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KurdistanObserver.com
The Day the Sun Never Rose
By: Cklara Moradian
Mar 18, 2005
I awoke far before the sun
rays could creep in with their playful hands through the thick colorless
curtains of my father’s house and bring the message of dawn to our perhaps
dreamless sleeps and silently whisper that she has arrived. I awoke and wore a
dress of the bluebell’s and violet’s grace and set out to the fields of my
mother’s land. I walked among the grass that grew knee high and the crimson
flowers who had not yet unveiled from their gentle moonlight rest. With such
childlike innocence I flouted like a butterfly that has come to greet the
blooming spring. Only days before Nowruj and already I felt revived, already I
could smell through the passing breeze the New Year, taste in the melted snow of
the racing rivers a new beginning, could touch the purity of my land as I
plugged a flower from the fields. I stood far from the city and looked down from
a hill, admiring every scent, every breeze, every sight, every inch of what
stood before me, of the metamorphosis that I was given the privilege to witness.
As the sun was rising and the glorious dawn was withstanding its triumph upon
the winter night, an unnatural wind began to blow behind me and my long dark
hair and colorful dress moved about violently. My heart began to pound upon my
fragile chest as the birth of day was stopped by a monster shaped helicopter,
flying right above me towards the city I had first opened my eyes to see. Fear
began to entangle itself around me, squeezing my body, making it hard to catch
the ever escaping air. The flying monsters continued to follow and without a
sound or trace left as sudden as they had come only to return again and again to
pierce the fear through me. I could not move and stood where I had first set
eyes upon them and as I could no longer see or hear their terrifying sight, I
began to run towards my home, hoping to find comfort in my mother’s embrace. I
ran as fast as my small feet permitted and as I began to get closer to my city,
I could smell the sweet scent of apples and pears but could no longer take long
deep breaths and see clearly. My feet began to tremble beneath me and shook as I
was walking through the streets of my city. I put my hands on my face covering
my mouth and nose and absent mindedly walked towards my home. There, in the
corner of the street, a boy I had often played with, lied motionless, his eyes
still open yet hollow, the only movement upon his face was a stream of blood
running down his nose…My eyes were burning and tears began to run down my cold
cheeks, and as I continued to walk, I was faced with the most terrifying scenes
of a morbid city. Another boy carrying a cart was standing, his feet in the same
position they had been when he had made his last stop. A man lied faced down, on
the concrete of his front yard, a woman, frozen, was sitting in the corner of
her door and her spilled milk was still running, a young mother, carrying her
child upon her back was half way up the stairs of her house but she remained
unmoved, her child was fast asleep. I passed neighbors, classmates, friends,
family, no one spoke, no one raised their heads, no one waved or said “hello”,
they all lied like statues upon the rocky roads of the streets and the only
movement upon the city was the torment of the wind that carried the agonizing
sound of shouts, weeping mothers and terrified children who had remained awake.
As I was getting closer to my father’s house, I had become somehow empty as a
drum and I knew that I would not find comfort in my mother’s embrace, for
although my vision was blurry, I could still see enough of the darkness that had
come with sunrise. I ran the last few steps inside to find a lethal silence that
tore me apart. I fell on my knees and screamed as my mother lied by my father on
the breakfast spread, the tea cold, the glass still between my father’s fingers.
I continued to scream and cry for I could do nothing else, the room was
illuminated by the sky’s light but it created a mocking irony upon the depth of
misery that had come upon my world. I shook my father’s cold body, asking him to
awaken, telling him that it is too late to still be asleep, yet he remained
where he had been. I threw objects around thinking that maybe somehow my mother
would awaken and scold me for misbehaving, but no one said a word, no one was
there to silence me…
The only survivor of my
family, I was left to carry them all to their graves, left to pick up the
crumbled pieces of life. I was left, like so many others, in a city that was
shaken, broken, left to horror and merciless pain, to mourn for those innocent
souls whose only crime was being born. I wonder if I would have been set free if
I had been buried by their side today. There was no Nowruj that year or the
years that followed. The only ceremonies that we attended were one funeral after
another and the only emotion that filled my emptiness was the penetration of
pain. So often did I sit before my window and longed to see those crimson
flowers once again, but they had all died, on that day when the sun never rose…
This is not just a young
girl’s personal story; it is the story of the Kurdish people of Halabcha, of the
survivors who were left to carry their loved ones on their bruised knees to mass
graves, of the massacre that left the innocent people to clean the bloodshed of
the blood thirsty tyrants. It is the story of the Kurdish holocaust and
Hiroshima. That Friday morning, on March 16th of 1988, in the city of Halabcha,
the city of the strong and brave, the sun did not rise, nor did the winter leave
or the spring arrive. That Friday morning in the city of Halabcha was only the
beginning of what continued to be a day of genocide upon humanity and it left
thousands of Kurds dead and a never ending chain of people sick, and almost two
decades later, still no flowers or sincere joy grow . Here we stand, remembering
the day the sun never rose and attempt to show our sympathy, strength, our
pride, our dignity, which has withstood the test of misery. Here we stand, and
although we can not mend the wounds of the Kurdish children of Halabcha, we take
a moment of silence to remember them, to remind ourselves that no matter what
they do to us, we will never bow down and kneel. How can we ever forgive or
forget? We stand here today to raise the voice of the silenced orphans left
behind by the corpses of their mothers and fathers. We stand to let them know
that they will never be forgotten…
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