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In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

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  • #51
    Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE REMEMBERED
    By Lisa D. Welsh

    Worcester Telegram

    April 21 2008
    MA

    Importance of repeating stories stressed

    Photo: During the Martyrs' Day commemoration at the Armenian Church of
    Our Saviour yesterday, 7-year-old Emilee Derkazarian of Holden lights
    a candle in memory of her relative Charles Derkazarian, who was killed
    during the Armenian genocide.

    Photo: Heghine Minassian, a survivor of the Armenian genocide, pauses
    as she relates her experiences.

    WORCESTER-- Three generations of Armenians -- a 99-year-old woman, a
    three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and a high school essayist
    -- spoke from differing perspectives but shared one message during
    the 93rd anniversary of the Armenian genocide recognition yesterday
    at the Armenian Church of Our Saviour: "Honor the truth of the past
    because denial makes it more likely that genocide will happen again."

    Heghine Minassian was 6 years old the day Turkish soldiers went house
    to house and emptied all the buildings in her village. She said most
    Armenians were marched into the desert, where they were left to starve
    to death; but some of the women, like her aunt, were kept as slaves.

    "My grandparents were in the attic hiding," Mrs. Minassian said in
    Armenian through an English interpreter, Van Aroian. "My grandmother's
    sister yelled, 'Don't open the door. Don't go out.' But the (soldiers)
    gave the order to come down and they came down."

    Within three years, Mrs. Minassian would be an orphan, the same age of
    many of the children in church who participated in a candle-lighting
    ceremony in honor of their family members who had died in the
    genocide. Looking out at the young faces in the front pews,
    Mrs. Minassian said, "Don't forget our struggle."

    Stephen A. Kurkjian, a reporter for the Boston Globe for 38 years,
    has written about many high-profile events. However, sharing the
    story of his father's family was not one of them.

    "I was not an appreciating Armenian until 1992, when I accompanied my
    83-year-old father to the village where he was born," Mr. Kurkjian
    said at the Martyrs' Day commemoration. "The sadness hit me like a
    sledgehammer. I started asking, 'How could this happen?' "

    "I came back and wrote an article called 'Roots of Sorrow.' But now
    I'd add to that title, 'Seeds of Hope.' "

    Mr. Kurkjian's father lost his father, brother and sister in the
    genocide of 1915; he survived after making the 300-mile trek to Syria
    with his mother, and later to America.

    "My father would say out of tragedy there was opportunity for liberty
    and religious freedom. There was education and economic opportunity
    in America. I would have never had the successes I've had. Instead
    I would have worked at a small weekly in a mountain village."

    "I asked my Der Hayr (priest), 'How this could happen?' " Mr. Kurkjian
    said. "He said, 'God would not have allowed the first Christian
    church to not have survived.' That's as good an answer as you are
    going to get."

    With the internal awakening about his heritage, Mr. Kurkjian has
    traveled to Turkey and watched pressure build on the Turkish government
    to reassess its position that downplays references to the genocide.

    Robin Garabedian, a junior at Doherty Memorial High School whose
    family has been with the Armenian Church of Our Saviour since her
    grandmother's family immigrated to Worcester, said she was 7 years
    old when her father told her about the genocide. In reading her
    award-winning essay, "Why Remembrance of the Genocide is Important,"
    she quoted Adolf Hitler as saying, "Who today remembers the
    extermination of the Armenians?" as rationalization for the Holocaust.

    "How does someone hate someone else so much?" Robin asked in
    anger. "If the world had stood up (against) the Armenian genocide,
    there wouldn't have been genocide of the xxxs, or in Cambodia in the
    '70s, or in Darfur today."
    What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

    Comment


    • #52
      Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

      WALK FOR GENOCIDE AWARENESS
      By Daniel Tedford

      Daily Pilot

      April 21 2008
      CA

      The Rev. Fr. Moushegh Tashjian, the pastor at St. Mary Armenian
      Apostolic Church, has been waiting a long time for the U.S. government
      to give him what he wants.

      Tashjian's father was orphaned when Tashjian's grandmother was
      killed during the Armenian Genocide, which began April 24, 1915. And
      since he first learned of the tragedy he has wanted justice from
      the U.S. government -- something he thinks is found in the simple
      acknowledgment of what took place early in the 20th century.

      "There are millions of Americans that sympathize with us, but it is the
      government that stubbornly is standing with the [Turkish government]
      on this issue," Tashjian said. "It's not a hopeless thing we are
      pursuing."

      Tashjian and many others in the Armenian community took to the streets
      of Costa Mesa and Santa Ana for an Armenian Genocide awareness walk
      starting at 1 p.m. Sunday. More than 250 people walked from St. Mary
      Armenian Church to Forty Martyrs Armenian Church in Santa Ana, an
      8-mile walk. Congressman Edward Royce spoke briefly to begin the
      event while Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez meet the group at Forty
      Martyrs for the closing ceremonies.

      "Our efforts here begin with the children," Royce said of the large
      amount of youths who turned out for the walk. "We have to remind them
      of their heritage."

      Royce has worked on legislation concerning the Armenian Genocide and
      spoke out against the refusals of both President George W. Bush and
      former President Bill Clinton to acknowledge the atrocities documented
      since 1915.

      Ara Malazian, one of the organizers of the event from the Armenian
      National Committee of Orange County, reiterated the congressman's
      thoughts by describing how vast the genocide has affected the Armenian
      people.

      "Talk to any Armenian here, every one of us has been touched in
      some way," said Malazian, whose grandfather escaped the country at
      5 years old.

      "We are looking at the Armenian Genocide as the first crime against
      humanity in the 20th century."

