|
AZTAG: Companions in suffering:
An Interview with Thea Halo
From: Khatchig Mouradian
Sat, 06 Nov 2004
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Aztag" Daily
Newspaper
P.O. Box 80860, Bourj Hammoud,
Beirut, Lebanon
Fax: +961 1 258529
Phone: +961 1 260115, +961 1 241274
Email: Aztag@inco.com.lb
Companions in
suffering: An Interview with Thea Halo
Interview by Khatchig Mouradian
http://www.aztagdaily.com/interviews/Interviews.htm
`Memory is the only way
home,' says the American author, Terry Tempest Williams. And
memory was Sano Halo's only guide, as she embarked, with her
daughter, Thea, on a journey to Turkey in search of Sano's home,
70 years after her exile. It also seems that home is the only
way to memory; it is only there, in modern-day Turkey, that Thea
`fully embraced' herself. `It was the first time I felt connected
to my heritage,' she says in this
interview. `I didn't have a heritage until I stood on my mother's
land and
then on my father's land. For the first time in my life I felt
connected to
these people, who were finally my people,' she adds.
A journey is incomplete,
I believe, if it does not pave way for another
trek. After Thea Halo had visited her Pontic Greek mother's and
Assyrian
father's lands, she embarked on another pilgrimage, that of the
mind and the
soul, to discover and help preserve a history much forgotten
and a genocide
barely remembered. The culmination of this pilgrimage was `Not
Even My
Name,' a book that recounts, through Sano Halo's survival story,
the
genocides of the Armenians, Pontic Greeks and Assyrians that
took place in
Ottoman Turkey during and in the immediate aftermath of World
War I.
However, "Not Even My Name" is also a book about the
beautiful things in
life. `I wanted to show the beauty of the Pontic Greek culture,
at least in
these three villages, and what they actually lost, because it
is only by
seeing the beauty of what was that you can you understand more
fully the
tragedy and injustice of what has been taken away,' says Thea
Halo.
`Praising what is lost
makes the remembrance dear,' says Shakespeare.
I dedicate this interview
to the memory of the hundreds of thousands of
Assyrians and Pontic Greeks that perished in Turkey almost a
century ago,
just about the same time that a million and a half Armenians
were marching
to their deaths.
Aztag- You often speak
about "the exclusivity of suffering." In an interview
you say, `It's truly unfortunate that many late 20th Century
activists, who
work so hard to make the Armenian genocide known to the world,
fail to
include their fellow sufferers.' In your opinion, what is the
reason for
this `failure'?
Thea Halo- I have many
contacts with Armenians and great affection and love
for them.
It was an Armenian family who rescued my mother when she found
herself
destitute and alone in Diyarbekir, and they took her to safety
as their
daughter. My aunt was also Armenian. So I feel a very great affinity
for the
Armenian people. That's why I found it truly disturbing when
I discovered
that the failure to mention the Genocide of the Pontic Greeks
and Assyrians
by many Armenian historians and activists was not just an oversight,
but an
actual agenda of exclusion and denial. The Genocide of the Greeks
of Asia
Minor are referred to as "an exchange of population,"
even though these
historians know that by the time of the exchange in 1923, at
least one
million Asia Minor and Pontic Greeks had already been slaughtered.
The
Assyrians are never mention at all. Someone once explained this
behavior by
telling me, "I'm sure you understand that these Armenian
historians feel so personally tied to this history because it
was a Genocide of their own families and people." And of
course I do understand, because it is the story of the Genocide
of my family and my people, which makes their exclusion even
more painful when the exclusion comes from those who should know
better. It also makes it more reprehensible, and it should stop.
The inclusion of the Greeks and Assyrians does not diminish the
horror of what happened to the Armenians. Even my mother, who
lost her own family and people, always describes the slaughter
of the Armenians as truly horrific.
I've come to realize that
there is a kind of tribalism in the world that is
the cause of almost all the world's misery. When one thinks of
tribalism,
one thinks of underdeveloped or backward nations. But I use this
word
"tribal" even for the United States. There is the greater
tribe that makes
up the country, and then the sub tribes, which are the various
ethnicities.
And there is another tribe, and that's the handful of elite who
are ruling
the world, almost all of whom do so from behind the scenes, behind
the
presidency. The differences of the peoples of the world: language,
look,
customs, food, dress, dance, etc., has been something quite exquisite
to me
throughout my life. But on the other side of that coin, we have
this drive
by the more powerful tribes who think nothing of obliterating
others for
their own greed or ideologies. Then we have Genocide. That's
what happened
in Turkey in the first part of the 20th century during and after
WWI. It's
what happened during WWII. It's what's happening today.
