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The crowds were huge in
Meskeneh. We were in the middle of a vast sandy area
and the Armenians there were from all over, not only
from Marash. We had no water and gendarmes would not
give us any. There were only two gendarmes for that
huge crowd. Just two. Wasn't there a single man
among us who could have killed them? We were going
to die anyway. Why did we obey those two gendarmes
so sheepishly?
The word was that from
Meskeneh, we were going to be deported to Der-Zor.
My father had brought along a tent that was black on
one side and white on the other. Each time gendarmes
approached us to send another group to Der-Zor, my
father would move the tent. He would pitch it on the
other side of the crowd—as far away as possible. We
were constantly moving. He bought us quite a bit of
time that way.
Eventually, we crossed
the Euphrates River to Rakka where we found an
abandoned house—with no doors or windows—and we
squatted there. But we still had no food. We used to
eat grass. We used to pick grains from animal waste,
wash them and then in tin cans fry them to eat. We
used to say: "Oh, mommy, if we ever go back to
Marash, just give us fried wheat and it will be
enough." |