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In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

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  • #71
    Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

    Los Angeles, California (US)


    Armenian Youth Federation- Western Region
    104 N. Belmont, Suite 206, Glendale, CA 91206
    Tel. (818) 507-1933 *Email: [email protected]


    News Advisory- April 24, 2008

    ARMENIAN YOUTH FEDERATION - WESTERN REGION

    PROTEST IN FRONT OF TUKISH CONSULATE

    Activists to Demand That the Government of Turkey End its Campaign of Denial
    of the Armenian Genocide

    WHERE: The protest shall take place in front of the Turkish Consulate which
    is located at 6300 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles CA 90048.

    WHEN: The protest shall take place on Thursday, April 24, 2008 from 4pm to
    6pm.

    WHO: The Armenian Youth Federation is organizing its annual protest in front
    of the Turkish Consulate. Thousands of Armenian Americans and Human rights
    Activists are expected to be actively protesting their serious
    disappointment with the denialist policies of the American and Turkish
    governments. In 2007, approximately 10,000 attended this event.

    *PROMINENT ELECTED OFFICIAL*: Lieutenant Governor John Garamendi shall
    appear at the protest to address attendees.

    WHAT: The year 2008 marks the 93rd anniversary of the genocide committed
    against the Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish Empire. The Armenian Genocide
    is the first genocide of the 21st century and is not yet properly
    acknowledged and accepted by the American and Turkish governments. April 24,
    1915 marks the day that the Turkish government kidnapped all the
    intellectual Armenians and slaughtered them as it embarked on its systematic
    annihilation of the Ottoman Empire's Armenian population.

    WHY: The Turkish government has attempted to place a "gag rule" on the
    United States Congress as evidenced by its heavy-handed opposition to H.
    Res. 106 (The Armenian Genocide Resolution, which passed the House Committee
    on Foreign Affairs on 10/10/07). The ongoing genocide in Darfur today is a
    testament to the need for clear and unequivocal acknowledgement of the crime
    of genocide. The protest shall strive to raise awareness regarding the
    denialist policies of the American and Turkish governments and how these
    policies enable and embolden perpetrators of genocide to both commit and
    deny this crime. The protest not only mourns the death of the 1.5 million
    Armenians massacred from 1915-1923 but it also tries to educate others about
    past and present genocides.


    STUDENTS DISRUPT GENOCIDE MEMORIAL
    by Melody Chiu

    Daily Trojan Online, CA
    University of Southern California
    April 24 2008

    Students xxxxxle flowers and signs erected in honor of the Armenian
    genocide.

    A peaceful demonstration was disrupted Wednesday when two students
    stepped on flowers and knocked down signs at a memorial service
    honoring those who died in the Armenian genocide between 1915 and 1923.

    The memorial was organized by several Armenian student organizations,
    including the Armenian Graduate Student Association and the Armenian
    Student Association, and consisted of 1,500 carnations in honor of
    the estimated 1.5 million victims of the genocide.

    Members of the organizations began planting the flowers in McCarthy
    Quad at 4 a.m., and fact sheets were put up with information about
    the Armenian genocide along the perimeters of the walkways.

    "We were trying to have a very silent and powerful way to
    raise awareness of the Armenian genocide on campus," said
    Kanakara Navasartian, president of the Armenian Graduate Student
    Association. "Everyone has a right to honor their past, and this
    wasn't just about the Armenian genocide. This was about crime against
    humanity, period."

    Navasartian said two students approached the display and began knocking
    down the fact sheets.

    The Ottoman Empire has been accused of deliberately and systematically
    destroying the Armenian population during World War I, starting in
    Istanbul in 1915.

    Turkey does not recognize the term genocide as an appropriate
    description of the events.

    Last year, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger proclaimed the week of April
    22 through April 29 as "Days of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide."

    Helen Kuiumdjian, president of the Armenian Student Association,
    said another member of the organization called her to tell her two
    students were disrupting the memorial.

    "She said the girl and her boyfriend were yelling and stomping on
    all the signs and flowers," Kuiumdjian said. "I was notified by [the
    Department of Public Safety] and they said they were looking for the
    girl and that they had found her."

    DPS officials declined to comment.

    Kuiumdjian said the students damaged the groups' display, but they
    were able to rebuild it.

    "They broke our signs and our plants were hanging," she said. "It
    was a wreck, but a bunch of members worked and fixed it back up in
    about 20 minutes."

    Kuiumdjian said students passing by the memorial also helped fix
    the display.

    Students said the disruptive behavior was inappropriate.

    "I don't have any definite examples of what else they could've done,
    but something more peaceful," said Daniel Bay, a sophomore majoring
    in business administration.

    "You can hate someone as much as you want, but they shouldn't have
    the right to do that," he said. "They have their own beliefs and they
    shouldn't have acted out so negatively."


    5,000 MARCH TO MARK ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Daily Breeze, CA
    Long Beach Press-Telegram, CA
    April 24 2008

    About 5,000 people marched today in Hollywood to observe the 93rd
    anniversary of what they call the Armenian genocide.

    Protesters want the Turkish government to admit responsibility for
    the slaughter of about 1.5 million people.

    Turkey questions the number of deaths and denies it was a genocide.

    Accompanied by police officers who blocked streets, the peaceful march,
    organized by the Armenian Youth Federation, traversed Sunset Boulevard,
    Western Avenue, Hollywood Boulevard and Normandie Avenue.

    The march is to end about 1 p.m., said Los Angeles police Officer
    April Harding of the Media Relations office.

    At 1:30 p.m. in Montebello, an Armenian Genocide Commemoration
    ceremony will be held at Bucknell Park, at which Los Angeles Mayor
    Antonio Villaraigosa is to deliver remarks.

    About 4 p.m., a rally sponsored by the Armenian Youth Federation
    is planned for the Turkish Consulate in the 6300 block of Wilshire
    Boulevard, Harding said.

    Protesters are expected to call on the Turkish government to take
    responsibility for the deaths.

    More Armenians live in the Hollywood and Glendale areas than in
    Yerevan, the capital of Armenia.


    SOUTHERN CALIFORNIANS REMEMBER THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    April 24 2008

    Many of Southern California's more than 300,000 Armenians will today
    gather at memorial services, protests and other events to mark the
    93rd anniversary of the Armenian genocide. The striped Armenian flag
    was already seen fluttering from cars earlier this week as local
    Armenians prepared for the emotional and controversial observance of
    the more than million people who died under Ottoman rule in what is
    now modern Turkey.