      The event was free to anyone who wanted to register and walk, but
      the Armenian National Committee did ask for donations it would use
      toward generating educational opportunities, Malazian said.

      Those educational benefits would go to educating teachers on how to
      teach students about the Armenian Genocide in schools and raising
      awareness in the public, Malazian said.

      "[The youth] will be the torch bearers for justice," Tashjian
      said. "There is hope."

      This was the second awareness walk the group has put on in Orange
      County.

      Last year's walk generated $15,000 in donations and the organization
      was hoping for more of the same this year, Malazian said.
      What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

      Comment


      • #53
        Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

        Yerevan

        ARMENIANS MARK 93rd GENOCIDE ANNIVERSARY

        ARMENPRESS
        April 24, 2008

        YEREVAN, APRIL 24, ARMENPRESS: Hundreds of thousands of Armenians
        from Armenia proper and its vast Diaspora went uphill today to the
        Genocide Memorial in Yerevan to remember 1.5 million of their ancestors
        killed brutally at the orders of the government of the Ottoman Turkey
        from 1915-1923.

        President Serzh Sarkisian, Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian, Parliament
        Chairman Tigran Torosian, Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II,
        parliament and government members and other top government officials,
        senior clergy and top army brass were the first to remember the
        victims by visiting the Memorial and laying flowers to it. The heads
        of foreign diplomatic missions in Yerevan were the next to lay wreathes
        at the Memorial.

        Armenia's leadership, the senior clergy, guests paid their tribute
        to the genocide victims by observing a minute of silence and laying
        flowers at the Memorial. Catholicos Karekin II conducted a special
        church service for the repose of the victims' souls.

        "There is no family in Armenia that would not mourn today with us,
        there is no family that was not affected by this great tragedy-directly
        or indirectly.

        Therefore we have to learn a lesson from the history.

        May God give us wisdom to do so, so that such tragedies never
        happen again. I think we have to be as wise as to realize that the
        only guarantee to avoid such crimes in future is to be strong and
        united. May God give us intelligence to understand this simple truth,"
        prime minister Tigran Sarkisian said to journalists after paying
        tribute to Genocide victims.

        Wreaths were laid at the Genocide Memorial on behalf of government
        ministries and agencies, political parties, student unions and civic
        society organizations.

        Liturgies and special ceremonies of repose of souls of the victims
        were held in Armenian churches across the globe.

        Countries officially recognizing the Armenian Genocide include
        Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Cyprus, France, Greece, Italy,
        Lebanon, Lithuania, The Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Slovakia, Sweden,
        Switzerland, Uruguay, Vatican City and Venezuela.

        Although part of the United Kingdom, Wales also officially recognized
        the Armenian Genocide. The Parliament of the State of New South Wales,
        Australia passed a resolution acknowledging and condemning the Armenian
        Genocide in 1997.

        International bodies that recognize the Armenian genocide include
        the European Parliament, the Council of Europe, the United Nations
        Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of
        Minorities, the International Center for Transitional Justice, the
        International Association of Genocide Scholars, the Union of American
        Hebrew Congregations, the World Council of Churches and the Permanent
        Peoples' Tribunal.

        The Armenian genocide was recognized by about 40 states of the USA
        and a U.S. House of Representatives Committee of Foreign Affairs. An
        Armenian resolution was motioned by an Israeli parliament committee
        earlier this year.

        - News on Armenia, Artsakh, Armenian Diaspora, South Caucasus and the World: Armenpress- your source of reliable information

        ADDRESS BY PRESIDENT SERZH SARKISIAN ON THE DAY OF REMEMBRANCE OF THE VICTIMS OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

        YEREVAN, APRIL 24, ARMENPRESS:
        Dear Compatriots: today we pay tribute to the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

        As a result of the state-conspired and carried out genocide in the Ottoman Turkey, a vast number of the Armenians were annihilated on their native land and lost their living space. At the time numerous cultural and material values, which the Armenian people had been creating for thousands of years, were destroyed and are being destroyed even today.

        International recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide is an appropriate and inevitable part of the Armenia’s foreign policy agenda. The Motherland of all Armenians – the Republic of Armenia – should double its efforts for the restoration of historic justice. When it comes to the genocide condemnation, the denial has no future, especially today, when many countries of the world have added their voices to the voice of truth.

        Recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide is not just an Armenian issue. Crime against humanity bears universal significance and reverberation and must receive a universal recognition. Our goals have nothing to do with animosity or revenge. While keeping the memory of the innocent victims alive, presently we are ready to establish normal relation with Turkey without any preconditions.

        Dear Compatriots:
        The preconditions and causes of the Armenian Genocide have been widely spoken and written about. Many new facts and analytical works are waiting to be published. However, one thing is absolutely clear: execution of such a crime became possible only in the absence of the Armenian state.

        Today, on April 24 we must acutely realize the exceptional meaning of the Armenian state. The Armenian nation should develop and strengthen, embracing our state - the guarantor of our people’s security.

        - News on Armenia, Artsakh, Armenian Diaspora, South Caucasus and the World: Armenpress- your source of reliable information

        ARMENIAN PREMIER ADDRESSES MESSAGE ON ANNIVERSARY OF GENOCIDE

        ARKA
        April 24, 2008

        YEREVAN, April 24. /ARKA/. RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan
        addressed a message to the Armenian people on the occasion of the
        93rd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

        In his message the RA Premier states that April 24 is one of the days
        when all the Armenians bow their heads to the memory of the victims
        of the Armenian Genocide. The crime masterminded and perpetrated by
        the authorities of the Ottoman Empire was the annihilation of the
        Armenian people. Over 1.5mln Armenians fell victim to that heinous
        crime. Hundreds of thousands of old people, women and children were
        forcibly displaced, says the RA Premier's message.

