Caroline Melkonian Ylitalo stood next to a portrait of her ancestors from Armenia, gently holding an old comb and tarnished scissors in her cupped hands. The two items are the only remaining objects that once belonged to her grandmother, a survivor of the genocide of Armenians a century ago.
Her grandmother managed to keep the comb and scissors after being forced by Turkish soldiers into a death march to the Syrian desert. Now, 100 years later, their story will travel across Minnesota.
The items are part of an new exhibit designed to keep alive the memory of the 1.5 million Armenians who perished in what's called the "hidden holocaust." The exhibit, launched by St. Sahag Armenian Church in St. Paul, features ordinary belongings of extraordinary people who somehow escaped death and whose descendants eventually made their way to this state.
"The family packed a donkey with their belongings, and these were the only things left after the Turkish soldiers confiscated everything from them," said Melkonian Ylitalo, of Stillwater.
"Everyone in my family is very pleased that my grandmother's story has a new chance to be told," she said.
The exhibit, called Treasures of Memory and Hope, opened last week at St. Sahag church. It will travel to at least a dozen Minnesota churches, universities and other institutions in the year ahead, said the Rev. Tadeos Barseghyan of St. Sahag.
Its format is unusual, if not unique, for Armenian memorials, said Barseghyan, who said he will be encouraging other Armenian communities nationally to try something similar.
The exhibit was unveiled last week on the 104th anniversary of the start of the Armenian genocide, when Armenian Christians living in the Ottoman Empire were forcibly removed from their homes and killed or marched into the Syrian desert where they faced certain death.