    The anniversary has long been denounced by many Turks and others,
    who dispute the larger number of deaths or that the genocide even
    occurred. Last year, the most recent effort to have the U.S. government
    officially recognize the genocide triggered a bitter battle on Capitol
    Hill. The animosity lives on, and one of today's events includes a
    human rights protest outside the Turkish consulate.

    There are also new tensions. On Wednesday, a memorial assembly at Grant
    High School in Van Nuys lead to a shouting match between Armenian
    and Latino students. Several students were sent home and additional
    school district police officers patrol the campus for the remainder
    of the week.

    Today's memorials, however, remain a source of pride for Armenians,
    including a young generation far removed from the pain and suffering
    of nearly a century ago.

    "A lot of people ask me why we care so much, especially the
    youth because we are a few generations out from the genocide,"
    twenty-year-old Caspar Jivalagian told the Times Molly Hennessy-Fisk
    last year year. "Every Armenian we have it in us, under our skin."

    Los Angeles Times blogs that were published between 2006 and 2013.
    What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

    Comment


    • #72
      Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

      ARMENIANS MARK ANNIVERSARY OF 1915 MASS KILLINGS
      by Mariam Harutunian

      France24, France
      April 24 2008

      Thousands of Armenians gathered Thursday to mark the anniversary of
      a 1915 massacre under the Ottoman Empire that Armenia regards as an
      act of genocide -- a label strongly rejected by Turkey.

      Under bright sunshine in the capital Yerevan, thousands climbed to a
      hilltop memorial to mark the 93rd anniversary of the killings, which
      led to a mass exodus of Armenians from what is now eastern Turkey.

      Tens of thousands take part in the procession every year, including
      many from Armenia's widespread diaspora who travel to Yerevan for
      the event.

      In an address at the ceremony, Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian
      said his country would continue to pursue international recognition
      of the killings as genocide despite Turkey's objections.

      "International recognition and condemnation of the Armenian genocide
      is an appropriate and inevitable part of Armenia's foreign policy
      agenda," he said.

      "The republic of Armenia should double its efforts for the restoration
      of historical justice. When it comes to condemning the genocide,
      denial has no future, especially today when many countries around
      the world have added their voices to the voice of truth," he said.

      Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen died in orchestrated
      killings during the final years of the Ottoman Empire.

      Turkey says 300,000 Armenians and at least an equal number of Turks
      were killed in civil strife in 1915-1917 when the Christian Armenians,
      backed by Russia, rose up against the Ottomans.

      The dispute has been a major obstacle in relations between Turkey
      and Armenia.

      Ankara recognised Armenia's independence after the collapse of the
      Soviet Union in 1991 but no diplomatic relations were established
      because of Armenian efforts to have the killings internationally
      acknowledged as genocide.

      In 1993, Turkey also shut its border with Armenia in a show of
      solidarity with its close ally Azerbaijan, which was at war with
      Armenia over the Nagorny Karabakh enclave, dealing a heavy economic
      blow to the impoverished nation.

      The controversy has also complicated relations between EU-aspirant
      Turkey and many Western countries, especially those with large ethnic
      Armenian communities such as the United States and France.

      Many taking part in Thursday's ceremony called on Western countries
      to pressure Turkey into recognising the massacres as genocide.

      "I lost my entire family at the hands of the Turks," said 80-year-old
      Srbuhi Pirumian. "I will never tire of telling our history to my
      children and to my grandsons.... The Turks have no place in Europe,
      they are dangerous, as long as they do not admit the reality of the
      genocide and ask our forgiveness."

      More than 20 countries, including Belgium, Canada, Poland and
      Switzerland, have officially recognised the killings as genocide. In
      2006, French lawmakers voted to make it a criminal offence to deny
      that Armenians were victims of genocide.

      But many countries, including Britain and the United States, refuse to
      use the term to describe the events, mindful of relations with Turkey.

      The US House Foreign Affairs Committee's endorsement of a resolution
      labelling the killings as genocide last October sparked fury in Ankara,
      which recalled its ambassador to Washington.

      Under intense pressure from the White House, the authors of the bill
      later asked Congress not to hold a debate on the issue.


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

      Comment


      • #73
        Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

        ARMENIAN GENOCIDE STILL CASTS A LONG SHADOW OVER HISTORY
        By Herout Kerjilian

        Press & Sun-Bulletin, NY
        April 24 2008

        Armenians worldwide today commemorate the 93rd anniversary of the first
        genocide of the 20th century, when on April 24, 1915, the Turkish
        government embarked on a planned and systematic ethnic deportation
        and massacre of the Armenian population of Anatolia with the purpose
        of annihilation and extermination of the Christian Armenian nation
        and ethnic cleansing of them from their ancestral lands of 3,000 years.

        The Turkish process was so horrific that it led Raphael Lemkin to
        campaign against such heinous crimes and coin the word "genocide"
        based on the Armenian experience.

        Armenians -- from the first Christian nation in the world -- have,
        over the centuries, contributed much to human civilization. However,
        it is little comfort to them that their catastrophe gave the world the
        word "genocide." One would think that the Turks would be ashamed that
        their "murder of a nation," as the American ambassador to Istanbul
        at the time, Henry Morgentau, and The New York Times labeled it,
        contributed to the creation of that word.

        As a matter of fact, one would expect Turkey to be uncomfortable
        having the singular dubious distinction of being the only nation in
        the world to have executed three genocides: the Armenian, Pontian
        Greeks and the Assyrians -- all Christian. Yet unlike Nazi Germany,
        the Turks vehemently deny that they ever committed a genocide and,
        using their geopolitical importance, have successfully thwarted the
        passage of resolution No. 106 by Congress -- U.S. recognition of the
        Armenian genocide.

        Twenty-three European countries and 40 U.S. states, including
        New York, have recognized it. Besides denying the genocide, the
        Turks further claim they are the original inhabitants of Anatolia
        (historic Armenian Highlands) and, in a recently published history
        book, a Turkish professor claims that all these "so-called" Armenian,
        Greek and Assyrian churches and monuments in Anatolia were built by
        original Turks who were Christian before converting to Islam.

