Last Canadian survivor of Armenian genocide dies at 107 - Action News
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Montreal

Last Canadian survivor of Armenian genocide dies at 107

Knar Yemenidjian, a Montreal resident, was the last living link for Canada's Armenian community to the genocide that began in 1915.

Knar Yemenidjian was 6 when family went into hiding in 1915, moving to Montreal in the early 1970s

Knar Yemenidjian, right, on her first visit to Montreal in 1967 when she was in her late 50s. (Courtesy of the Yemenidjian family)

Montreal resident Knar Yemenidjian lived to 107, but the Armenian genocide survivorwas lucky to have made it past the age of six.

Yemenidjian died Thursday, just weeks shy of her108th birthday.

The mother, grandmother and great-grandmother, who moved to Montreal in 1971, was the last living link for Canada's Armenian community to the horrors inflicted on their ancestors in Turkey beginning in 1915.

"We're all grieving withthe family," saidArmenYeganian, Armenia's ambassador to Canada. "But she was also a bigger symbol, Iwould imagine, for the CanadianArmenian community and for Armenian people in general."

That role as living symbolwas a responsibility Yemenidjian took seriously, appearing at commemoration events as long as she was physically able.

Knar Yemenidjian with her son Joseph Yemenidjian. (Ren Saint-Louis/Radio-Canada)

Sent into hiding

When thekilling of Armenians by Ottoman Turk soldiersbegan in 1915, Yemenidjian and her family were hidden on a farm outside their hometown ofCaesareabyone of her father's colleagues in the Turkish army.

For months, they lived in a barn with little food, sleeping on the floor with the farm animals. In a recent interview, Yemenidjian's son, Joseph, said his mother recalledtheir constant hunger.

When it was safe, Yemenidjian and her family returned to findtheir home burned down, along with those of their Armenian neighbours, many of whom had been murdered.

They rebuilt the family home and lived under Muslim identities in Caesarea, nowKayseri, for 10 years.

"They were given Muslim identities, Muslim names and made to convert to Islam and accept Muhammad as their prophet," Josephsaid.

Knar Yamenidjian, back row middle, photographed with her family in Egypt in 1931. (Courtesy of the Yemenidjian family)

New turmoil, then refuge in Canada

Yemenidjian and her family eventuallyleft Turkey for Egypt, where they joined other Armenian survivors.

There, amid the turmoil of another world war, Knar met Jean Yemenidjian, whom she married in Alexandria in 1943.

The couple had three children two sons anda daughter. The girl, however, died young.

In 1956, the Armenian community in Egypt once again found itself the object of persecution, this time as a result of the Suez Canal Crisis.

The crisis unleashed a wave of Arab nationalism that brought resentment and even hostility toward Europeans and Armenians in its wake.

The tensions led her sonsto leaveEgypt for Canada, where theysettled in Montreal.

On a visit with her boys in 1967 for Expo 67,Yemenidjianfell for Montreal and finally moved here for good.

Knar Yemenidjian looks through old family photos at her seniors' residence in Montreal. (Ren Saint-Louis/Radio-Canada)

'At peace with herself'

Her son Joseph reflected on the inner strength and peace that kept his mother going despite the terror she knew as a child.

"The reason she lived so long was she was so strong and at peace with herself," hesaid.

While Yemenidjian lived to the see the Canadian government formally recognize the Armenian genocide in 2004, her death precededany sign of an apology from the Turkish government.

Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks during and after the First World War, an event viewed by many scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century.

Turkey disputes the description. It says the death toll has been inflated and considers those killed victims of a civil war.

It's believed that no more than 100 survivors of the genocide are still alive today.

with files from Elias Abboud and Radio-Canada's Ren Saint-Louis