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April 24

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  • Haykakan
    replied
    Re: April 24

    Here is a great statement by a Turkish human rights group. http://asbarez.com/122221/turkish-ri...nize-genocide/
    Yes these people are by far in the minority but it shows how now as it was back then that not all Turks are evil.
    As for this years commemoration here we showed again that we have not learned much. Last year some things were said that gave me hope about a shift in our policies here in the diaspora but we heard non of it this time around. Instead we got a show about the Wilsonian agreement and the Treaty of Lausanne.. and we also got a frank admission from the ANCA that our cause is dwarfed by our opponents in the U.S. political system where even the mildest reaching out is met with scorn regarding our issues. I have lived in this Armenian community for well over 30 years and have been attending April 24 commemorations pretty much every year and it is amazing to note how much the power of the diaspora has decreased over the years regarding U.S. politics. Now you may not hear it from the ANCA which like to pat itself on the back rather then recognize the facts but just looking at who was at the commemoration was telling enough. There were secraterys from the governors office, from the senators office but none of them were present and this is not how things used to be...we had senators and congressmen present before and they would make addresses, take our money and then forget about us but now they don't even bother doing that anymore instead they send some intern with a letter. Another disheartening thing that was so obviously wrong was that this year the commemoration was done on a partisan bases along the lines of party and church affiliation...and this is a great reflection of the diaspora's lack of unity even on this issue. The Armenian community here has been my home for decades and these people are my friends and family but despite some glimmers of hope our community here is weakening and is increasingly ineffective when it comes to pursuing our causes. If we Armenians cannot come together on April 24 and commemorate our shared grief together then what can we do as a people?

    Leave a comment:


  • bell-the-cat
    replied
    Re: April 24

    Originally posted by Artashes View Post
    Maybe we could suggest to the allied forces that they join with the turks (hominoids) in their celebration of their defeat.
    Maybe we could suggest that they could say.... We got our asses kicked & and our young men killed
    But at least we didn't get genocided like the Armenians.
    Maybe that will console them greed ridden conniving capitalist sellouts.
    Artashes
    I somehow missed this example of the forum's most charming Armenian being his typical charming self.

    Maybe he should get together with that other slimeball, the one who lives in Australia, and together tell Australians what proper Armenians really think of Australians. And of course also tell those same Australians that they are still expected to do whatever Armenians want whenever Armenians want it.
    Last edited by bell-the-cat; 03-20-2014, 09:12 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Haykakan
    replied
    Re: April 24

    It saddens me that non of the genocide victims saw justice done and we probably never will see it.


    LAST BAY AREA ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SURVIVOR DIES


    Tuesday, March 18th, 2014

    Takouhie Keshishian

    SAN FRANCISCO--The last known Armenian Genocide survivor in the San
    Francisco Bay Area has died. Takouhie Keshishian, age 99, passed away
    peacefully on February 26th. She was one of the last living survivors
    of the 20th century's first systematic genocide, perpetrated by the
    Ottoman Turkish government against its Armenian subjects, 1915 -1923,
    during which more than half of the Armenian population living on
    its ancient homeland was killed, and their personal and community
    properties seized.

    Takouhie had often expressed her wish that the Turkish government
    and the U.S. Congress recognize the Armenian Genocide. She has been
    honored as a source of strength and voice of justice at Bay Area
    Armenian Genocide commemorative events, held at the historic Mt.

    Davidson Cross in San Francisco. In a video message to the Armenian
    community, Keshishian had a simple yet powerful message: "We must
    never forget what Turkey did. . . We must always remember."

    Takouhie is survived by 6 children, 16 grandchildren, and 24
    great-grandchildren. Funeral services and interment took place on
    Saturday, March 8, 2014, at 11:00 AM, at Cypress Lawn, 1370 El Camino
    Real, Colma CA.

    California Lt. Governor Gavin Newsom sent a condolence letter to the
    Keshishian Family. "She was a leader in every sense of the word"
    stated Lt. Governor Newsom. "Her leadership touched her family,
    friends, community, and demonstrates that there are no obstacles in
    life that cannot be overcome."

    Congresswoman Jackie Kanchelian Speier issued a statement and had
    a flag flown at the US Capitol in memory of Takouhi Keshishian. "I
    share with Takouhie her wish that the Turkish government and the U.S.

    Congress recognize the Armenian Genocide" stated Rep. Speier. "I have
    introduced legislation to that effect since 2008 and will continue
    to do so until it passes in the Congress."

    "Considering the traumatic experiences she had endured, our grandmother
    had such a great, positive spirit which we loved so much.

