Ninos Aho: Ghom Ya Jvangha (Assyrian Nationalistic Poetry)
Read more about the
Assyrians at:
http://www.assyriatimes.com
Ninos Aho is born to
Georges Aho and Saydé Chamoun in the village of Girkeh-Shamo,
Syria. The strategic place of his birth, located in the contemporary
Arab world due to the division of
Mesopotamia during the
Sykes-Picot agreement in
1916, set the foundation for Ninos' future involvement in the
Assyrian cause.
Malfono Ninos' political activism has taken him around the world.
The following are examples of a select number of instances:
In
1970, along with fellow Assyrian revolutionaries Malfono
Jean Kardously,
George Bet-Shlimon and the late Gowriyé Alyo, Malfono Ninos is chosen to represent the
ADO at the
Assyrian Universal Alliance's
Third World Congress in
Cologne, Germany.
Malfono Ninos has the honor of working with the Assyrian Universal Alliance (
AUA) in
1974, and contributing to the creation of bylaws meant to be utilized by Assyrians worldwide.
Malfono Ninos and the late
Nadan Younadam travel to
Russia in
1986 to retrieve Freydon Atoraya's manifesto titled, "
Urmia Manifesto of the
United Free Assyria". With the help of Dr.
Elia Vartanov, they are able to recover and translate the manifesto.
In
2003, Rabi
Yosip Bet Yosip and Malfono Ninos represent Occupied Assyria at the
World Congress of
Poets (a
UNESCO affiliation) in
Taipei, Taiwan. Several years later they return to the Congress, this time held in
Kenosha, Wisconsin, where they raise our flag in the name of Occupied Assyria alongside the flags of 22 other nations, a very proud moment for all Assyrians.
In
Australia in 2003, Malfono and Rabi Yosip Bet Yosip continue to edify people on the origins, history and future of the Assyrians.
In
2005, Malfono Ninos meets Malfono Sabri
Atman, the founder and director of
Seyfo Center --
Assyrian Genocide Research Center. Malfono Ninos becomes heavily involved in the organization's work, as his belief is that the tragic genocides inflicted upon our people can be our unifying factor. In 2008, he is named Seyfo Center's Honorary
Global Ambassador.
Malfono Ninos participates in the
European Union symposium on Assyrian Rights and the Democratization of
Turkey in
Brussels, Belgium in
2010.
Malfono fervently supports Assyrian lobbyists who have petitioned
Washington against the political marginalization of the
Assyrian people and is an integral player in the struggle for the Assyrians to regain ownership of the
Nineveh Plains.
In pursuit of his Assyrian vision, Malfono has been exposed numerous times to the prevailing political turmoil of the the
Middle East, being both kidnapped and hijacked on different occasions.
Utilizing his innate talent, Malfono Ninos uses poetry as an outlet to deliver his nationalistic passion and ideology. He inspires fellow Assyrians through his declarations of belief. Due to the moving messages contained in his poetry, many of Malfono Ninos' works have been set to music, both traditional folkloric melodies and original compositions.
Prior to
1968, singing in the
Suryoyo dialect was forbidden in the
Western Assyrian community; it was considered a sacred language to be used only in church liturgy (in contrast to the
Eastern Assyrians, who already had traditional song). At the time,
Western Assyrians sang in
Arabic,
Kurdish and
Turkish at gatherings and celebrations. The ADO believed that our nation would not be able to sustain itself without folkloric traditions. Consequently, they set out to renew the Assyrian song in the
Western culture of the nation.
As a result of the ADO functioning as an underground nationalistic movement, they had to utilize the church choir to bring these songs to the community. Overcoming initial skepticism regarding this idea, Malfono Ninos was at the forefront of organizing the church choir and teaching them these songs, which they began to perform at various parties and functions. This innovative idea was well received; in later years, when these choir members immigrated to other countries, they organized new choral groups, perpetuating the idea of the Assyrian song. Consequently, the current industry of
Assyrian music today is a direct result of the young nationalistic revolution headed by the ADO in the 1960's.
Visit Late Malfono Ninos Aho's website at: http://www.ninosaho.com