Armenian Aram Haigaz was only 15 when he lost his father, brothers, many
relatives and neighbors, all killed or dead of starvation when enemy
soldiers surrounded their village. He and his mother were put into a
forced march and deportation of Armenians into the Turkish desert, part
of the systematic destruction of the largely Christian Armenian
population in 1915 by the Ottoman Empire. His mother urged Aram to
convert to Islam in order to survive, and on the fourth day of the
march, a Turk agreed to take this young convert into his household. Aram
spent four long years living as a slave, servant and shepherd among
Kurdish tribes, slowly gaining his captors' trust. He grew from a boy to
a man in these years and his narrative offers readers a remarkable
coming of age story as well as a valuable eyewitness to history. Haigaz
was able to escape to the United States in 1921.