Sergey and Lusine Khachatryan
Daniel Khachatryan, great-grandfather to Sergey Khachatryan and his sister Lusine, was born in Kars. His great-grandchildren know little about him as Daniel had already passed away when they were little. Neither did Daniel talk much of his survival and the lost motherland to his son, Sergey Khachatryan, Sergey and Lusine’s grandfather.
Daniel Khachatryan, Sergey and Lusine Khachatryan’s great-grandfather. |
The family does know that Daniel was one of nine children and had six brothers and two sisters. The Khachatryans owned wheat fields and a bakery in Kars. When imagining their great-grandfather’s lost homeland, Sergey and Lusine think of vast golden fields, the large family peacefully gathered around the baking oven (the tonir), a scent of freshly baked bread filling the air. The Khachatryans defended themselves from Turkish attacks, but only two children – Daniel and his brother Grigor – survived the massacres. They escaped to Gyumri, where Daniel remained while his brother continued his way up to Tbilisi. His trace was lost.
Somewhat later Daniel moved to Yerevan and settled in Kond. His only descendant, Sergey Khachatryan, who died in 2014, had three sons – Vladimir, Artashes and Daniel. Violinist Sergey Khachatryan, Vladimir’s son, is Daniel’s only male descendant.
Sergey and Lusine Khachatryan. |
Daniel Khachatryan and his brother Grigor (right). |
Speaking music
The Centennial of the Armenian Genocide is a special year for Sergey and Lusine, not only because of their work, but also due to their sense of responsibility. The numerous concerts they played in commemoration of the Armenian Genocide on various prestigious stages of the world in Cologne, Vienna, Amsterdam, St. Petersburg, London and San Francisco, their group and individual projects and events all served one purpose: “To speak out in the language of music; to say that the people forcibly displaced from their homeland, subjected to massacres and deportation, still live and create after 100 years, preserve their thousand-year-old culture and address the world in their native language,” says Lusine.
Sergey Khachatryan at the “24/04” world orchestra concert in Yerevan in 2015. |
During the concerts Sergey, Lusine and cellist Narek Hakhnazaryan played Beethoven and Rachmaninov, as well as the “7th Dance” by Komitas and Babajanyan’s “Trio.” Lusine spoke from the stage: “The second part of our concert is dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide…I urge you to join the fight, to demand the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, so that this crime never happens again – especially now, when horrible things are happening in front of our eyes in the modern world. In the end I would say that our wealth is our culture, and that it is thanks to people like Komitas that we exist nowadays. As long as we keep our culture, we can never be annihilated.”
Lusine Khachatryan during the “Nostalgia” piano performance. |
A piece from Lusine Khachatryan’s “Nostalgia” piano performance. |
Sergey and Lusine Khachatryan. |