I do think what happened
in Turkey was a Christian Genocide. But I don't
think one can simply use that term without differentiating who
the
Christians were, because although the Assyrians, Greeks, and
Armenians lived in the same land for thousands of years, their
languages, cultures and
histories were unique. It's important to acknowledge that there
was an
Armenian, Assyrian, and a Greek Genocide, but overall it was
a Genocide of
the Christian of Asia Minor. I even differentiate between the
Asia Minor
Greeks: the Ionians, Pontians, and Cappadoccians, first because
the Pontians
had their own empire, and second, because I think it's important
that we
remember their distinctive historical names and regions in Asia
Minor.
One of the reasons I think
the Armenians do themselves a great disservice by
failing to mention the Genocides of the Pontic Greeks and Assyrians
is
because there was a small faction of Armenians in Turkey who
were fighting
for an independent state for Armenians... obviously for very
good reasons.
These so-called "trouble makers" gave the Turks and
their supporters, then
and now, the excuse to blame the victims for their own Genocide,
even though the vast majority of Armenians were simply trying
to live their lives. It's only when one looks at the scope of
the Genocides that the Young Turk regime perpetrated, and Mustafa
Kemal "Attaturk" continued, against the Armenians,
Greeks and Assyrians, that we see it was not because some Armenians
were causing troubles. Rather, it was a plan to rid Turkey of
the Christian population to fulfill the edict of "Turkey
for the Turks."
Aztag- Why is it that few
people have heard about the Genocide of Assyrians
and Pontic Greeks?
Thea Halo- In Greece there
are a lot of Pontic Greeks and a number of books
about the Pontic Greek Genocide. They have been working for recognition
for at least 35 years, even here in America. Assyrians have also
worked for many
years to get this issue on the table without much success. I
blame this
failure mainly on two factors: One, there were no viable books
that told the
story of what happened to the Greeks and Assyrians, until my
book, Not Even My Name was published. But perhaps equally or
more important, those with the strongest voices in our society,
have traditionally had this tribal
mentality I speak of. They have wanted to portray their own people
as being
exclusive in their suffering, and therefore, have failed to even
make
mention of the Genocide of other ethnic peoples. Until quite
recently,
Jewish historians and activists only focused on what happened
to the Jews
during WWII. There was a doctrine that the Holocaust is the definitive
Genocide and therefore one need not look further to understand
the phenomena of Genocide. The study of the Holocaust became
a mandatory part of the curriculum in many, if not all, schools
in the US. But the other ethnic, religious, or social groups
slaughtered by the Nazis were not mentioned, and other Genocides
were overshadowed or ignored, even the Armenian Genocide.
Now many Jewish Historians have recognized the Armenian Genocide
and
Armenians have finally gained a voice. But in turn the Armenian
historians and activists fail to mention the Genocides of their
fellow sufferers: the Assyrians, the Pontic Greeks, and the other
Asia Minor Greeks, even while including other Genocides, such
as those in Rwanda and Cambodia, in so-called "comparative
studies" programs.
Fortunately, not all Armenians
believe that the exclusive approach is the
right one.
Aztag- In an interview,
you say: `To remember does not mean stirring up
hatred within or without. Hatred destroys what was good and pure
in the past
and the present. It simply means to embrace what is ours'. It
is not easy to
overcome feelings of hatred, especially for the very victims
of genocide and
their immediate descendants, is it?
Thea Halo- My mother lived
through this Genocide; she lost everybody and
everything by the age of ten. She had lived side by side with
the Turks.
Turkish villages surrounded the Greek villages. My mother said
they bartered
together and had no problems. One can't say that no Turk ever
attacked a
Greek, Armenian or Assyrian. Of course some did, for various
reasons. But
overall, they lived together peacefully. I've heard countless
stories from
Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks, of how Turks saved the lives
of their
families. My mother says that you must put blame where blame
belongs, on the Turkish government. If you begin to single out
the people of a country, and forget that whatever they did was
instigated or sanctioned by the
government, you will then never get rid of the hatred. This tribal
mentality
takes over and goes on and on until we're all gone, because there
are
hatreds that go back thousands of years between almost every
tribe on earth.
We must learn to acknowledge the past without living in the past.
We don't understand how
the past has affected us. Because I was born and
raised in New York City, I can say it hasn't affected me, but
that's not
true. My parents went through this Genocide. They raised me,
and we don't
know all the subtle ways that their lives and experiences have
affected us.