    She taught us a lot about life and values," said Ara Makasdjian,
    Keshishian's grandson and ANCA- San Francisco Bay Area Board Member.

    Takouhie was born in the city of Adana, Turkey, on February 14, 1915.

    Her mother, Marie, was born in the village of Missis, outside of
    Adana. When the massacres against Armenians in that region were
    unleashed by the Turkish Sultan in 1909, Marie's entire family was
    murdered, and her village, destroyed. A kind neighbor saved Marie,
    keeping her hidden and safe, until she could make her way to Adana,
    where she later gave birth to Takouhie.

    Takouhie never knew her father. When she was two months old, he fled
    the Turkish army into Syria. (Armenian men were being conscripted into
    segregated, un-armed sections of the army, and later murdered). During
    his flight, disguised as a Kurd, he saw many Armenians on forced
    death marches, including his own sister and her family. He contracted
    Typhoid and never returned.

    Takouhie's mother Marie, was married off to another man and as a
    child, Takouhie was told that this man was her father who had come
    back from the army. In addition to her eldest son and Takouhie,
    Marie also later gave birth to more two sons and a daughter.

    In 1921, under the threat of continuing massacres, the family was
    able to leave Adana, travelling by boat to Tripoli, Lebanon. When the
    family arrived in Lebanon, their very poor condition was exacerbated
    by the fact they didn't know the language. Takouhie's stepfather died
    of food poisoning. Instead of going to school, Takouhie cared for
    her younger siblings while her mother worked to support them. Each
    evening, Takouhie joined her mother in creating embroidery pieces,
    which her mother sold for income the follow day.

    Takouhie married Antranig Keshishian in the 1930's, and they had 6
    children, 5 girls and a boy - Shake, Loucine, Anahid, Dikran, Sossi,
    and Sona.

    After years of living through the devastating Lebanese civil war,
    several of her children moved to the Bay Area, and Takouhie joined them
    in 1987. In her last years, she was a resident of Pacifica, California.

    Leave a comment:


  • Artashes
    replied
    Re: April 24

    Originally posted by Artashes View Post
    So the hominoids (turks) are planning to celebrate their victory at Gallipoli on April 24th in an attempt to obfuscate their planned GENOCIDE of the Armenian people that is brought to remembrance every April 24th.

    ---------------------------------------------------
    What do you think about this for an idea?
    We counter that by displaying the names and numbers of those that were killed by the foul turks at Gallipoli .
    We point out that the hominoids (turks) are celebrating the defeat of the west. And the killing of their lost ones.
    Hooray, the monkey a$s turks killed your young men. That's what they are celebrating. And they are doing that to divert yor attention & the worlds attention from the well documented 1st genocide of the 20th century.
    The Armenian genocide.
    Smart monkey, smart monkey.
    Dumb monkey a$s hominoids (Turks).
    Maybe we could suggest to the allied forces that they join with the turks (hominoids) in their celebration of their defeat.
    Maybe we could suggest that they could say.... We got our asses kicked & and our young men killed
    But at least we didn't get genocided like the Armenians.
    Maybe that will console them greed ridden conniving capitalist sellouts.
    Artashes

    Leave a comment:


  • Artashes
    replied
    Re: April 24

    So the hominoids (turks) are planning to celebrate their victory at Gallipoli on April 24th in an attempt to obfuscate their planned GENOCIDE of the Armenian people that is brought to remembrance every April 24th.

    ---------------------------------------------------
    What do you think about this for an idea?
    We counter that by displaying the names and numbers of those that were killed by the foul turks at Gallipoli .
    We point out that the hominoids (turks) are celebrating the defeat of the west. And the killing of their lost ones.
    Hooray, the monkey a$s turks killed your young men. That's what they are celebrating. And they are doing that to divert yor attention & the worlds attention from the well documented 1st genocide of the 20th century.
    The Armenian genocide.
    Smart monkey, smart monkey.
    Dumb monkey a$s hominoids (Turks).

    Leave a comment:


  • Haykakan
    replied
    Re: April 24

    YEREVAN SLAMS DAVUTOGLU


    Monday, December 9th, 2013

    Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian and his Turkish counterpart
    Ahmet Davutoglu shake hands after signing the dangerous Protocols in
    Zurich in 2009

    Armenia's Deputy Foreign Minister says Davutoglu should visit
    Dzidzernagapert instead of making divisive statements.

