoral visits. During
a twenty-year period, between 1969 and 1989, for example,
the late Patriarch Shnorhk Kalusdian visited Armenian
remnants and churches in Anatolia six times. Four of those
itineraries included Vakef. On June 17, 1989, he preached at
the Surp Asdvadzadzin church and met privately with the
parish council to discuss church matters, especially the old
roof that was falling apart and causing rain to damage the
interior. But despite the problem's urgency, the government
failed to grant permission for repairs for the next
seventeen years, that is, until 1996, when the church, then
almost in ruins, was finally restored. This granting of
permission for renovation was believed to be in line with
Turkey's attempt at integration with the European Union (EU).
The church of Vakef celebrates the Holy Mother of God feast
in mid-August of each year. This also coincides with the
traditional blessing of grapes. On these dual occasions, a
food called harisa is cooked and served to the numerous
congregants visiting from various parts of the world. In
September, the Holy Cross feast is likewise celebrated. For
example, the incumbent patriarch, Mesrob Mutafian, together
with two priests and the choir of St. Harutiun Church of
Taksim in Istanbul, on Holy Cross Sunday, September 25, 2005
celebrated mass at Vakef. He was accompanied by 25 pilgrims
from Istanbul, 40 pilgrims from Los Angeles, and an
unspecified number from Anjar, Lebanon, the latter two
groups consisting of Musa Dagh descendants.
Education
Vakef Armenians had always been zealous about the education
of their children. What hurt the learning process during the
1920s and 1930s, however, was the rivalry between the Social
Democrat Hnchakian Party and the ARF to control community
affairs, which led, among other things, to the split of the
existing parochial school into two parallel institutions,
thereby draining unnecessarily the resources of this small
village. Things would grow worse after 1939, but for
different reasons.
Soon after Musa Dagh was evacuated in 1939, the Antioch
government asked the Armenian leadership of Vakef to pay the
salary of a Turkish teacher as well. Since, however, the
shrunk community could not shoulder the extra expense for a
new hire, the school was closed. Its furniture and other
belongings were gifted to the school at nearby Jireyri
village, and children began to attend the public school at
Buyuk Zeytinli village some 2 miles away. This situation
continued for seven years, until the 1951-52 academic year,
when the government provided Vakef with a female teacher
from Niide by the name of Halide Hanum. Because in 1943 the
old school building had been sold piecemeal by the
Directorate General of Foundations (Vakiflar), a two-story
house located next to the church, and previously belonging
to Panos Ayntablian, was rented from the same Directorate
General of Foundations for the annual sum of 60 liras. The
Ataturk Ilk Okulu, or Ataturk Primary School, as the school
was called, moved to a new facility in 1955. In 1964,
teacher Mehmet Sabit Cokbilir taught 25 girls and 12 boys,
or a total of 37 students. Another 9 students from Vakef
attended middle school, 4 attended high school, 6 attended
university, and 4 attended technical school. Due to the
decrease of school-age children in subsequent years, the
school closed its doors probably in the late 1980s or early
1990s, never to reopen.
Economy
As soon as the Armenians left Musa Dagh in July 1939, the
Directorate of State Properties took charge of their
abandoned properties. At the same time, the Vakef Armenians
began to claim those holdings as their own, asking Tateos
Babigian for verification papers, which he declined to
issue. The hassle to grab land aroused jealousies and caused
enmities, while the government sent armed guards to prevent
anyone from gathering the crops, which were auctioned off.
Within two years the other Armenian villages were occupied,
at least partially, by Turks and Turkmen from surrounding
Muslim villages. In March-April 1940, the Antakya government
auctioned off the crops once again. The orange crop fetched
3,880 Turkish liras, the bay oil crop used to manufacture
soap fetched 3,128 liras, and the medlar crop fetched 1,858
liras, for a total of 8,866 liras. When the French consul at
Antakya inquired about the fate of the sums thus raised, the
government responded that they would be deposited in the
Central Bank as a trust fund for the Armenians. It is not
clear as to what this meant or what actually happened to
that money.
What is certain, however, is the fact that in 1943 the
General Directorate of Foundations lay hands on some 1,508
donums or about 377 acres of land out of a total 2,818
donums or 705 acres belonging to Vakef village. What was
more, of the balance 330 acres only 60 acres actually
remained in the hands of the villagers, the remaining 270
acres being divided among the Treasury Department, State
Property Agency, and the neighboring villages of Kurtderesi
and Maiaracik. Naturally, these appropriations caused great
economic hardship. For instance, an official registry for
1964 listed 15 agriculturists out of 47 as landless, and the
remaining 27 as lacking sufficient cultivable land. As a
result, a number of Armenians from Vakef migrated to Antakya
beginning with 1944, as was the case with several households
from the Horoz clan, or to Iskenderun, Kirik Khan, and
Istanbul during the 1950s in the case of households from the
Canoilu, Babek, and Silahli clans. They now worked as
mechanics in factories, directors of movie theatre box
offices, dealers of old ware, shoe repairers, and so on.
Still others toiled as seasonal workers in Adana, Tarsus,
and Mersin. Some were able to purchase land in their adopted
towns, others returned to Vakef after saving money. Cold
weather exacerbated the situation in January 1950, when many
fruit trees were destroyed.
Vakef has been a citrus growing rural community since
earliest times. But as mentioned, the lack of jobs due to
limited private land has compelled the younger generation to
move out. Presently, enterprising individuals and the local
government are trying to reverse the trend by engaging in
organic farming and receiving official certification from
the EU with the approval of the World Bank. In fact, the
submitted project for certification won first prize, and the
Turkish National Olympic Committee recognized this
achievement with a special award of its own. In 2004, the
Vakef Village Cooperative exported 1 million Euros worth of
organic oranges, raising the prospects for economic recovery
and encouraging some expatriates to return to Vakef. Just
eight-and-a-half months ago, on December 27, 2007, the
Turkish Daily News reported that “a 5,000-square meter
organic greenhouse area will open;in the next few days.”
The tourism industry is also given serious consideration. In
2000, the Association for Protection and Development of
Vakifli was formed by its former inhabitants now residing in
Istanbul. They assemble in their club at the Pangalti
neighborhood to drink tea, play backgammon, chat, and eat
their favorite traditional foods. But like Armenian
compatriotic unions of old, they similarly are keen on
improving the socio-economic status of their native village.
Accordingly, they and the district government of Samandai
have begun to implement a plan of eco-tourism with the
renovation of abandoned traditional houses in the village.
To date, the four-room house belonging to the Shemmassians (Aydin)
has been restored as a hotel, and the old school building
has been converted to bed-and-breakfast. Similar projects
are in the pipelines.
To conclude, while such measures portend well for the
foreseeable future, the long term prospects are not as
clear. These last of the Mohicans will continue to be
showcased and draw interest as the residents of the sole
Western Armenian village left in Turkey until history
determines their fate.
|
|
|
|
|
|