        This day all the Armenians pay homage to the innocent victims' memory
        and re-examine the most important lessons of the past.

        "We cannot live a prosperous and secure life if we are disunited. We
        will not be able to prevent great disasters if we have no strong
        statehood, and we neither can and nor must forget our history as a
        nation. We must move forward, we must unite round national ideas,
        build up a strong democratic state, do everything possible and
        impossible for Armenia's security, prosperity and development -
        for our country's future," says RA Premier's message.

        The Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923 was the first genocide in the 20th
        century organized and systematically committed by the government of
        Young Turks. The admission of the Armenian Genocide by Turkey is of
        fundamental importance for the Armenian nation, as the Genocide was
        aimed at putting an end to the Armenian Cause.

        The day of massacre of the best representatives of the Armenian
        intelligentsia, April 24, is a symbolic day of commemoration pf
        the victims.

        The policy of destroying Armenians in their historical homeland was
        launched in the 1990s of the 19th century. During World War I, about
        1,500,000 Armenians were killed, 350,000 fled to the Caucasus and
        Europe. As a result, the Armenian population of Turkey was reduced
        from 2,000,000 early in the 20th century to 150,000.

        On April 24, 1915, eight hundred well-known representatives of the
        Armenian intelligentsia - scientists, writers, teachers, doctors,
        clergymen and public figures - fell victim to torturous killing
        in Turkey.

        The Armenian Genocide has been recognized by a number of countries
        (Uruguay, Russia, France, Lithuania), and Parliaments.

        Last edited by Siamanto; 05-04-2008, 06:02 PM.
        What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

        Comment


        • #54
          Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

          Germany

          ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MARKED IN A NUMBER OF GERMAN CITIES

          YEREVAN, APRIL 24, ARMENPRESS: On the initiative of the Armenian Central Council and with the support of German Diocese of the Armenian church a service was conducted today in Frankfurt church to commemorate the victims of the Armenian genocide.
          An official from the Armenian Central Council told Armenpress that at the event present were political, cultural and scientific figures.
          Professor from Leipzig university Georg Megle, official of the Evangelic Church Council of Germany and the EU Stefan Reimer, Archbishop Garegin Bekchian delivered speeches.
          “Time will come when the denial of the Armenian genocide will at last be punished in Germany and time will come when the genocide and violence of the 20th century will be included in the education system,” the chairman of the Armenian Central Council Shavarsh Hovasapian said.
          “It is necessary to break the silence which is being displayed by a number of European and other countries. Those who keep silence become participants of the crime. It is a historic mistake that time may clear the issue. Just the opposite, the developments of recent years show that history does not forget anything,” he said.
          The council also urged the Turkish organizations of Germany come to terms with history and recognize the Armenian genocide.
          Commemorating services were also held in Berlin, K?ln, Stuttgart and other German cities.


          - News on Armenia, Artsakh, Armenian Diaspora, South Caucasus and the World: Armenpress- your source of reliable information
          What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

          Comment


          • #55
            Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

            Marseille, France

            List of Events Commemorating the Armenian Genocide
            Last edited by Siamanto; 04-26-2008, 05:10 PM.
            What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

            Comment


            • #56
              Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

              Nice and Cannes, France


              [The following is an automatic translation, using SYSTRAN. Siamanto.]
              Commemorations of the 93e birthday of the genocide of the Armenians of 1915 in Nice and Cannes

              Wednesday April 23 in Nice
              17:00 with 20:00: The Armenian Youth of the Riviera (JACA) and the NOR FRA Seround Nice section organize one taken care commemorative in the form of a stand of information on the square of the Notre Dame Basilica of Nice (Jean Médecin).


              Thursday April 24, 2008 in Nice
              9:50: Gathering walk of the English (vis-a-vis the garden of Arménie)

              10:00: Go of the memory to the war memorial

              10:45: Speech commemorative and wreath laying with the memory of our martyrs and our French Resistant War veterans and of Armenian origin died for France, in 1914-1918 and 1939-1945

              11:30: Requiem with the Armenian Church co. Marie, 281 bd de la Madeleine


              Thursday April 24, 2008 in Cannes
              15:15: Gathering in front of the stele dedicated to the victims of the genocide of the Armenians, with the Public garden of Verdun, Points Small cross (assured Carpark with the xxxel beach)

              15:30: Beginning of the ceremony: Commemorative speech, allowance of the mayor of Cannes and Wreath laying to the memory of our Martyrs and of the War veterans and Resistant French of Armenian origin died for France in 1914-1918 and 1939-1945

              A prayer of Requiem will be marked with the memory of our martyrs by the Father Vatché Ayrapetyan, priest of the Armenian Apostolic Church of Nice

              The Armenian Community Council of the Riviera
              281, bd de la Madeleine 06000 Nice
              Tel.: 04 97 07 06 13/Fax: 04 92 15 05 84
              Mobile: 06 14 40 71 09
              e-mail: [email protected]




              [Original French text]
              Commémorations du 93e anniversaire du génocide des Arméniens de 1915 à Nice et Cannes

              Mercredi 23 Avril à Nice
              17h00 à 20h00 : La Jeunesse Arménienne de la Côte d’Azur (JACA) et la FRA Nor Seround section Nice organisent une veillée commémorative sous forme d’un stand d’information sur le parvis de la Basilique Notre Dame de Nice (Jean Médecin).