We are the product of our parents. If we don't acknowledge their
past, and
embrace it as part of ours, we never fully embrace ourselves.
Only if we try
to understand where we come from, can we really understand who
we are.
Aztag- And when did you
yourself come to this understanding?
Thea Halo- It was first
when I visited Turkey. It was the first time I felt
connected to my heritage. Here in America, nobody knew who the
Pontic Greeks are. And everybody told me that I couldn't be Assyrian,
because the
Assyrians don't exist anymore. `How I can be something that doesn't
exist?'
I used to think. Consequently, I didn't have a heritage until
I stood on my
mother's land and then on my father's land. For the first time
in my life I
felt connected to these people, who were finally my people. And
after
writing my mother's part of the story, which included the Genocide
of the
Pontic Greeks, Assyrians, and Armenians, I began to research
the general
history for the book, and I realized how important their story
really is.
The thought that people who had lived in a land for 3 thousand
years and
more, could just be wiped from the face of that land and all
memory of them
seizes to exist, not only there, but from the face of the earth,
was a
powerful testament. That certainly makes the Genocide complete,
when no one has even heard of your people. People ask me sometimes
why I titled the book "Not Even My Name." The reason
was that my mother lost everything, family, home, language, and
country, even her name. But many Pontic Greeks and the Assyrians
tell me that for them the title also has a bigger meaning. It
means that even the names, Pontic Greek and Assyrian, was lost
to the world. It was an interesting revelation for me.
Aztag- Many Armenians attach
great importance to the land they lost. For
them the genocide isn't `simply' the extermination of 1.5 million
Armenians,
it is also the expulsion of an entire people from its land and
the wiping
out of a culture. When you speak about your "father's land"
and your
"mother's land", do you have similar feelings?
Thea Halo- Almost every
ancient culture has this attachment to the land.
What else is there without a place to call home? When I stood
on that land,
for the first time in my life I could actually feel my ancestors,
my
grandparents. They became real to me for the first time. They
were as much a
part of that land as the trees, the rocks, the grasses. Their
blood and
sweat is mingled with the earth for thousands of years. How can
one walk
away from that without feeling that a part of oneself is somehow
left
behind, somehow missing, like an amputated leg or arm that continues
sending out sensations to the brain, even though it's gone? Just
the other day my mother said to me, "you know, when you
are born in a country, there is a
part of you that always feels that that country is your true
home."
Aztag- Do you think the
recognition of these genocides should be a
prerequisite to Turkey's accession to the EU?
Thea Halo- I don't think
that only the recognition of the Genocides is
important, I think many factors are important for Turkey's inclusion
into the EU. But by recognizing the Genocides they would resolve
some of the other important issues as well. For instance, journalists,
publishers, and teachers are still being jailed for talking about
the Genocides. If you recognize the
Genocides, then you don't have to keep jailing your teachers,
publishers,
and journalists on this issue. As my father used to say, you
kill 2 birds
with one stone. And there are other human rights issues that
Turkey has to
deal with. I must tell you, when I went to Turkey I found a very
beautiful
land visually, and I found the people to be exceptionally sweet
and
hospitable. It's a shame that they can't speak freely and learn
what
happened in their own country without fear.
The sad thing is that they
lost so much, because the Greeks, Armenians, and
Assyrians had so much culture there. They brought so much vibrancy
to the
country that was lost. They were wonderful artisans, intellectuals,
teachers, musicians. At the time, there were Europeans who were
saying "What in the world will Turkey do without the Christians?"
After all, it was the Christians who were the intellectuals and
business people, who had the
education to help Turkey progress into the 20th century. When
Turkey got rid
of the Christian populations, they set themselves back, way-way
back. The
general Turkish population was not well educated at that time,
because the
Turkish government didn't bother to educate them the way the
Christian
missionaries educated the Christian populations. For the most
part, the
government wouldn't allow Muslims to attend the Christian schools,
for fear
of conversion, so most Turks of the time remained peasants and
farmers.
Consequently, the Turks did themselves a great disservice, because
the
removal of the Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians left a great
vacuum in
Turkey.
Aztag- What was the impact
of your book? To what extent did it help raise
greater awareness about the genocides of the Pontic Greeks, the
Assyrians,
and the Armenians?
Thea halo- One of the first
emails I got when the book was published was
from a young Pontic Greek girl living in Holland. She said, the
Pontic
Greeks lived in Asia Minor for 3 thousand years and I go to school
and no
one in Holland knows we ever existed. It really touched my heart.
I knew
what she was talking about because no one knew that we exist
in New York.