        An article published in a recent Binghamton University alumni
        newsletter stated that Turkey is a great democratic country, and that
        Binghamton University is very proud to be associated with it. Have
        the writers or contributors of this article talked with the Armenian,
        Greek or Kurdish refugees in our area?

        How can a so-called democratic country deny, even today, the existence
        of 15 million Kurds in Turkey and disallow the teaching of any Kurdish
        language or letting them practice their cultural heritages?

        Our own government will not recognize this tragic event under the
        guise of not offending an important ally and partner in the war
        against terrorism. Yet, Turkey's decision not to allow us to enter
        Iraq from the north created, in former Defense Secretary Donald
        Rumsfeld's words, a vacuum which allowed the al-Qaida and the Iraqi
        insurgency time and space to organize, which led to today's mess in
        Iraq and the unnecessary deaths and injury of thousands of American
        soldiers and Iraqis.

        As Nazi Holocaust survivor Elie Weisel has said in connection with the
        Armenians, "genocide denial is the last act of genocide." We believe
        that all people of conscience in this country believe in the values
        this country stands for and encourage our government to do what
        is right and moral by allowing Congress to pass resolution 106 --
        something President Bush promised the Armenian-American community
        during his presidential campaign but went back on once he became
        president.

        On April 27 at 12.30 p.m., please join the Armenian community of
        Broome County as we commemorate the 93rd anniversary of this tragic
        genocide. The event will take place at the Armenian monument site
        at corner of Conklin Avenue and South Washington Street Bridge in
        Binghamton.

        Kerjilian is a Binghamton resident.

        Binghamton New York News - pressconnects.com is the home page of Binghamton New York with in depth and updated Binghamton local news. Stay informed with both Binghamton New York news as well as headlines and stories from around the world.
        What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

        Comment


        • #74
          Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

          ARMENIAN GENOCIDE REMEMBERED MEREDITH BLAKE

          Greenwich Time, CT
          April 24 2008

          When Hermon Hosvepian was forced by Ottoman Turkish soldiers to
          march through the Syrian desert without food or clothing with her
          two daughters, all she could do was focus on staying alive.

          Her husband had been taken from their home and killed. And during
          the grueling march across the desert, one of her daughters died and
          one night, while she slept, the other one was taken.

          Her daughter Catherine Papalian, who was born in the United States,
          recounted this story yesterday at a flag raising held outside town
          hall to memorialize the victims of the Armenian Genocide, when 1.5
          million to 2 million Armenians living under Turkish rule within the
          Ottoman Empire were killed or starved to death from 1915 to 1923.

          This morning more than 40 people, most of Armenian descent, gathered
          in front of Town Hall and shared stories about their parents and
          grandparents who survived.

          Sara Mushegian, who organized the event, said her grandparents were
          able to escape, spending years in the protective custody of American
          authorities in Constantinople. But others were not as fortunate. George
          Papailian's father's first wife killed herself, out of fear, knowing
          the fate that lay ahead, he said.

          "There are so many horror stories," said Harry Nakashian, who said
          his mother, at 11 or 12, remembered opening the door of her house,
          and saw five children dead in a street, who out of thirst, drank some
          kind of toxic fluid and died.

          Nakashian's father never could talk about the atrocities, he said.

          Mushegian said that organizing the flag raising, honoring the victims
          and survivors of the genocide is an important part of Armenian
          heritage.

          "I feel it's my duty," she said. "It's about raising awareness. People
          know a little, but they don't really know."

          During the event, First Selectmen Peter Tesei read a proclamation
          declaring April 24 Armenian Martyrs' Day. The flag, with the colors
          of red, blue and orange, was raised with the sounds of the Armenian
          national anthem.

          April 24, 1915, holds special significance since it was the day
          that the Turkish government placed under arrest over 200 Armenian
          community leaders in Constantinople. It is seen as the start of the
          government-ordered genocide.


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

          Comment


          • #75
            Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

            Massachusetts (US)


            ARMENIAN STUDENTS ORGANIZATION REFLECTS ON 1915 GENOCIDE, HOLDS CANDELIGHT VIGIL
            Jess Sacco

            The Massachusetts Daily Collegian, MA
            April 25 2008

            PrintEmail Article Tools Page 1 of 1 Yesterday, as the evening
            approached, students of the Armenian Students Organization (ASO)
            gathered on the steps of the Student Union to recognize the 1915
            Armenian Genocide in a commemorative candlelight vigil.

            Each year, Armenians, as well as others in the community, come together
            to pay their respect and remember those who were lost.

            "The Armenian Genocide was conceived and carried out by the Ottoman
            Empire from 1915 to 1923, resulting in the deportation of nearly
            2,000,000 Armenians, of whom 1,500,000 men, women, and children
            were killed, 500,000 survivors expelled from their homes, and which
            succeeded in the elimination of the over 2,500-year presence of
            Armenians in their historic homeland," according to the Armenian
            National Committee of America.

            April 24, 1915 signifies the day that the Ottoman Empire, under the
            rule of Turkey, began the first genocide of the 20th century.

            "We [Armenians] still believe the genocide is going on even though it
            happened 93 years ago," said junior and vice president of the ASO,
            Steve Keshishian. "The [Turkish] government denies it, so we can't
            even begin to move on because we're still fighting for the world to
            recognize that it happened."

            As the ceremony continued, members of the ASO read stories of those
            who survived the genocide, as well as giving a brief history of the
            event. Students welcomed those who had gathered to listen to light
            a candle, symbolizing the commemoration of the genocide.

            "It's important to remember the past," said freshman and member
            Charles Beyrouthy. "The past influences the future, and it influences
            political leaders and leaders who are in high stature. [The event]
            is a testament to those who were victimized in such a crime."

            Another goal of yesterday's event was for people to acknowledge and
            appreciate their Armenian ancestors and backgrounds.

            "Nobody knows Armenia was the first Christian Nation, that we have
            a very ancient culture," said Keshishian. "We commemorate this every
            year on this day all around the world, [taking] a moment of our lives
            to remember those who passed away and get word out about our legacy."

            "My parents taught me to love and respect my heritage," said
            Beyrouthy. "I think it's a heritage that is very rich in culture and
            in general. It is a big part of my life."

            The ASO, a new group on campus, plans to continue the event in the
            future and has hopes of advertising it more, and doing things on a
            much bigger level.