    YEREVAN-The Armenian government slammed Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet
    Davutoglu for undermining the peace process in the South Caucasus by
    continuing to precondition the resolution of the Karabakh conflict
    with normalizing of Turkey-Armenia relations.

    Armenia's Deputy Foreign Minister Savarsh Kocharyan responded to
    Davutoglu, who announced last week that he would visit Yerevan for the
    December 12 meeting of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Organization
    and hinted, over the weekend, that he might broach Turkey-Armenia
    relations while in Yerevan.

    "Instead of making provocative statements, the Turkish foreign minister
    would do right by taking the chance to visit the Armenian Genocide
    Memorial to pay tribute to the memory of the [Armenian Genocide]
    victims," Kocharyan told Armenpress Saturday.

    "Turkey can contribute to the normalization of relations with
    Armenia by ratifying and implementing, without any preconditions,
    the Armenian-Turkish Protocols," added Kocharyan

    "If Turkey wishes to further accelerate the establishment of civilized
    relations between the countries of the region, it must recognize the
    Armenian Genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire, and open the
    Armenian-Turkish border which it closed," added Kocharyan stated.

    Kocharyan's comments came in response to Turkish press reports
    indicating that while in Armenia, Davutoglu would propose the opening
    of the Armenian-Turkish border if Armenia "cede(s) from at least
    two of the seven regions Armenia has been occupying since 1993,"
    reported the Hurriyet Daily News.

    While there has been no official indication about a meeting between
    Dovutoglu and Armenia's Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian, the
    Turkish foreign ministry told Hurriyet that such a meeting is
    "highly possible."

    Turkey has refused to ratify the dangerous Turkey-Armenia protocols,
    which were signed in 2009, saying that Turkey will sign the accord
    only after the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, in favor
    of Azerbaijan.

    Davutoglu recently re-visited the Turkey-Armenia normalizations
    process, when in October he visited Switzerland and brought up the
    matter with Swiss leaders.

    "We are now looking to develop it and advance with creative ideas and
    new ways of thinking. We will increase our works in the coming period.

    When relations between Turkey and Armenia are normalized, most of
    the issues between Azerbaijan and Armenia will also be within the
    framework of a solution," Davutoglu said during his visit to Bern
    in October, when he also sought Switzerland's support for steps in
    developing ties with Armenia.

    Protest awaits Davutoglu

    Protests Awaits Davutoglu The Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    Nigol Aghabalian Student Organization announced that it would protest
    Davutoglu's visit to Armenia Thursday.

    The organization's chairman Gerasim Vardanyan said the protesters
    will demand recognition of the Armenian Genocide and reparations to
    its victims.

    "One thing is clear," said Vardanyan, "We will remind Turkey, once
    again, that owes a debt to Armenia and that there are unresolved
    issues."

    ANCA Issues Statement on Davutoglu Visit Armenian National Committee
    of America Executive Director Aram Hamparian issued the following
    statement Friday on Davutolglu's visit.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Davutoglu's upcoming visit to Armenia for
    a December 12th regional conference shines a spotlight on Ankara's
    continued use of its Protocols to escape liability for mass murder,
    vast theft, and the wholesale dispossession of a nation of its
    ancestral homeland.

    The Armenian nation and all peoples should use this visit by a
    leading official of a perpetrator state to the land of its surviving
    victims to strengthen our call for a truthful, just, and comprehensive
    international resolution of the Armenian Genocide. In coming to terms
    with its responsibilities, Turkey must not only end its denials and
    stop its obstruction of justice, but also cease its century-long policy
    of anti-Armenian aggression, strangulation, and coercion rooted in
    the legacy of this still unpunished crime.

    The United States and our partners in the international community,
    rather than abetting Ankara by arm-twisting Yerevan into a politically
    untenable and morally unacceptable policy of "normalization without
    justice," should be pressing Turkey to forfeit its genocidal gains,
    to fully return all it has stolen, and to fairly compensate the
    Armenian nation for its vast and ongoing losses.

    The Armenian Genocide-an act of premeditated mass murder and national
    dispossession-is not a bilateral "conflict" to be reconciled, but
    rather an ongoing international crime that all nations, not Armenia
    alone, have a moral and legal responsibility to punish.

    Leave a comment:


  • Haykakan
    replied
    Re: April 24

    "Did it occur to you that perhaps she was helping simply because she believes it is the right thing to do? Or is that a concept just too alien? "
    I never said nor implied that not to be the case.