So, of course, it makes a difference. They could then start to
teach this
history in schools. My book was picked up by UCLA and they began
to teach high school teachers how to teach Not Even My Name to
their students.
Aztag- "Not Even My
Name" is already translated to Greek and Dutch. Are
there any plans to translate it to other languages, including
Armenian?
Thea Halo- I think it would
be important and I would love to see `Not Even
My Name' translated into Armenian. A Turkish publisher also wanted
to
publish it and an Icelandic publisher recently contacted me for
the rights.
Aztag- You are one of the
very few who are speaking out about the Genocides of the Pontic
Greeks and Assyrians; with this comes great responsibility. A
Scholar or an author, who deals with the Holocaust or the Armenian
genocide
for instance, might be under less pressure, because there are
many others in
the field. How do you deal with this pressure?
Thea Halo- I do feel very
responsible and when I'm asked to give a lecture,
I do feel I should go, but I also enjoy going out there. I usually
bring my mother with me. She loves doing this because it's something
very important to her. It's nice to see her with some of the
older people who have lived through this. They hug and kiss each
other; because my mother's memory helped put this history on
the map. She became a very important person and a symbol, and
she feels this importance. There's an immediate connection between
them when they meet, even with the younger generations, that's
just so wonderful to see. One young Pontic Greek girl in one
of our audiences in New York stood up and said to my mother,
"you are our history; our history alive." It was very
moving. So I do enjoy doing this, but I also feel a great
responsibility, and will continue to feel that way, until there
is proper
recognition of the Genocide of the Pontic Greeks and Assyrians.
Aztag- What about your
mother? She is very much involved in this as well,
isn't she?
Thea Halo- My mother is
94. I was amazed the first time we had a radio
interview on NPR. My mom was on the phone and I was in the studio
in Boston. During the interview she laughed and she cried. Then
I found Lisa Mullins' website on the internet for "The World."
Mullins said her favorite
interviewees were Thea and Sano Halo. I was surprised, but I
could
understand why. My mother was perfect. Her answers were very
sweet and
natural. When I read the passage from the book about her mother
giving her
away to save her, my mother began to cry. She had to take a moment
to
collect herself. Then she said she never saw her mother again.
Soon after
she told a funny story about how people would ask her husband
if she was his daughter, and then she laughed. She had a natural
instinct not to allow the
interview to become morbid. When I asked her about it later she
said, "a
little bit of laughter and a little bit of tears." I again
realized how much
there was about her I didn't know. She always loved to sing,
and when we go
on our events, she sings old Greek and Turkish songs for the
audience that
she learned as a child. She even sings an old Armenian love song
she learned
when living with Zohra and Hagop.
Aztag- During a lecture,
speaking about your book you said, `The story is my
mother's but the sunsets are mine.' Can you elaborate on this?
Thea Halo- Well, of course
she doesn't remember when the sun came up and
when the sun went down, when it was raining, etc. But I wanted
to help
people be there, really experience the story. All the facts are
hers; the
story of the village, what happened to the people, the couple
who ran away
and married, that's all true. But the part where they stare into
the puddle
of water as they stand before their parents, of course, that's
part of the
things I added to help the reader enter the story. From what
people tell me,
it does help them be there. They feel they were actually walking
with my
mother on that harrowing death march to exile.
Aztag- Any plans for another
book?
Thea Halo- I do think of
many other books. The book that I would like to
write is a collection of interviews with people who have experienced
Genocide, because in that way we will see how similar the suffering
really
is. Maybe in this way some of the tribalism will be put away.
But it's
impossible to get rid of all the tribalism. Unfortunately, Genocide
has
become big business. It's not simply a moral issue anymore, and
this is what
I find the most objectionable. Some Armenians have told me that
certain
survivors have passed away but they have already been interviewed,
and
they'll turn over the tapes to me. Same goes for Assyrians and
Pontic
Greeks. So I am hoping that for the ones I can't interview directly,
I can
at least access the tapes of their interviews.
I guess my focus in life
has always been both the beauty of the world and
the injustices. I think that those two things often go together.
If you look
at the various cultures that once inhabited Turkey, for instance,
they are
all unique and very beautiful. They created great works of art
and
architecture and they developed communities that allowed them
to survive and
prosper for thousands of years, at least in the periods when
they weren't
being slaughtered and oppressed. And that's why I wrote the book
the way I
did. I wanted to show the beauty of the Pontic Greek culture,
at least in
these three villages, and what they actually lost. Because only
by seeing
the beauty of what was, can you more fully understand the tragedy
and
injustice of what has been taken away.
http://groong.usc.edu/news/msg96555.html
|