The Cilician Mount Ararat
Vahe H.
Apelian
Much like Mount Ararat, Gassios Ler (Կասիոս Լեռ) has been a silent witness to the lives of the Kessabtsis since the original inhabitants set foot at the mountain slope. The mountain rises from the Mediterranean Sea shore and flanks Kessab in the northwest. It commands a majestic view to the traveler approaching Kessab. Gassios Ler may very well be regarded as the Cilician version of Turkish-occupied Mount Ararat.
Ler in Armenian means mountain.
The Armenian name of the mountain, Gassios, is thought to have evolved from Cassius. Syria was
once a Roman province and several “Cassius”s were governors of Syria.
Although the Kessabtsis refer to the mountain as Gassios Ler, its official name in Arabic is Jabal Aqra ("Bare Mountain")
because of its sparse vegetation. Its summit is approximately 1,800 metres
(5,000 ft) and commands a magnificent view of the Mediterranean, Moussa Ler of the famed Forty Days of Mussa Dagh by Frantz Werfel and parts of the historical Antioch through which
Apostle Paul traversed spreading Christianity.
The very first stamps of the new Republic of Armenia
depicted Mount Ararat even though the mountain is in Turkey. Much like Mount
Ararat, Gassios Ler is part of Turkey as well. However, the Kessabtsis continue to
relate to it as their own. Historically, it was part of Armenian Cilicia. The
mountain, along with parts of the region (Sanjak of Alexandretta), including
part of the Kessab, was annexed to Turkey in 1937-1939. Present-day Kessab was
incorporated into Syria, thanks to the appeals of the local Armenians to the
European powers. It is claimed that Cardinal Aghajanian played a decisive
role in securing present-day Kessab as a remnant of the historical Cilicia.
Kessab retains its Armenian inhabitants to this day, while the rest of Cilicia
is depopulated of its once-thriving Armenian population.
Up to its annexation to Turkey and once a year, on the Sunday
nearest to August 15, Kessabtsis used to go on pilgrimage to the ancient
ruins on top of Gassios Ler, to celebrate the Feast of
Assumption. Kessabtsis called these ruins Ballum. Some of the historians claim
that a temple dedicated to Greek god Apollo stood there once. At one time for
the Kessabtsis, the word Ballum and the Feast of Assumption were intertwined if
not synonymous. Both of my parents as youngsters used
to accompany their parents to celebrate the Feast of Assumption at Ballum
on Gassios Ler.
The Feast Assumption is an important religious celebration to
Catholic and Orthodox Christians as the day that Virgin Mary was received into
Heaven. However, all the Kessabtsis, irrespective of their denominational
affiliations, celebrate the feast. Grapes are brought to the church and are
blessed after Divine Liturgy. Kessabtsis would not eat grape until the feast. I
remember well my paternal grandmother Sarah forbade me to pick grapes from
vines until their blessing. The Feast of the Assumption is a major festivity
for the Kessabtis who continue to celebrate it with davul and zurna and
feast on harissa.
Gassios Ler, unlike Mount Ararat, has one summit. In the gorge between the
snow-capped twin peaks of Mount Ararat our legendary King Ardavast remains
chained, accompanied by his faithful dogs that unceasingly lick his chains to
free Ardavast to liberate Armenia. No such legendary figure inhabits Gassios Ler. Both mountains however,
remain silent witnesses of our turbulent history, stretching from the slopes of
Mount Ararat to the slopes of Gassios Ler and its surroundings within
the famed historical Armenian Cilicia.
Source: Keghart.com.
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