We all know families that are poor but ‘respectable’. Mine,
 in contrast, was extremely rich but not ‘respectable’ at all.
 At the time I was born they were outrageously wealthy, but those
 days are long gone. Sad for us, though quite right in the moral
 scheme of things. Anyone kind enough to show interest might
 ask in what way my family wasn’t ‘respectable’. Well, because on
 the one hand it could not trace its ancestral line further than my
 great-grandfather, who went by the fine name of Asadullah, meaning
 ‘loved by Allah’. This proved very apt: born a peasant, he died
 a millionaire, thanks to the oil gushing from his stony land, where
 sheep had once grazed on meagre pickings. On the other hand
 because my family included some extremely shady characters on
 whose activities it would be better not to dwell. If I get caught up
 in the story, I might reveal all, though my interest as an author is at
 odds with my concern to preserve the last shreds of family pride.
 So, I was born into this odd, rich, exotic family one winter’s
 day in a turbulent year; like so many ‘historic’ years, this one was
 full of strikes, pogroms, massacres and other displays of human
 genius (especially inventive when it comes to social unrest of all
 kinds). In Baku, the majority of the population of Armenians and
 Azerbaijanis were busy massacring one another. In that year, it
 was the better-organized Armenians who were exterminating the
 Azerbaijanis in revenge for past massacres, while the Azerbaijanis
 made the best of it by storing up grounds for future slaughter.
 There was, therefore, something for everyone—except of course
 for the many who sadly lost their lives.*
 No one would have considered me capable of taking part in the
 work of destruction, but I clearly was, since I killed my mother as
 I came into the world. To escape the bloodshed, she had chosen
 to give birth in an oil-producing area in the hope that it would be
 quieter there; but in the chaos of the time she ended up giving birth
 in dreadful conditions and contracted puerperal fever. In addition,
 the house was cut off from outside help by a violent storm, compounding
 the confusion into which we’d been plunged. Without
 the complex care that her condition required, my mother fought
 the illness in vain. She was lucid when she died, full of regret at
 leaving life so young and of anxiety at the fate of her loved ones.
 My memories of conscious awareness begin with toys that
 my father brought from Berlin. It was through these that life was
 revealed to me: I first perceived the world through the purring
 stomach of a plush cat, the beautiful gleam of a maharajah astride a
 grey buckskin elephant, the bowing and scraping of a multicoloured
 clown. I perceived it all, felt it, marvelled and began to live.
 My early years were the happiest; I was so young compared
 to my three older sisters that I enjoyed all kinds of privileges and
 knew how to make the most of them.
 But, more than anything, my happiness was the result of my
 upbringing by a Baltic German governess—she was my governess,
 my mother and my guardian angel too. This saint (the noun is no
 exaggeration) gave us her health, and her life; she wore herself out
 for us, suffered all sorts of trouble because of us, and received little
 joy; she always sacrificed herself and asked for nothing in return.
 In a nutshell, she was one of those rare beings who are able to give
 without receiving.
 Fräulein Anna had fair skin and flaxen hair, while the four of
 us had brown skin, black hair and a markedly oriental, hirsute
 appearance. We made a fine group when we surrounded her in
 photographs, all hook noses and close-set eyebrows, she completely
 Nordic. And I should say that in those days—despite the prohibition
 of the Prophet, enemy of the image—we often had our photograph
 taken, dressed in our finery and flanked by as many relatives as
 possible, all against the background of a painted park. A harmless
 obsession that can be explained by the novelty of the process for
 the near savages that we were; an obsession to which I owe several
 hilarious and touching pictures that I preserve with great care.								
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