            "Whether we had two people or 200 people [today], this was something
            that was going to be going on in my head. I did what I wanted to do,
            make my peace and move on with it," said Keshishian.

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

            Comment


            • #76
              Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

              WE WILL NEVER FORGET: IN REMEMBRANCE OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
              Arek Horozyan

              Los Angeles Loyolan, CA

              April 24 2008

              To an Armenian, the words "Armenian Genocide" evoke many horrific
              memories of the early 1900s. To many others, these two words have
              either never been heard of or have been heard in passing and have
              gone in one ear and out the other. But what should these two words
              mean to everyone? To answer this question, one must know some the
              early history of the 20th century.

              There were many Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire in the 20th
              century.

              The Ottoman Empire was a multiethnic empire which included areas of
              historic Armenia. However, by the beginning of the 20th century it
              had become a shrunken state, mostly made up of the territories in
              the Middle East. Even though it was still multinational, the Ottoman
              Empire tended to favor the Muslims -- after all, its official religion
              was Islam. The Ottoman Empire thus treated the Christians and xxxs
              that lived in its empire as second class citizens.

              The government was overthrown in 1908 by a group of reformists who
              called themselves the Young Turks. Seeing that a multiethnic empire
              was one cause of its downfall, the Young Turks decided to convert
              all of its inhabitants to Islam, especially the Armenians who were
              the largest of the Christian minorities living in the empire.

              Since the Armenians wouldn't easily convert to Islam, the Young
              Turks decided that genocide was the best way to get rid of the
              Armenians. After WWI began, the Young Turks took this as an apropos
              moment to get rid of its Armenian population. The fact that they did
              this systematically constitutes this event as genocide. First, the
              Armenians in the army were disarmed and killed. Then, on April 24,
              1915, the Armenian political leaders and intellectuals were rounded
              up and mysteriously vanished - never to be heard from again.

              All of the remaining Armenians were forced to march through the deserts
              of Syria with no food or water, most of them dying in the process.

              Although the Young Turk government took precautions not to have
              eyewitnesses, there were still many who reported to their native
              countries about the atrocities they witnessed in the Ottoman
              Empire. One such witness was Henry Morgenthau, the U.S. Ambassador to
              the Ottoman Empire. Morgenthau wrote, "When the Turkish authorities
              gave the orders for these deportations, they were merely giving
              the death warrant to a whole race; they understood this well, and,
              in their conversations with me, they made no particular attempt
              to conceal the fact." Another historical example is Adolf Hitler,
              who in justifying his invasion of Poland, referred to the Armenian
              Genocide by saying to his generals, "Who, after all, speaks today of
              the annihilation of the Armenians?"

              Armenians all over the world commemorate the genocide on April 24 of
              each year. Thousands of Armenians march down streets, pass out fliers,
              lobby in Washington D.C. and so forth, all to being more attention
              to the genocide in order to have the US recognize it as an official
              Genocide. Many college students do their part as well. Julia Balian,
              one of the Armenians at LMU says, "My family is directly affected by
              the genocide. Because of the Turks' actions I never knew my uncles and
              aunts on my father's side." Sedda Antekelian, another LMU student,
              says, "The Armenian Genocide was a tragic event that should be
              recognized by everyone. If we don't recognize it, what prevents it
              from happening again?"

              Today LMU will have activities on campus to to make the LMU community
              more aware of the Armenian genocide that occurred from 1915-1923. They
              will also be having a candlelight vigil at 8:30 pm at Foley Pond to
              commemorate the 1.5 million Armenians killed.

              This is the opinion of Arek Horozyan, a senior biology major from
              Playa del Rey, Calif. Please send comments to [email protected].
              What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

              Comment


              • #77
                Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

                ARMENIA'S ANGELS
                Vicken Babkenian

                The Australian

                April 25 2008
                Australia

                AT the same time as Australian troops landed at Gallipoli on April
                25, 1915, another event of historical importance was taking place in
                Turkey: the Armenian genocide. The Gallipoli landing took place one
                day after the mass arrest of Armenian leaders in Istanbul, which is
                known as the beginning of the genocide.

                "Who, after all, remembers the annihilation of the Armenians?" were
                Adolf Hitler's famous words before he embarked on his heinous crime
                of the Holocaust.

                One group who remember the Armenians are a handful of Australians who
                were at the forefront of the relief effort, yet their stories have
                been largely hidden. Not one Australian historian has devoted any
                attention to these remarkable Australians, who have been forgotten
                along with the "forgotten genocide".

                For example, Edith Glanville from Haberfield, Sydney, lost her son
                Leigh, from the 1st Battalion, who died in battle at Gallipoli. Thus
                began her extraordinary journey with the Armenian people.

                Glanville was the first woman justice of the peace in NSW and founded
                both the Quota and Soroptimist clubs in Australia. Most notably she
                was honorary secretary of the Armenian Relief Fund of NSW from 1922,
                and became a driving force in raising more than $100,000 worth of
                supplies (about $19 million in today's value) within months.

                Other members of the relief fund included Charles Lloyd Jones, the
                first chairman of the ABC; and Oscar Lines, the general manager of
                the Bank of NSW. Glanville was so concerned about the plight of the
                Armenians that she ended up adopting an Armenian orphan.

                Former Menzies cabinet minister and British high commissioner Thomas
                White was a prisoner of war during World War I in Turkey. As a
                witness to the Armenian genocide, he later returned home and joined
                the Armenian relief effort.

                Another prominent Australian, the Rev J.E.Cresswell from Adelaide's
                Congregational Church (now the Uniting Church), was national secretary
                of the Armenian Relief Fund of Australasia in the 1920s.

                Witnessing the plight of Armenian refugees in Syria in 1923, Cresswell
                said: "Over 6000 are here. The sights within these caves are beyond
                words. No words seem adequate to describe the misery that must be
                the portion of these poor people."

                He oversaw relief programs from port to destination, including setting
                up an Australian-funded orphanage for 1700 children who survived the
                genocide in Antelias, Lebanon.

                That site is now one of the holiest for Armenians, the Catholicosate
                of Cilicia.

