Vahe H. Apelian
Anna-the-bride (Anna Titizian Apelian), Anna Khatcher Chelebian, Annais Apelian Toutikian, Annie Chelebian Hoglind |
Yesterday I read that Annais (Apelian) Toutikiian succumbed to her illness and passed away on Thursday January 2, 2025, in Canada. She was a family relation. My late mother took special pride noting that Annais was dressed up for her wedding to Joseph Toutikiian in her house in Antelias, Lebanon and that she escorted her out for her wedding. She took immense pride in seeing the family Annais and Joseph had formed and wrote about her sentiments in that regard in a Kessab yearbook of years past.
The family relations were deep. Annais paternal grandfather Kerop Apelian was my mother’s maternal uncle, that is to say Kerop was the brother of mother’s mother, my maternal grandmother Karoun (Apelian) Chelebian. Annais’ mother Sirvart Chelebian, was my mother's paternal aunt, that is to say Sirvart was the daughter of my mother’s paternal uncle. My maternal grandparents Khacher Chelebian and Karoun Apelian were married in their makeshift camp in Attiyeh Syria, where they were driven in 1915 along many Kessabtsis, instead of to Deir ez Zor.
Annais’ obituary noted that she was born in 1950 in Keurkune, Kessab, Apelian family’s ancestral village. That makes her four years my junior. There is also much history associated with Annais’ name as well, that goes way back to her paternal grandmother Anna (Titilzian) Apelian. Annais’ brother, the late Kevork George Apelian immortalized their paternal grandmother Anna in his book, “Anna the bride”.
Annais’ grandmother Anna’s marriage to Kerop had been the sensational event in Kessab of their days. It had come about by elopement. Anna had done the unthinkable. She had crossed all by herself in the darkness of the night and through the eerie silence of the gorge and walked all alone all the way from the coastal village Kaladouran to Keurkune to her lover's parent's house, to the utter astonishment of his parents and only sister, my grandmother Karoun. Something had gone terribly wrong. Trusted intermediaries had worked out a plan. Kerop and his friends were to meet Anna in the cover of the night and escort her to his house. But the lovers missed either the rendezvous point or the timing, so Anna took upon herself to finish the task and walked to Kerop’s parent's house and waited for her lover’s return. Never in greater Kessab had a girl walked all by herself to her lover’s house before. She had always been free spirited with a mind of her own and was also known for her beauty.
Anna, however, was not to experience the tranquility of a family life with the man she chose to love. In time Kerop Apelian left his pregnant wife Anna and their firstborn child Kevork behind in Keurkune, under the care of his parents and sister, my grandmother Karoun, and joined his two brothers in New York to have his family join him after settling in the New World. When his pregnant wife gave birth to their second son, Kerop sent word from America to name him James for the family was to join him in America. But that was not to be.
In June 1915, Anna and her two young sons; her in laws, Kerop’s father Hanno, and Kerop’s mother, also Anna; and her sister-in-law, my maternal grandmother Karoun, were forcefully driven into the interior of Syria. Only my grandmother Karoun and Anna’s young son James survived the ordeal. The rest fell victims to the first genocide of the 20th century.
"Anna the Bride" by Kevork George Apelian. The book has been translated to Arabic, English by Annie Hoglind and to Italian |
In time James Apelian joined his father in America but did not want to live there, and returned to keurkune where he married Sirvart Chelebian, my maternal grandmother Karoun (Apelian) Chelebian’s sister-in-law. Three children survived to adulthood from that marriage, Kevork George, Annais, and Kerop.
James and Sirvart (Chelebian) Apelian had named their first-born daughter Anna, in memory of child’s paternal grandmother Anna. But the child died in her infancy. My widowed grandmother’s youngest child also named Anna, died of pneumonia when she was vivacious sixteen years old beautiful girl and was also buried in the Keurkune’s ancient cemetery next to her father Khatcher who also had died due to pneumonia at the age of 38. Anna’s tombstone reads in Armenian: “Here rests Anna K. Chelebian (1928-1945), “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God” (Mathew 5:8).
My grandmother Karoun ruled out naming any daughter Anna, henceforth. But the memories of the Annas lingered. Thus, a variation of the name Anna evolved in the persons of my maternal cousin Annie (Chelebian) Hoglind, and in the person of Annais (Apelian) Toutikian. Both of whom became proud grandmothers.
I convey my deepest condolences to Annais’ husband Joseph and their two sons Haig James, Troy Aram and daughter Maria Sira and their children.