    "If Armenians were to start to feel greater empathy with the rest of the world and not be so insular, then maybe the rest of the world will start to feel greater empathy with Armenia."
    I do not understand where you get your presuptions. Look at the threads in this forum and observe the sympathy twords palastinians , syryans, and others. Plenty armenians were against the Iraq war to. You again generalize and again that destroys you argument. Sure there are plenty of people who do not care about others but that is true for any nation.
    As for corrupting the meaning of past events - i do not follow you there. I assume you are talking about Raffi and again this was a question i asked and the answer he gave me was what i reported here. This subject seems pretty important to me and many others so i am not sure how this corrupts anything. Politics and polititions is what got us killed before and i want to make sure it does not happen again.

    Leave a comment:


  • bell-the-cat
    replied
    Re: April 24

    Originally posted by Haykakan View Post
    So it was that time of the year again when some of us armenians gather to comemorate the genocide which has effected us all so deeply. I have been living in the Detroit area for over 30 years and have seen as many april 24 events come and go and to date they were all amazingly unremarkable as a matter of fact some of them were offensive to put it mildly. I remember one year when one of the clergy said we deserved the genocide because we were not religious enough. I wanted to knock that guys head off but my wife talked me out of it. The disapointing parade of ever changing polititions brought before us to make us believe we have a shot at getting justice became so mundane and procedural and the results we hoped for became ever more out of our reach. We as a diaspora have waisted our resources and time on what is basicaly a show and nothing more for many decades and i expected nothing more then that when i attended the event last night. The evening began with the usual poam-dance-introductions.. then Baroness Cox gave us a rather lively slide show presentation of things that she has accomplished in Kharabagh and talked about how wonderful the people there were. This was new and a welcomed change from the regular even when it was not clear if she was helping us because we were armenians or because we were chrystians. So ok this was nice but then a man named Mushegh Muradyan was introduced and again due to past events my expectations were woefully low of anything significant coming out of this event but then there it was. First the man thanked the commmunity for helping him and his family deal with his daughters cancer(he was very emotional) and then he started talking about why it is important that we remember and commemorate and fight for justice. Its not like he said anything new but it was the way he said it and the way he emphasized that history was on our side and how just our caus is. Ok so far this was already better then any of the previous commemorations but it was going to get a lot better. He went on to talk about how the xxxish lobby was working with the turks and successfully impeding armenian causes on the political front (you could see the frustration on his face). He then went on to say that USA no longer abided by its founding principles and that it was our job as armenian citizens of USA to remind her polititions of what this country stood for. He then emphasized the fact that the diaspora needs to help the state of Armenia and Kharabagh despite their imperfections for it has only been 20 years of independence and we ca
    nnot expect perfection when it took this country hundreds of years to get to where it is and he mentioned again that it is very corrupt(the USA). He went on to point out that Armenia's enemies are conspiring to destroy Armenia once and for all ie. the meeting on panturkism held in naxichevan, the huge militery spending by azeris, huge international antiarmenian propoganda..He then stated that he was very much anti russian/communist for decades but that now he realizes that the only reason that Armenia still exists is because the turk is afraiad of Russia. He emphasized Russia like no diasporan ever has and this was indeed a big change for i had long stated the same things but since i was from the soviet union the diasporans figured i was bias and to hear it coming from this guy(first time ever i heard it from any diasporan publicly) i hope made an impression. I liked the fact that this man emphasized 1 justice and history are on our side 2 the danger Armenia and Kharabagh face 3 the need for the diaspora to help 4 the importance of Russia. There was a gathering at a restaurant afterward for those who had made donations and i did not intend to attend until i heard Mushegh's speech which made me want to meet the man and ask him a few questions thus i got there early so i could intercept him when he came in and that is what i did. I expressed my thanks for the wonderful speech he made and the fact that he talked about so many of the serious problems which are usually ignored in the diaspora. I also asked for his opinion on Raffi Hovhanessian and if Raffi was affiliated with ANCA. He said that Raffi is not in any way afiliated with ANCA and that he believes that Raffi does not have the best interest of Armenia and her people at heart. He was very emphatic about that last part. Murad is an elder man and he was tired so i left him alone after our conversation and mingled with my friends in the community(made some new friends to) the rest of the night. It was good to see someone talk about things that really do matter in a realistic manner for a change in a emotionally charged manner with some sense of urgency. This was by far the best commemoration i have witnessed and i hope that what was said that night by one of their own will sink in for the diasporans.

    Once again you try to corrupt the meaning of past events and hijack them to serve your own short term politics.