                In 1918, Sydney mayor James Joynton Smith set up the Armenian Relief
                Fund, which included prominent philanthropists and business people
                such as the Griffith brothers, one of the largest suppliers of tea
                and coffee in Australia, and the Elliot brothers, one of the nation's
                biggest pharmaceutical groups.

                This fund, with the help of many Sydneysiders, raised hundreds of
                thousands of dollars to help the Armenians, all when Australians
                were already sacrificing so much during World War I. Even prime
                minister Billy Hughes promised that free freight would be provided
                by commonwealth steamers for any contribution to the fund.

                These are just some of the hundreds of Australian stories of
                generosity, hope and moral decency that have been unearthed. In
                the words of Robert Manne: "In world history there is an intimate
                connection between the Dardanelles campaign and the Armenian genocide."

                So, as we reflect on the sacrifices of brave Australians who landed
                on those distant shores, let's also remember those Australians who
                lost loved ones and, through the kindness of their hearts, were able
                to save others.

                Vicken Babkenian is director of the Australian Institute for Holocaust
                and Genocide Studies.
                What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

                Comment


                • #78
                  Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

                  Capitol Hill


                  REP. SCHIFF VOWS TO CONTINUE FIGHT TO RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

                  US Fed News
                  April 24, 2008 Thursday 1:06 AM EST

                  Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif. (29th CD), issued the following news
                  release:

                  At an event on Capitol Hill last night in honor of the 93rd Anniversary
                  of the Armenia Genocide, Rep. Adam Schiff vowed to continue to lead
                  efforts in Congress to recognize the Armenian Genocide. Rep. Schiff
                  is the sponsor of "The Affirmation of the U.S. Record on the
                  Armenian Genocide" resolution (H. Res. 106) which calls on the
                  President to "ensure that the foreign policy of the United States
                  reflects appropriate understanding" of the "Armenian Genocide" and to
                  "accurately characterize the systematic and deliberate annihilation
                  of 1,500,000 Armenians as genocide." His remarks from last night's
                  event are below:

                  "I'm Congressman Adam Schiff and I'm very proud to represent one of the
                  largest Armenian communities in the country. Ninety-three years ago,
                  a million and a half people lost their lives for the simple reason
                  that they were Armenian. It began with a round-up of intellectuals. It
                  continued with forced marches in the desert; women and children,
                  parents and grandparents, aunts and uncles perished. Whole families
                  were lost. Almost an entire people were lost.

                  "Ninety-three years later we still fight in the greatest democracy
                  on earth to recognize the plain facts of what took place. We have
                  witnesses; some of them are here today. There are fewer and fewer
                  witnesses left, though, and while there are witnesses among us we have
                  the strongest moral imperative to recognize what they went through
                  and what their families went through.

                  "We have the strongest moral imperative to call that loss exactly what
                  it was - without equivocation, without mitigation - a genocide. And we
                  will fight until we succeed. We have a moral imperative and we have
                  a very practical imperative as well. And the practical imperative
                  is this, although this genocide took place ninety-three years ago,
                  there is also a genocide taking place today half-way around the
                  world. And we cannot have the moral authority we need to stand up
                  and ask the world to take action against that genocide if we don't
                  have the courage and the moral rectitude to recognize this genocide
                  and indeed every genocide.

                  "So this must change, this will change, the fight will go on, we will
                  prevail. I ask your help and God's help that we prevail in time for
                  the survivors to see justice done in their name."


                  REP. COSTA ISSUES STATEMENT ON 93RD ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

                  US Fed News
                  April 24, 2008 Thursday

                  Rep. Jim Costa, D-Calif. (20th CD), issued the following news release:

                  Today, Congressman Jim Costa (D-Fresno) made the following statement
                  on the Floor of the House of Representatives regarding the 93rd
                  anniversary of the start of the Armenian Genocide.

                  Costa is a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and supported
                  H. Res. 106, a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide in the
                  United States, when it came before him in Committee last October.

                  "Madam Speaker, I rise today to commemorate the 93rd anniversary of
                  the start of the Armenian Genocide, which was the first genocide of
                  the 20th century and sadly, the template for a cycle of genocide that
                  continues to this very day.

                  "It is, by any reasonable standard, established history that between
                  1915 and 1923 the Ottoman Empire systematically killed an estimated
                  1.5 million Armenians and drove hundreds of thousands of others into
                  exile from their ancestral homeland. The record of this atrocity is
                  well documented in the United States Archives and has been universally
                  accepted in the International Association of Genocide Scholars and
                  the broader historical and academic communities.

                  "However, there is still debate around the world, including here in our
                  nation, on whether this incident actually qualifies as genocide. On
                  April 26, 1915, the New York Times reported on the first reported
                  purges of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey. Later in 1915, the Times ran
                  a front page article about a report from the Committee on Armenian
                  Atrocities discussing exactly what was happening to Armenians in
                  Turkey. 'The report tells of children under 15 years of age thrown
                  into the Euphrates to be drowned; of women forced to desert infants in
                  their arms and to leave them by the roadside to die; of young women
                  and girls appropriated by the Turks, thrown into harems, attacked or
                  else sold to the highest bidder, and of men murdered and tortured.'

                  "One can debate specific historical incidents, but growing up in
                  Fresno, California, the land of William Saroyan, I heard stories
                  shared by grandparents from the Kezerian, Koligian and Abramhian
                  families about being forced to leave their homes, the stories of the
                  long marches, and the random murders. Clearly, they believed there
                  was a systematic approach to eliminate the Armenian communities in
                  places that had been their homes and farms for centuries. My Armenian
                  friends believe this systematic approach was among the first genocides
                  of the 20th century, and so do I.

                  "Around the world, in the single, longest lasting and far-reaching
                  campaign of genocide denial, Turkey seeks to block recognition of this
                  travesty. It's against the law to even mention the Armenian Genocide in
                  Turkey. The Armenian Genocide involved the issue of man's injustice to
                  mankind, and it continued to occur throughout the 20th century in the
                  Holocaust, Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia, and now in Darfur. As leaders,
                  we must confront this and not allow Turkey to continue to stand alone
                  and ask us to believe that the Armenian Genocide was not genocide.

                  "In standing up to this policy of denial, we, of course, honor the
                  martyrs of the genocide and we encourage our Turkish allies and
                  friends to come to terms with their past. And, in a very powerful
                  and significant way, we reinforce our own vital role, as Americans,
                  in leading the international community toward unconditional opposition
                  to all instances of genocide.