              Jeudi 24 Avril 2008 à Nice
              9H50 : Rassemblement promenade des Anglais (face au jardin d’Arménie)
              10h00 : Marche du souvenir jusqu’au monument aux morts
              10h45 : Discours commémoratif et dépôt de gerbes à la mémoire de nos martyrs et de nos Anciens Combattants et Résistants Français d’origine arménienne morts pour la France, en 1914-1918 et 1939-1945
              11h30 : Requiem à l’Eglise Arménienne Ste Marie, 281 bd de la Madeleine


              Jeudi 24 Avril 2008 à Cannes
              15h15 : Rassemblement devant la stèle dédiée aux victimes du génocide des Arméniens, au Square de Verdun, Pointe de la Croisette (Parking assuré au Bijou plage)
              15h30 : Début de la cérémonie : Discours commémoratif, allocation du maire de Cannes et Dépôt de gerbes à la mémoire de nos Martyrs et des Anciens Combattants et Résistants Français d’origine arménienne morts pour le France en 1914-1918 et 1939-1945

              Une prière de Requiem sera prononcée à la mémoire de nos martyrs par le Père Vatché Ayrapetyan, curé de l’Eglise Apostolique Arménienne de Nice
              Conseil Communautaire Arménien de la Côte d’Azur
              281, bd de la Madeleine 06000 Nice
              Tél. : 04 97 07 06 13 / Fax : 04 92 15 05 84
              Mobile : 06 14 40 71 09
              e-mail : [email protected]
              Last edited by Siamanto; 04-26-2008, 04:23 PM.
              What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

              Comment


              • #57
                Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

                Paris, France


                [The following is an automatic translation using SYSTRAN. Siamanto]
                Ceremonies of the commemoration of the 93ème birthday of the genocide of the Armenians in Paris region

                Wednesday April 23, 2008
                18:00 Brightening up of the Flame to the Unknown soldier by Shamiram Sevag, surviving of the genocide and girl of the poet-writer Roupen Sevag, accompanied children.
                [Where:] Arc de Triomphe, places Charles de Gaulle, Etoile.

                19:00 "Veillée" of the young people
                Concert and official launch of the petition for the recognition by the Turks of the genocide, in the presence of Ali Ertem.
                [Where:}Square place of Notre-Dame de Paris




                Thursday April 24, 2008
                11:30 Reception with the Town hall of Paris Homage to the victims of the genocide returned by Bertrand Delanoë. Obligatory invitation.
                Place: Living rooms of the Town hall of Paris.

                15:00 Mass of Requiem
                In the presence of S.E. Monseigneur Norvan Zakarian,
                Primacy of the Armenian Diocese of France
                Place Church Saint Jean-Baptiste 15 rue Jean Goujon 75008 Paris

                16:30 Gathering and speeches:
                * To pay homage to the 1,5 million Armenians assassinated at the time it genocide * to condemn the negationnism of Turkey as a supreme stage of the genocide * to affirm the right of wire of survivors, debouts and determined to obtain justice for the Armenian people finally. Deposits of flowers to the foot of the statue of Komitas

                Interventions of Mr Jean-Michel Quillardet, Large Main of the Great East of France and French political directors.
                Place Rules of Komitas, Place from Canada - Course Albert 1st - 75008 Paris

                18:00 Demonstration
                Place Of the statue of Komitas to the Embassy of Turkey, avenue of the Fields-Elysées.



                Sunday April 27, 2008
                10:00 Steles of Collective VAN 1915/2008: the genocides look at you

                in 20:00 Armenians, xxxs, Tutsis, Darfouris: a wall against the refusal Πuvres of the APAF)
                Square place of Notre Dame

                15:00 Mass of Requiem
                In the presence of S.E.R. Monseigneur Georges Gilson, highly skilled Archbishop of Direction-Auxerre and Prélat of the mission of France which will give the homélie.
                Place: Cathedral Notre-Dame de Paris




                Ceremonies are also organized in several cities of the Paris region, to get information near the Town halls, of the Armenian organizations and about Internet sites.

                Arnouville-les-Goness
                Sunday April 27. preceded by the memory of the deportees.
                Course of these ceremonies will take place as it follows:

                To remember the deportees: 10:30 departure of the Public garden of Estienne d' Orves (vis-a-vis the stage Léo Lagrange) in direction of the cemetery with meditation in front of the stele of the group Manouchian 11:00 ceremony of the memory to the war memorial - cemetery of Arnouville (wreath laying, minute of silence and speech)

                93ème birthday of the Armenian genocide: 11:30 - mass with the Church Holy-Cross of Varak, street Saint-Just 12:15 - mass of requiem in front of the KHATCHKAR located in the garden of the Church Holy-Cross in the presence of the flags, 12:30 - walk in direction of the stele commemorating the Genocide, located at the angle of the streets Jean-Jaurès and Saint-Just. Wreath laying, silence minute, prayer and speech.



                Sarcelles
                Saturday April 19 at 12 noon
                Gathering in front of the stele
                Center Sportif Nelson Mandela



                Livry-Gargan
                Alain Calmat
                Former minister
                Mayor of Livry-Gargan
                The municipality
                Armenian organizations
                you invite to the ceremony in homage to the victims of the Armenian genocide of 1915
                on Saturday April 26, 2008 with 16:00
                with the Lefèvre park, in front of the stele of the memory
                RN3 - avenue of the Consul - General - Nordling


                Sevres
                Saturday April 26 with 11:00
                COMMEMORATION OF the 93e BIRTHDAY OF the Armenian genocide in front of Khatchkar of Sevres.


                Chaville
                Sunday April 27
                COMMEMORATION OF the 93e BIRTHDAY OF the Armenian genocide. Mass of requiem followed by a walk towards the Armenian Monument of Chaville.

                robert kotcharian a rencontré dimanche le président du tadjikistan, emomali rakhmonov, à dushanbe la capitale. les deux hommes ont discuté de la...