    "Baroness Cox gave us a rather lively slide show presentation of things that she has accomplished in Kharabagh and talked about how wonderful the people there were. This was new and a welcomed change from the regular even when it was not clear if she was helping us because we were armenians or because we were chrystians." Did it occur to you that perhaps she was helping simply because she believes it is the right thing to do? Or is that a concept just too alien?

    "He then went on to say that USA no longer abided by its founding principles and that it was our job as armenian citizens of USA to remind her polititions of what this country stood for." So, America can kill hundreds of thousands in Iraq, crush human rights everywhere, engineer chaos across the world, murders innocent civilians at will by remote control - but it only reaches the "no longer abiding by its founding principles" stage when it ignores the demands of some Armenians. Someone needs to get a f-ing sense of proportion! If Armenians were to start to feel greater empathy with the rest of the world and not be so insular, then maybe the rest of the world will start to feel greater empathy with Armenia.
    Last edited by bell-the-cat; 04-28-2013, 06:44 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Haykakan
    started a topic April 24

    April 24

    So it was that time of the year again when some of us armenians gather to comemorate the genocide which has effected us all so deeply. I have been living in the Detroit area for over 30 years and have seen as many april 24 events come and go and to date they were all amazingly unremarkable as a matter of fact some of them were offensive to put it mildly. I remember one year when one of the clergy said we deserved the genocide because we were not religious enough. I wanted to knock that guys head off but my wife talked me out of it. The disapointing parade of ever changing polititions brought before us to make us believe we have a shot at getting justice became so mundane and procedural and the results we hoped for became ever more out of our reach. We as a diaspora have waisted our resources and time on what is basicaly a show and nothing more for many decades and i expected nothing more then that when i attended the event last night. The evening began with the usual poam-dance-introductions.. then Baroness Cox gave us a rather lively slide show presentation of things that she has accomplished in Kharabagh and talked about how wonderful the people there were. This was new and a welcomed change from the regular even when it was not clear if she was helping us because we were armenians or because we were chrystians. So ok this was nice but then a man named Mushegh Muradyan was introduced and again due to past events my expectations were woefully low of anything significant coming out of this event but then there it was. First the man thanked the commmunity for helping him and his family deal with his daughters cancer(he was very emotional) and then he started talking about why it is important that we remember and commemorate and fight for justice. Its not like he said anything new but it was the way he said it and the way he emphasized that history was on our side and how just our caus is. Ok so far this was already better then any of the previous commemorations but it was going to get a lot better. He went on to talk about how the xxxish lobby was working with the turks and successfully impeding armenian causes on the political front (you could see the frustration on his face). He then went on to say that USA no longer abided by its founding principles and that it was our job as armenian citizens of USA to remind her polititions of what this country stood for. He then emphasized the fact that the diaspora needs to help the state of Armenia and Kharabagh despite their imperfections for it has only been 20 years of independence and we cannot expect perfection when it took this country hundreds of years to get to where it is and he mentioned again that it is very corrupt(the USA). He went on to point out that Armenia's enemies are conspiring to destroy Armenia once and for all ie. the meeting on panturkism held in naxichevan, the huge militery spending by azeris, huge international antiarmenian propoganda..He then stated that he was very much anti russian/communist for decades but that now he realizes that the only reason that Armenia still exists is because the turk is afraiad of Russia. He emphasized Russia like no diasporan ever has and this was indeed a big change for i had long stated the same things but since i was from the soviet union the diasporans figured i was bias and to hear it coming from this guy(first time ever i heard it from any diasporan publicly) i hope made an impression. I liked the fact that this man emphasized 1 justice and history are on our side 2 the danger Armenia and Kharabagh face 3 the need for the diaspora to help 4 the importance of Russia. There was a gathering at a restaurant afterward for those who had made donations and i did not intend to attend until i heard Mushegh's speech which made me want to meet the man and ask him a few questions thus i got there early so i could intercept him when he came in and that is what i did. I expressed my thanks for the wonderful speech he made and the fact that he talked about so many of the serious problems which are usually ignored in the diaspora. I also asked for his opinion on Raffi Hovhanessian and if Raffi was affiliated with ANCA. He said that Raffi is not in any way afiliated with ANCA and that he believes that Raffi does not have the best interest of Armenia and her people at heart. He was very emphatic about that last part. Murad is an elder man and he was tired so i left him alone after our conversation and mingled with my friends in the community(made some new friends to) the rest of the night. It was good to see someone talk about things that really do matter in a realistic manner for a change in a emotionally charged manner with some sense of urgency. This was by far the best commemoration i have witnessed and i hope that what was said that night by one of their own will sink in for the diasporans.
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