                  "Last October, the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed H. Res. 106,
                  a resolution to recognize the Armenian Genocide in the United
                  States. Unfortunately, this bill has yet to come before the full
                  House for a vote. Supporters of this resolution are constantly told
                  that now isn't the time to recognize the genocide, that scholars,
                  not Congress, should determine if this event was genocide, or that
                  passage of this resolution will hurt our relationship with Turkey. I
                  could not disagree more with these statements.

                  "First, there is never a 'right time' to recognize
                  genocide. Ninety-three years have passed since the start events
                  occurred, and we cannot wait around for a convenient moment to
                  recognize this truly catastrophic historical event. Secondly, the
                  scholars have spoken and the historical record is clear and thoroughly
                  documented. And finally, we have seen over and over again that Turkey's
                  warning of disastrous consequences are dramatically overstated. In
                  fact, in nearly every instance, Turkey's bilateral trade has gone up
                  with each of the countries that have recognized the Armenian Genocide -
                  including Canada, Italy, France, Russia, and Belgium.

                  "Genocide is not something that can simply swept under the rug and
                  forgotten. We need leaders around the world to not only recognize it,
                  but to condemn it so the world can truly say "Never Again." The United
                  States cannot continue its policy of denial regarding the Armenian
                  Genocide, and I encourage passage of H. Res. 106 to recognize the
                  Armenian Genocide in our nation."


                  REP. MARKEY COMMEMORATES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

                  US Fed News
                  April 24, 2008 Thursday

                  Rep. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass. (7th CD), issued the following
                  statement:

                  Representative Edward J. Markey (D-MA), entered the following statement
                  into the Congressional Record commemorating the 93rd anniversary of
                  the Armenian Genocide:

                  "Madam Speaker, I rise today to commemorate the ninety-third
                  anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

                  "In September of 1919, President Woodrow Wilson spoke of his vision
                  of a future Armenia. He said, 'Armenia is to be redeemed...So that
                  at last this great people, struggling through night after night of
                  terror, knowing not when they may come out into a time when they can
                  enjoy their rights as free people that they never dreamed they would
                  be able to exercise.'

                  "The Armenian people finally have the ability to enjoy the rights
                  that President Wilson hoped they would have so many years ago, and
                  for that we are all thankful.

                  "The nights of terror that President Wilson spoke about, the Armenian
                  Genocide, was the first genocide of the twentieth century. It was
                  the opening chapter of what was arguably the most violent period
                  of human history. In the decades following this initial Genocide,
                  the world witnessed genocidal acts against the xxxs and against
                  the Roma in World War II, and subsequently in Cambodia, Rwanda,
                  Bosnia-Herzegovina, and in too many wars to list here. Today, the
                  world is witnessing genocide yet again in Darfur.

                  "There is no more important way to commit ourselves to preventing
                  the genocides of the future than to commemorate and never forget the
                  genocides of the past. As such, I would like to note my continuing
                  support for House finally passage of H.Res. 106, the Affirmation of
                  the United States Record on the Armenian Genocide Resolution. In
                  my view, it is long past time for the United States to officially
                  recognize the massacre of one and a half million Armenians in early
                  in the twentieth century for what it undeniably was: a genocide.

                  "Countries all around the world have adopted similar resolutions to
                  ensure that the atrocities committed against the Armenian people are
                  properly recognized as genocide. Canada, France, Switzerland, Greece,
                  and Poland have passed resolutions affirming the recognition of the
                  Armenian Genocide. Properly recognizing the Armenian Genocide here
                  in America is essential to ensure that all past genocides are never
                  forgotten and all future atrocities are never permitted. This House
                  must afford the proper recognition to the Armenian Genocide. We must
                  do so not only because of our solemn obligation to recognize those
                  that were lost, but also because of our duty to those that can still
                  be saved.

                  "I yield back the balance of my time."

                  Last edited by Siamanto; 04-29-2008, 09:03 PM.
                  What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

                  Comment


                  • #79
                    Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

                    Connecticut (US)


                    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE REMEMBERED
                    By Meredith Blake

                    Greenwich Time, CT
                    April 25 2008

                    Sara Mushegian releases the Armenian flag as it is pulled up
                    the... (Helen Neafsey/Staff photo)"1"When Hermon Hosvepian was
                    forced by Ottoman Turkish soldiers to march through the Syrian desert
                    without food with her two daughters, all she could do was focus on
                    staying alive.

                    Her husband had been taken from their home and killed. And during the
                    grueling march across the desert, one of her daughters died and one
                    night, while she slept, the other one was taken and never seen again.

                    Hosvepian's daughter Catherine Papalian, who was born in the United
                    States, cried as she recounted the story of her mother and sisters
                    yesterday at a flag raising held outside Town Hall to memorialize
                    the victims of the Armenian Genocide, when 1.5 million to 2 million
                    Armenians living under Turkish rule within the Ottoman Empire were
                    killed or starved to death from 1915 to 1923.

                    More than 40 people, most of Armenian descent, gathered and shared
                    stories about their parents and grandparents, who survived.

                    Sara Mushegian, who organized the event, said her grandparents were
                    able to escape, spending years in the protective custody of American
                    authorities in Constantinople. But others were not as fortunate.

                    George Papailian's father's first wife killed herself out of fear,
                    knowing the fate that lay ahead, he said.

                    "There are so many horror stories," said Harry Nakashian, who said
                    his mother, at 11 or 12, remembered opening the door of her house
                    and seeing five children dead in the street.Nakashian's father never
                    could talk about the atrocities, he said.

                    Mushegian said that organizing the flag raising, honoring the victims
                    and survivors of the genocide is an important part of Armenian
                    heritage.

                    "I feel it's my duty," she said. "It's about raising awareness. People
                    know a little, but they don't really know."

                    During the event, First Selectmen Peter Tesei read a proclamation
                    declaring April 24 Armenian Martyrs' Day. The flag, with the colors
                    of red, blue and orange, was raised with the sounds of the Armenian
                    national anthem.

                    April 24, 1915, holds special significance as it was the day that
                    the Turkish government placed under arrest more than 200 Armenian
                    community leaders in Constantinople. It is seen as the start of a
                    government-ordered genocide.