                [Original French text]
                Les cérémonies de la commémoration du 93ème anniversaire du génocide des Arméniens en Région Parisienne


                mardi22 avril 2008, par Stéphane/armenews
                Programme des cérémonies

                Mercredi 23 avril 2008
                18 h 00 Ravivage de la Flamme au Soldat Inconnu par Shamiram Sevag, survivante du génocide et fille du poète-écrivain Roupen Sevag, accompagnée d’enfants.
                Lieu Arc de Triomphe, place Charles de Gaulle, Etoile.

                19 h 00 Veillée des jeunes
                Concert et lancement officiel de la pétition pour la reconnaissance par les Turcs du génocide, en présence d’Ali Ertem.
                Lieu Parvis de Notre-Dame de Paris


                Jeudi 24 avril 2008
                11 h 30 Réception à la Mairie de Paris Hommage aux victimes du génocide rendu par Bertrand Delanoë. Invitation obligatoire.
                Lieu : Salons de l’Hôtel de Ville de Paris.

                15 h 00 Messe de Requiem
                En présence de S.E. Monseigneur Norvan Zakarian,
                Primat du Diocèse Arménien de France
                Lieu Église Saint Jean-Baptiste 15 rue Jean Goujon 75008 Paris

                16 h 30 Rassemblement et prises de paroles :
                * Pour rendre hommage aux 1,5 millions d’Arméniens assassinés lors du génocide * Pour condamner le négationnisme de la Turquie en tant que stade suprême du génocide * Pour affirmer le droit des fils de survivants, debouts et déterminés à obtenir enfin justice pour le peuple arménien. Dépôts de fleurs au pied de la statue de Komitas

                Interventions de Monsieur Jean-Michel Quillardet, Grand Maître du Grand Orient de France et de dirigeants politiques français.
                Lieu Statue de Komitas, Place du Canada - Cours Albert 1er - 75008 Paris

                18 h 00 Manifestation
                Lieu De la statue de Komitas à l’Ambassade de Turquie, avenue des Champs-Elysées.



                Dimanche 27 avril 2008
                10 h 00 Stèles du Collectif VAN 1915/2008 : les génocides vous regardent
                à 20 h Arméniens, Juifs, Tutsis, Darfouris : un mur contre le déni Œuvres de l’APAF)
                Lieu Parvis de Notre Dame

                15 h 00 Messe de Requiem
                En présence de S.E.R. Monseigneur Georges Gilson, Archevêque émérite de Sens-Auxerre et Prélat de la mission de France qui donnera l’homélie.
                Lieu : Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris



                Des cérémonies sont également organisées dans plusieurs villes de la Région parisienne, se renseigner auprès des Mairies, des organisations arméniennes et sur les sites internet.

                Arnouville-les-Gonesse
                dimanche 27 avril. précédée du souvenir des déportés.
                Déroulement de ces cérémonies aura lieu ainsi qu’il suit :
                Souvenir des déportés : 10 h 30 départ du Square d’Estienne d’Orves (face au stade Léo Lagrange) en direction du cimetière avec recueillement devant la stèle du groupe Manouchian 11 h 00 cérémonie du souvenir au monument aux morts - cimetière d’Arnouville (dépôt de gerbes, minute de silence et discours)

                93ème anniversaire du génocide arménien : 11 h 30 - messe à l’Eglise Sainte-Croix de Varak, rue Saint-Just 12 h 15 - messe de requiem devant le KHATCHKAR situé dans le jardin de l’Eglise Sainte-Croix en présence des drapeaux, 12 h 30 - marche en direction de la stèle commémorant le Génocide, située à l’angle des rues Jean-Jaurès et Saint-Just. Dépôt de gerbes, minute silence, prière et discours.



                Sarcelles
                Samedi 19 avril à 12 heures
                Rassemblement devant la stèle
                Centre Sportif Nelson Mandela


                Livry-Gargan
                Alain Calmat
                Ancien ministre
                Maire de Livry-Gargan
                La municipalité
                Les organisations arméniennes
                vous invitent à la cérémonie en hommage aux victimes du génocide arménien de 1915
                le samedi 26 avril 2008 à 16h
                au parc Lefèvre, devant la stèle du souvenir
                RN3 - avenue du Consul - Général - Nordling


                Samedi 26 avril à 11 h - Sèvres
                COMMÉMORATION DU 93e ANNIVERSAIRE DU GENOCIDE ARMENIEN devant le Khatchkar de Sèvres.


                Dimanche 27 avril - Chaville
                COMMÉMORATION DU 93e ANNIVERSAIRE DU GÉNOCIDE ARMÉNIEN. Messe de requiem suivi d’une marche vers le Monument Arménien de Chaville.


                robert kotcharian a rencontré dimanche le président du tadjikistan, emomali rakhmonov, à dushanbe la capitale. les deux hommes ont discuté de la...
                Last edited by Siamanto; 04-26-2008, 04:42 PM.
                What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

                Comment


                • #58
                  Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

                  Nevada, US

                  NEVADA ARMENIANS HONOR CONGRESSWOMAN BERKLEY DURING 93RD GENOCIDE COMMEMORATION

                  armradio.am
                  24.04.2008 16:42

                  During the commemoration of the 93rd Anniversary of the Armenian
                  Genocide, the Las Vegas Armenian community honored Congresswoman Shelly
                  Berkley with a plaque for her relentless efforts for congressional
                  recognition of the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

                  The packed audience at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV)
                  applauded Congresswoman Berkley's strong position on the issue. After
                  accepting the plaque from the event chair, Hriyr John Dadaian,
                  Congresswoman Berkley noted, "as a xxx, it is a shame to deny somebody
                  else's genocide and that it is why I cannot deny what happened to
                  the Armenians and I will continue to support recognition."


