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  • #31
    UCLA: Month Calls To Mind Victims Of Genocide

    Voices recounting tragic tales and staggering death tolls projected
    over a loudspeaker from Meyerhoff Park on Tuesday as speakers from
    several human rights groups promoted the Armenian Student Association's
    Genocide Awareness Month, taking place all of April.

    Speakers talked about five different conflicts: the Armenian Genocide,
    the Holocaust, the Cambodian Genocide, the Rwandan Genocide, and the
    conflict in the Darfur region of Sudan, which the U.S. government
    has called a genocide.


    more...http://groong.usc.edu/news/msg185058.html
    "All truth passes through three stages:
    First, it is ridiculed;
    Second, it is violently opposed; and
    Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

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    • #32


      Many horror stories lay suppressed in this home. It is good that they can come out during this time.

      Comment


      • #33
        Can anyone tell me when and where exactly the genocide march is in US, please....it was on 21 in the UK...

        Comment


        • #34
          ANCA Launches the Click for Justice Campaign - the Nation's Largest Online Genocide

          WASHINGTON, DC – The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) escalated its nation-wide campaign to end the cycle of genocide today with the launch of its "Click for Justice" internet campaign, slated to become the nation’s largest online genocide protest.

          From April 20th to 30th, the ANCA website homepage, www.anca.org, will feature a special "Click for Justice" banner, directing e-advocates from across the country to a targeted Congressional WebMail message. In letters to their Senators and Representatives, these advocates will call for the passage of the Congressional Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.106 & S.Res.106) and urge the U.S. government to take concrete steps to end the ongoing killing in Darfur

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          • #35


            Thank you, SoSarkissian

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            • #36
              Event: Assyrian, Armenian, Greek Genocide -- 92 Years of Denial

              Assyrian International News Agency
              Assyrian, Armenian, Greek Genocide -- 92 Years of Denial

              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              Posted GMT 4-18-2007 19:10:40

              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              (AINA) -- On April 24, 2007, the Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks worldwide will commemorate and remember the sufferings of hundreds of thousands of innocent people during the first Genocide act of the 20th century, the Armenian, Assyrian, Greek Genocide of 1915.

              There is very little doubt that the world indifference to the mass killings of our Christian population during World War I became the precedent and the precursor to the horrific Jewish Holocaust, which resulted in the extermination of over six million Jews. Regrettably, even half century after the world first vowed "Never again," genocide had not disappeared.

              Throughout the 20th century, we witnessed with horror, yet once again in silence the massacres of half-a-million Chinese and Communists in Indonesia, the slaughter by the Tutsi army of 200,000 Hutu in Burundi, the deaths by beating, starving or torture of a million and a half Cambodians by the Khmer Rouge, and more recently, the acts of Genocide in Rwanda and Darfur.

              Today, the Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks confront 92 years of denial by the same world powers with a renewed determination for the just and rightful recognition of the systematic killings and atrocities and the Genocide that resulted in near annihilation of our people at the hands of the Young Turks of the Ottoman Empire, present day Turkey.

              Milan Kundera has written that the struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting. Indeed, the world must not forget.

              In an effort to further educate our communities on this dark history of our nation and the first Genocide act of the 20th century, Dr. David Gaunt, Professor of History at Södertörn University College, Stockholm, Sweden, will give a series of lectures in California entitled "Massacres and Resistance: The Genocide of the Armenians and Assyrians Based on New Evidence from the Archives" from May 3 through 11, 2007.

              These lectures will be based on findings from Dr. Gaunt's recently published book Massacres, Resistance, Protectors: Muslim-Christian Relations in Eastern Anatolia during World War I (Gorgias Press, 2006), which will be on sale and available for signing by the author at each of the lectures.

              A brief description of the book is as follows:

              "This is a pioneering historical investigation of the Assyrian, Chaldean, and Syrian Christian minorities during World War I, who suffered the same fate as the Armenians. Ethnic cleansing and large-scale massacres occurred throughout northern Mesopotamia and parts of Ottoman-occupied Iran. Based on primary sources from official Russian, Turkish, and West European archives, as well as hitherto unused manuscript sources and oral histories published here for the first time, this book attempts to give a full picture of the events of 1915. Concentration is on the Assyrians of Urmia and Hakkari and on the Syrians of Diyarbekir province, particularly in Tur Abdin."

              The lectures will be co-sponsored by the Assyrian American National Federation (AANF) and the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) and in conjunction with a number of Assyrian and Armenian academic and community groups (listed below).

              The schedule of the lectures is as follows:


              Thursday, May 3, 7:30 p.m.: Stanford University, Tresidder Union, Cypress Rm., 2nd floor, 459 Lagunita Drive, Stanford, CA
              Friday, May 4, 7:00 p.m.: University of California, Berkeley, Dwinelle Hall, Room 219, Berkeley, CA
              Sunday, May 6, 4:00 p.m.: California State University, Stanislaus, Demergasso-Bava Hall, Room 166, 801 West Monte Vista Ave, Turlock, CA
              Tuesday, May 8, 7:30 p.m.: California State University, Fresno, University Business Center, Alice Peters Auditorium, Rm. 191, Fresno, CA
              Wednesday, May 9, 7:30 p.m.: Assyrian American Association of Southern California Hall, 5901 Cahuenga Blvd., North Hollywood, CA
              Thursday, May 10, 7:00 p.m.: University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Moore Hall, Room 100, Los Angeles, CA
              Friday, May 11, 7:30 p.m.: Merdinian Armenian Christian School, 13330 Riverside Drive, Sherman Oaks, CA

              In addition to the primary-organizing sponsors, the Assyrian American National Federation and National Association for Armenian Studies and Research, the lectures are being presented through an unprecedented collaboration with the following Assyrian and Armenian organizations: (Listed in alphabetical order)


              Advancement of Education Foundation
              Analysis Research and Planning for Armenia (ARPA Institute)
              Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History at UCLA
              Armenian Student Association at UCLA
              Armenian Student Association at Stanford University
              Armenian Studies Program, University of California, Berkeley
              Armenian Studies Program, California State University, Fresno
              Assyrian Academic Society -- Bay Area Chapter
              Assyrian Aid Society of America -- Central Valley Chapter
              Assyrian Aid Society of America--Southern California Chapter
              Assyrian American Association of Modesto
              Assyrian American Association of Southern California
              Assyrian American Civic Club of Turlock
              Assyrian Foundation of America
              Assyrian Student Alliance at UC Berkeley
              Assyrian Student Association at UCLA
              Mesopotamian Museum
              Narekatsi Chair in Armenian Studies at UCLA
              Zinda Magazine

              Jackie Bejan
              Director of Public Relations
              Assyrian American National Federation
              General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

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