                    PRESS RELEASE
                    Date: April 29, 2008
                    Armenian National Committee of America
                    Eastern Region
                    122 W. 27th St., Floor 12
                    New York, NY 10001
                    Contact: Karine Birazian
                    Tel: 917-428-1918

                    CONNECTICUT ARMENIANS GATHER AT STATE CAPITOL IN REMEMBRANCE OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

                    --Representative John Geragosian (D-25) presents proclamation from
                    CT Governor

                    Hartford, CT- On Saturday April 26, 2008, over 120 Armenians
                    gathered at the Hartford State Capitol for a commemorative service
                    in recognition of the Armenian Genocide, reported the Armenian
                    National Committee of America, Eastern Region.

                    The program included an invocation from the local Armenian
                    Churches; recognition of Armenian Genocide survivors in the
                    Connecticut area; remarks by Rep. John Geragosian (D-25); and
                    presentation of a proclamation by the Governor (full text below);
                    as well as remarks and singing by the youth and requiem service.
                    Greg Kuo from the Genocide Intervention Network, gave an
                    informative update on the actions GI-Net is taking to have the
                    teachings of genocide in the school system.

                    Keynote speaker ANCA Eastern Region Director Karine Birazian talked


                    about taking action and being part of the solution. During her
                    comments she said, "As Samantha Power, Pulizer Prize winner, for
                    her book a Problem From Hell has discussed on several occasions,
                    you can either be a bystander or an upstander. I implore all of
                    you to become upstanders. And not watch another survivor pass
                    without proper recognition or watch another Darfurian die. We must
                    continue, as Armenian Americans, to raise our voices about the
                    truth and ensure that our children will not have to bear witness to
                    similar atrocities."

                    Following the special requiem service a "Madagh" was donated by the
                    St. Stephen's Armenian Apostolic Church, the Armenian Church of the
                    Holy Resurrection, and St. George Armenian Apostolic Church where
                    gatherers met with Birazian.

                    Earlier that week on April 24 community members gathered at the
                    State Capitol for an annual Armenian flag raising ceremony.
                    Following the events Geragosian commented: "For years we have been
                    told that it is 'not a good time' to press for such a resolution.
                    "Enough is enough; it's time for us to come to grips with what many
                    nations the world over have already recognized'the 1915 massacre of
                    Armenian'Turks was a genocide."

                    As Majority Caucus Chair, Geragosian was elected to the Connecticut
                    House of Representatives in 1994. Representing the 25th district
                    located in New Britain he serves on the Appropriations, Insurance &
                    Real Estate, and Judiciary Committees.
                    ####
                    Photo Caption #1: Representative John Geragosian (D-25)
                    Photo Caption #2: ANCA ER Director Karine Birazian

                    State of Connecticut
                    By Her Excellency M. Jodi Rell, Governor: an Official Statement

                    WHEREAS, the Armenian genocide was a horrific, senseless
                    persecution of millions of innocent Armenian citizens, during which
                    perhaps as much as half of the population of Armenian was
                    exterminated; and

                    WHEREAS, it is critical that we recognize and condemn the Armenian
                    genocide; and

                    WHEREAS, the history of the Armenian genocide offers and
                    opportunity to reflect on the moral responsibilities of
                    individuals, societies and governments; and

                    WHEREAS, each year, Armenians throughout the world honor those who
                    perished from 1915-1923; and

                    WHEREAS, the citizens of the State of Connecticut should always
                    remember the terrible events of the Armenian Genocide and remain
                    vigilant against hatred, persecution and tyranny, and

                    WHEREAS, the commemoration of the Armenian Genocide each year


                    provides an opportunity for people to reflect upon our own humanity
                    and the need to respect all peoples; now

                    THEREFORE, I, M Jodi Rell, Governor of the State of Connecticut, do
                    hereby proclaim April 26, 2008, as

                    A Day of Remembrance for the Armenian Genocide in the State of
                    Connecticut, in recognition of the 93rd Commemoration of the
                    Armenian genocide and in memory of its victims, survivors,
                    rescuers, and liberators.

                    SIGNED: M. Jodi Rell


                    Stamford Advocate, CT
                    April 26 2008


                    Student to speak on 20th century's 1st genocide


                    By Patrick McNamee
                    Special Correspondent
                    Article Launched: 04/26/2008 01:00:00 AM EDT


                    History is full of events and tragedies that fade from the public's
                    mind with passing time. Weston High School senior Anna Guller took
                    action to ensure 1.5 million lives are not forgotten.

                    Guller, 18, will read her essay about the Armenian genocide tomorrow
                    afternoon at its 93rd anniversary commemoration in Times Square in New
                    York.

                    It is three days after the annual remembrance day; April 24, 1915, is
                    considered the date the genocide began.

                    Guller learned about the 20th century's first genocide while attending
                    last year's event with her mother.

                    "It really affected me when an Armenian woman came up to me and asked
                    me if I was Armenian, and when I told her I wasn't . . . she seemed
                    surprised," said Guller, who was chosen to read by the
                    Armenian-American association Knights and Daughters of Vartan. "Right
                    then, I saw it was because they've gone so long without people
                    remembering what happened."

                    The Young Turks, a political party within the Ottoman Empire, carried
                    out the genocide during World War I in hopes of creating an
                    exclusively Turkish population.

                    It is estimated that 1.5 million Armenians living under Turkish rule
                    died from 1915 to 1923. Turkey acknowledges that large numbers of
                    Armenians died, but says the figure is inflated and that the deaths
                    occurred in civil unrest during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

                    During last year's commemoration, Guller took photos and spoke with
                    survivors.

                    "They told me their stories and what they witnessed; they were
                    senseless, terrible acts and how they changed their lives. It was very
                    similar to the Holocaust," Guller said. "Their emotion just brought
                    the story to a whole new level." Guller was so moved by the
                    experience that she chose the topic for her college entrance essay,
                    and said she is thrilled to have the chance to present her essay this
                    weekend.

                    "I'm proud and honored that they were touched by what they read. It
                    was a new experience being able to get first-hand knowledge and
                    meeting them really changed me," said Guller, who will attend New York
                    University in the fall.

                    "I expect that it will be amazing. I want them to see that there are
                    those who are not Armenian that care about what happened."