                  What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

                  Comment


                  • #59
                    Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

                    SPEAKER PELOSI LEADS CALLS FOR CONGRESSIONAL ADOPTION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE LEGISLATION AT ANNUAL CAPITOL HILL REMEMBRANCE

                    Watch Video from the 2008 Capitol Hill Armenian Genocide Observance at youtube.com/ANCAgrassroots

                    Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) with ANCA Legislative Affairs Director Raffi Karakashian and Executive Director Aram HamparianWASHINGTON, DC – On April 23rd, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) was joined by more than a dozen of her House and Senate colleagues in urging passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution, a move described by legislators on both sides of the aisle as a long overdue rejection of Turkey’s “gag-rule” on the U.S. Congress and a powerful step toward ending all forms of U.S. complicity in Turkey’s multi-million dollar campaign of denial, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

                    “Americans don't like gag rules,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We saw that at this year’s Capitol Hill observance, and we’re seeing it across Congress, from both sides of the aisle. Americans don't appreciate a foreign government dictating our human rights policy and resent Turkey’s attempts to veto America’s recognition of the Armenian Genocide.”

                    Speaker Pelosi’s remarks came at the annual Armenian Genocide Observance on Capitol Hill, organized this year by the Congressional Armenian Caucus. Over 200 Armenian Americans attended the function including Armenian Genocide survivors Rose Baboyan, Yeretsgeen Sirarpi Khoyan and Alice Shnorhokian. The event was preceded by a reception organized by the ANCA, U.S.-Armenia Public Affairs Committee and other organizations.

                    Speaker Pelosi, who received a standing ovation upon her arrival, noted that she keeps a copy of the front page of the October 11, 2007, issue of The New York Times, which features a photo of Armenian Genocide survivors attending the House Foreign Affairs Committee markup of the Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.106). The Committee, despite intense pressure from the Turkish Government and personal pleas by President George Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Defense Secretary Robert Gates and other Administration officials, passed the resolution 27 to 21. “Our work is not finished – there is much more to be done, but on that day, a very important committee of the Congress of the United States made a statement that was courageous – made a statement that was appropriate to the values of the American people – that nearly 100 years ago something happened to the Armenian people and we in the United States are prepared to call it a genocide,” stated Pelosi, who went on to note, “it is long past time for the President and the Congress to formally recognize the Armenian Genocide.”

                    Speaker Pelosi then went on to explain the modern day implications of genocide denial. “Many times people have said to me as we were bringing this up and since then ‘Why are you doing this? Even if it is genocide, it happened a long time ago?’ I said ‘I know, but genocide is happening right here and now on our planet. It happened in Rwanda, and it is happening in Darfur. And as long as it exists we have to make a statement about a genocide we know happened – no matter how long ago.’”

                    Majority Leader Hoyer with ANCA Exec. Dir. Aram Hamparian, Gov't Affairs Dir. Kate Nahapetian, and Legis. Affairs Dir. Raffi KarakashianMajority Leader Steny Hoyer concurred, sharing with the assembled Members of Congress and Armenian American community activists, “Don’t accept the premise at all that this resolution is about what happened in 1915-1923. Does it recognize it, does it relate to it – of course. But it is a resolution that says not just to Turks, not just to the Armenian people, but to all peoples, that we need to recognize the transgressions of the past – however heinous they may be and however much we may want to deny them. Because if we do not, our children will not recognize their responsibility to never let it happen again.”



                    Ending the Cycle of Genocide
                    DCCC Chairman Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) with ANCA Legislative Affairs Director Raffi Karakashian, ANCA Eastern Region Director Karine Birazian, and Rep. Van Hollen Senior Foreign Policy Advisor Greg AftandilianSpeakers throughout the evening of the Capitol Hill Observance noted the dangerous precedent set by failing to recognize the Armenian Genocide. Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chairman Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), an influential member of the House leadership, citing his successful efforts along with Maryland State Senator Perry Sfikas to adopt Armenian Genocide legislation in the Maryland State Senate in 2003, explained that “If people had stood up and called attention to what was happening at the time and had condemned it, we may well have avoided the other genocides and atrocities in the 20th Century.”

                    Congressional Hellenic Caucus Co-Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) agreed, noting that, “those who forget will face the same horrors in the future. We must pass the resolution, we must make sure that this country and world remembers the Armenian Genocide so that it never happens again to any person, to any culture, to any nation.”

                    Armenian American Legislators Offer Powerful Remarks

                    Rep. Anna Eshoo with ANCA Gov't Affairs Dir. Kate NahapetianRep. Anna Eshoo (D-CA), who until recently was the only Member of Congress of Armenian heritage, affirmed that she “will not rest” until the U.S. Congress has recognized the Armenian Genocide, and praised the Armenian American community for its vital role as the conscience behind this noble human rights movement. She pointed out to her legislative colleagues and all gathered for the event that, “There is an important advertisement in ‘The Hill’ today which reads, “Who decides when America speaks on human rights? We should – not any foreign government.” And so we shall.”

                    Jackie Kanchelian Speier (D-CA), who was sworn-in as the second Armenian American in Congress earlier this month after a special election in her Bay Area district, came to Washington, DC with a long and distinguished track record of Armenian Genocide recognition as a State legislator. She stressed that, “The facts before us are not in dispute. The reason we still debate this is not to determine that a genocide took place, but to determine if we have the political backbone to stand up for the truth... I commit to you, as a member of this Armenian Caucus, and as a member of the House of Representatives, that I will have the backbone to stand up to make sure that the Armenian Genocide is not only recognized, but is never ever forgotten.”



                    New U.S. Ambassadorial Nominee for Armenia
                    Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ) received the most thunderous applause of the evening for his remarks regarding his principled stand against President Bush’s flawed nomination to fill the vacancy in U.S. Ambassador to Armenia after the State Department, in 2005, fired John Marshall Evans from this same post for speaking truthfully about the Armenian Genocide. To sustained applause, he recalled that, “When I saw Ambassador Hoagland’s responses to questions that were placed to him, I felt compelled to put a hold on his nomination. His nomination did not move forward and I have told the Administration, which now has a new nominee, that I intend to ask the same tough questions [...] and that I hope our new nominee will give us answers that we can accept. If not, I will not hesitate to use my power once again to stop that nominee.”

                    Also addressing this issue, Congressman Jim Costa (D-CA), explained that he sent a letter to the President last month stressing that the Administration’s nominee fully understand the “very clear” history of the Armenian Genocide before having an opportunity to be confirmed by the U.S. Senate.



                    Armenian Genocide Resolution Lead Sponsors Call for Passage
                    “Almost an entire people were lost and 93 years later we still fight in the greatest democracy on earth to recognize the plain fact of what took place,” said the author of the Armenian Genocide Resolution, Adam Schiff (D-CA). “We have the strongest moral imperative to call that loss exactly what it was without equivocation without mitigation - genocide. And we will fight until we succeed.”

                    Rep. George Radanovich (R-CA), the lead Republican behind the Resolution and consistent champion for its adoption, shared that State Department officials have said to him, “George, we can’t do this, if we do this... Turkey is on the border of Iraq, if we do this they’re going to invade and go after the Kurds in northern Iraq. Well we didn’t do it and look what the Turks did - they went into Northern Iraq anyway, and they attacked the Kurds.”

                    Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Co-Chairman of the Armenian Caucus, who served as one of the events two Masters of Ceremony along with his fellow Co-Chairman Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), explained that, “Though we have had some setbacks in this Congress and certainly last year, we are not going to stop until there is an official genocide recognition and we pass House Resolution 106. So we give you that commitment.” Rep. Knollenberg, who serves on the Congressional panel that writes the foreign aid bill, stressed that, “The United States should affirm the Genocide once and for all. There are many reasons to do this, but the most important is so that we can prevent atrocities like the genocide from happening in the future. But we first must admit to and learn from the past before we can stop future genocides.”

                    Congressman Brad Sherman (D-CA), a vocal and eloquent advocate who played a pivotal role in the resolution’s adoption in Committee last year, said that, “We will pass the Armenian Genocide Resolution and we will pass it on the floor. And when we do, I would argue that the greatest beneficiaries other than the Armenian people, will be the Turkish people. Where would Germany be today, if Germans denied the Holocaust? Their ticket to becoming a modern and respected nation was acknowledging their own history. Someday Turkey needs to enter the 21st Century with clean hands or at least a repentant heart.”

                    Armenian Caucus Member Ed Royce (R-CA), who rallied key Republican supporters during October’s Committee vote, delivered a moving address, in which he asked: “if we are going to be a leader for human rights around the world, are we prepared to stand aside when the French and the Germans and the Swiss and the Swedish and even the Russians step forward and recognize what constitutes genocide? Are we prepared, because of pressure to be silenced?”

                    Rep. Steve Rothman, a powerful member of the foreign aid panel and a strong advocate for the passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution and strengthening Armenia, affirmed that, “We will never hide from the truth. Humanity will suffer if we do that again. I will not be a party to that. A genocide has been committed, if you wish to say it was by the Ottomans, so be it, but it was a genocide. One and a half millions souls destroyed intentionally.”

                    Among the other legislators in attendance were Representatives Gus Bilirakis (R-FL), David Dreier (R-CA), Betty McCollum (D-MN), James McGovern (D-MA), Joe Wilson (R-SC) and Frank Wolf (R-VA).



                    IAGS President Greg Stanton Explains Real Cost of Genocide Denial
                    Providing keynote remarks at the observance was noted genocide scholar Dr. Gregory Stanton, President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS) and Genocide Watch. Citing the House Foreign Affairs Committee passage last year of the Genocide resolution, Stanton explained that by postponing a full House vote, “Again the United States surrendered to the ninety-year campaign of denial by the government of Turkey. The State Department and the White House have continued the cowardly policies of every Secretary of State since Lansing who have considered it more important to placate the Turkish government than to be truthful about history.”

                    Dr. Stanton went on to explain the eight stages of genocide and the dangerous cost of genocide denial both to the victims and the perpetrators. He described the benefits of genocide recognition, “telling the truth would ultimately be good for U.S.-Turkish relations, because they would no longer be based on diplomatic lies.” Passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution, he noted, would also “pay tribute to America’s first international human rights movement. The Foreign Service Officers and prominent individuals such as Theodore Roosevelt, Ambassador Henry Morgenthau, and Cleveland Dodge, who did so much to help the Armenians, exemplify America’s legacy of moral leadership. Click here to read Dr. Stanton’s complete remarks.



                    Moving Remarks by Diplomats and Clergy
                    The program was opened by moving prayers by His Eminence Oshagan Choloyan, Prelate of the Armenian Apostolic Church of the Eastern United States, and His Eminence Archbishop Vicken Aykazian, Diocesan Legate and Ecumenical Officer of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America. In his invocation, Archbishop Choloyan gave a special prayer for the “safety of all of the men and women of our armed forces serving around the world.” He went on to praise the efforts of Amb. Henry Morgenthau and the diplomatic corps of the time of the Genocide who “shared in the responsibility of publicizing the Genocide of the Armenians and administering relief.”