                    Last edited by Siamanto; 05-06-2008, 10:04 PM.
                    What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

                    Comment


                    • #80
                      Re: In Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide - 2008

                      ARMENIA'S 'CHRISTIAN HOLOCAUST'
                      By David Smith

                      Jerusalem Post
                      April 25 2008

                      In late August 1939, the day before his invasion of Poland, Adolf
                      Hitler gathered his commanders at his home and informed them he had
                      placed "death's head" military formations in the east with orders
                      "to send to death mercilessly and without compassion men, women and
                      children of Polish derivation and language."

                      He assured his commanders the world would not long condemn them,
                      justifying his brutality by asking rhetorically, "Who, after all,
                      speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?" Hitler was
                      referring to the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turkish
                      forces beginning in April 1915. Until today, the Turkish government
                      denies the authenticity of both Hitler's statement and the genocide
                      itself.

                      Tel Aviv University professor Israel Charny, chief editor of the
                      Encyclopedia of Genocide, insists the statement was recorded by "an
                      indisputably serious" Associated Press correspondent, and that other
                      remarks were made by Hitler that "confirm that the Armenian genocide
                      was an active guiding concept in the monster's mind."

                      Kevork Kahvedjian, son of Jerusalem photographer and Armenian genocide
                      survivor Elia Kahvedjian, explains his father was personal testimony
                      to the genocide and its savagery. "When it started, he was only five
                      years old, but he remembered it very clearly. Especially the last
                      year of his life he remembered it..." Kevork continually slipped
                      into the first person while recounting his father's story, as if it
                      had happened to him: "I used to see lots of dead people, piles of
                      them. Some had been burned. Until today I remember the smell of burned
                      flesh," he narrated, detailing the death march through the desert.

                      He remembered the sound of the German cannons pounding the city, then
                      a lull of about a month before the Turkish soldiers entered his home
                      and took Elia, his mother, a sister and two brothers - one brother
                      was just a few months old. Two older brothers had already been hanged.

                      "Soldiers came and started pushing my mother. She tried to go back
                      to the house but the soldiers hit her with rifle butts and she had
                      to take the children and start walking." The Armenians were allowed
                      only what they could carry. They walked for weeks through the desert
                      of Deir Zor with soldiers on both sides. The soldiers offered neither
                      food nor water, but the prisoners ate some plants and drank brackish
                      water on the way.

                      After weeks of carrying her six-month-old baby, Elia's mother,
                      exhausted, set the infant in the shade of a tree and abandoned him,
                      hoping some kind person would find him. The older sister, about 12
                      years old during the march, was abducted. Elia found her 18 years
                      later and discovered she had been forced to serve in a harem.

                      In a wadi, near the end of the trek, "I heard my mother say, 'Today,
                      I think they're going to kill us.'" It happened that that a Kurd
                      was passing by. She called the Kurd and told him, "Take this boy and
                      go." The Kurd took Elia and the boy remembered, "At the top of the
                      hill we turned around and saw the soldiers killing everyone." The
                      Kurd took Elia, burned his clothes, gave him medicine for dysentery,
                      and sold him to a blacksmith, who eventually sent him away. Elia
                      sought refuge in a Syrian convent. In 1918, when the war was over, the
                      American Near East Relief Foundation began to gather Armenian orphans
                      and distribute them in its orphanages throughout the Middle East.

                      Elia was transferred to Lebanon, then to Nazareth in 1920. There,
                      one of the teachers was a photographer and Elia worked for him. Elia
                      learned the photography trade and became a prominent photographer. Many
                      beloved pictures of early 20th-century Jerusalem were taken by Elia;
                      the album, Through My Father's Eyes, celebrates his work.

                      Turkish authorities strive to discredit accounts such as Elia's,
                      although his testimony is confirmed by an abundance of contemporary
                      journalism, eyewitness accounts by statesmen such as American
                      ambassador to the Ottoman Empire Henry Morgenthau, as well as German
                      and Austrian documentation.

                      Charny claims there was "most certainly" a religious element in
                      the persecution of the Armenians, the first empire to embrace the
                      faith. (Armenia officially adopted Christianity as the state religion
                      in 301 CE, about 25 years before the Roman Empire did so.) "There are
                      even some who want to refer to this period overall as 'The Christian
                      Genocide,' because the victims of the Turks' genocide were not
                      only Armenians but also Assyrians and Greeks," he explains. Still,
                      he is reticent to use that term as it "could seem to remove from
                      the Armenian community their hard-won gains for recognition of the
                      genocide of their people."

                      According to Charney, "What stands out about the denials of the
                      Armenian genocide is that for many years, the full power of the
                      Turkish government has been devoted to denials of the genocide. Turkey
                      literally spends millions on advertising agencies and on publicity
                      efforts. It also throws the considerable weight of its government
                      behind coercing denials from other countries, with threats to the
                      United States of not allowing American military planes to use Turkish
                      air space or threatening to pull out of joint NATO military exercises,
                      as well as with threats of major economic retaliation should or when a
                      country, such as France, confirms recognition of the Armenian genocide.

                      "Israel is regularly the object of threats by the Turks and,
                      regrettably to say the least, for many years has kowtowed to these
                      threats. But then too so has the stronger United States"

                      MK Haim Oron (Meretz) proposed in March that the Knesset appoint a
                      committee to consider recognizing the Armenian genocide, adding,
                      "It is unacceptable that the xxxish people is not making itself
                      heard." Although the measure passed, MK Shalom Simhon (Likud)
                      responded, "this has become a politically charged issue between
                      Armenians and Turks, and Israel is not interested in taking sides."

                      Many Israelis are eager for their country to recognize the
                      genocide. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem will hold an event titled
                      "A Symposium in Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide" at its Givat
                      Ram campus on April 29 at 6:30 p.m. Both Kevork Kahvedjian and Charney
                      will speak.

                      Israel will eventually recognize the genocide, insists Kevork, who
                      manages his father's business, Elia Photo Service, in Jerusalem's
                      Old City. Kevork, named for the baby left under a tree in the desert,
                      believes, "One day they are going to say, 'Yes, it happened.' If not
                      now, then in 50 years!"

                      Otherwise, Armenians worry, states that refuse to recognize the
                      genocide risk rendering Hitler's rhetorical question a reality.


                      Breaking news about Satellite from The Jerusalem Post. Read the latest updates on Satellite including articles, videos, opinions and more.
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