                    Armenia’s Ambassador to the United States, His Excellency Tatoul Markarian, affirmed that Armenia’s “policy towards Turkey will continue under the newly elected President, Serzh Sargisyan. We are ready to establish diplomatic relations with Turkey. We have made that offer consistently since 1991, meaning that Turkey has to resolve all issues bilaterally with Armenia within normally established inter-state relations. Meanwhile, we all understand, however, that normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations although important, cannot happen at the expense of the genocide recognition.”

                    The Republic of Nagorno Karabagh’s Representative in Washington, DC, Vardan Barseghian, spoke eloquently on behalf of the citizens of his Republic, noting that, “Some who are less familiar with our part of the world, and whom we are trying to educate about the urgency of recognizing the crimes of the past, would say that we should not be concerned about a new genocide. Some are even prepared to argue that modern day Turkey is not a threat to Armenia and Artsakh. Fifteen years ago, Turkey supported Azerbaijan, as the latter waged a war to kill or expel the entire Armenian population of Nagorno Karabagh. Unfortunately the threat of genocide is an ever-present one. Azerbaijan continues to threaten Artsakh with a new war, because we insist on our right to live in freedom.”


                    What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

                    Comment


                    • #60
                      Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

                      SILENT MEMORIES SILENT MEMORIES
                      By Michael Bennett

                      The West Australian (Perth)
                      April 22, 2008 Tuesday
                      METRO

                      A million were killed but in Turkey you cant talk about it. Michael
                      Bennett reports

                      Every year on April 24 cupboards are opened around Australia, boxes
                      are pulled down from top shelves, medals are dusted off and given the
                      Brasso treatment. Sons and daughters, grandchildren and widows, and,
                      indeed, past and present servicemen and women prepare themselves for
                      the Anzac Day marches that take place with pride in cities and towns
                      around the nation.

                      But on the other side of the globe, on April 24, the day before Anzac
                      Day signifies something very different for another nation of people.

                      While a link was forged between Turkey and Australia at Anzac Cove on
                      April 25, 1915, around the same time the history of Armenia was being
                      rewritten. For Armenians April 24 is their day of remembrance. It is
                      Genocide Day. A day many Australians would know little about.

                      As the Anzac landings were taking place on the coast of Turkey,
                      in Anatolia in central Turkey, ethnic Armenians were being evicted,
                      harassed and slaughtered. Historians put the death toll as high as
                      a million with many more displaced. For decades successive Turkish
                      governments have refused to acknowledge the Armenian genocide.

                      Two years ago the ABCs Foreign Correspondent reported on Orhan Pamuk,
                      a recipient of the Nobel prize for literature and Turkeys most famous
                      author. Pamuk had dared to speak of the genocide and was convicted
                      of insulting Turkey. The report also featured an interview with Hrant
                      Dink, the publisher of an Armenian newspaper in Istanbul.

                      A few months after the report Dink was shot dead, allegedly by a
                      teenage ultra-nationalist, one of 18 people arrested for the crime.

                      Eric Campbell, a Foreign Correspondent stalwart since 1996, went
                      to Armenia and Turkey in February to find out why people were still
                      being killed in the name of history.

                      He told The West Australian that Turkish law makes it a criminal
                      offence to insult "Turkishness".

                      "One of the definitions of that is to imply that the Ottoman Empire
                      during World War I committed genocide on the Armenian people,"
                      Campbell says. "Its not a historical debate, if you take that point
                      of view you are committing a criminal offence in Turkey."

                      Both Pamuk and Dink were charged under the law, known as Article
                      301. The allegation is that Dink was killed for referring to genocide.

                      He had written a series of articles in which he discussed the
                      deportation of Armenians. Campbell says Dink crossed a taboo and would
                      still be alive today if he had not been released from jail. "But
                      he was out on appeal and he was openly gunned down as he left his
                      newspaper office."

                      As part of tonights Foreign Correspondent, Campbell interviews the
                      family and lawyer of the man accused of being the mastermind behind
                      the killing. Yasin Hayal, a young nationalist, gave the alleged killer
                      a gun and money. His lawyer, Fuat Turgut, was recently arrested and
                      charged, with 30 others, for plotting to murder Pamuk.

                      Turgut acknowledges that his client provided the alleged killer with
                      a gun and cash. Hayals father also concedes his son "might have been
                      tricked because he loves his country and his nation".

                      Campbell remembers the time when Dink died. "We were all shocked,"
                      he says. "We had run the story about this guy and it caused a massive
                      reaction in Turkey with 100,000 people marching at his funeral. But
                      they appear to be still a minority in Turkey."

                      According to Campbell people simply dont accept their forbears carried
                      out genocide. "Even though it was almost a century ago it is still
                      a very current issue for both Turkey and Armenia."

                      While a veteran at tackling the maze-like conditions of international
                      journalism, Campbell says this story posed a few hurdles. As well
                      as being arrested twice, once on the Armenian border, and once for
                      filming the US Embassy in Armenia, he found Turgut was in jail when
                      he wanted to interview him.

                      "But he was happy to talk to us," Campbell says. "Even though from our
                      outside perspective it seems terrible that they could deny genocide,
                      from their point of view there was no genocide, they were actually
                      victims of Armenians.

                      "In many ways it was a lot more brutal and bloody than
                      Gallipoli." Armenians view the tragedy in the same way xxxs view the
                      Holocaust. "But in the Armenians case the world doesnt know about it
                      and the people they accused of carrying out the genocide refuse to
                      bear responsibility. Its as though Germany still denied the Holocaust."

                      Campbell isnt saying who is right or wrong. "But the facts are
                      very clear that terrible things happened and Turkey has not yet
                      acknowledged it."


                      What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

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