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Peabody Remembers Those Killed In Armenian Genocide

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  • Peabody Remembers Those Killed In Armenian Genocide

    PEABODY REMEMBERS THOSE KILLED IN ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Robert Cook

    Peabody City Hall
    24 Lowell St, Peabody, MA
    /listings/peabody-city-hall
    775596
    /locations/4173215
    Government, The Neighborhood Files

    Peabody Remembers Those Killed in Armenian Genocide

    City officials, residents gather at City Hall to remember the 96th
    anniversary of the Armenian massacre of 1915

    The number of Peabody residents of Armenian heritage with ties to
    those who survived the Armenian massacre inflicted by Ottoman-Turkish
    soldiers on April 24, 1915 may be small, but the pain of remembrance
    they feel is still great.

    Several members of this community gathered with city officials at
    City Hall on Wednesday morning to first raise the Armenian flag in
    front of City Hall and then remember the atrocities of that day and
    the genocide that followed that killed more than 1.5 million men,
    women and children from 1915 to 1923.

    Mayor Michael Bonfanti said yesterday's ceremony was the 10th one
    he has presided over as mayor. The city first started to remember
    the Armenian genocide in 1991 when former Mayor Peter Torigian,
    whose parents were Armenian immigrants who survived the genocide,
    decided it was needed.

    Bonfanti said that as more people who have ties to that horrific period
    in Armenian history pass away, it will become even more critical
    to make sure what happened is never forgotten so it doesn't happen
    anywhere again in the world.

    "Millions of innocent human beings died and we must never forget,"
    Bonfanti said.

    The Rev. Karenkin Bedourain of St. Gregory Church in North Andover
    said the Armenian people's hope for justice to make those responsible
    accountable has never diminished even as the anniversary of the 1915
    nears 100 years.

    "God's anger will keep reminding us and others that there are other
    nations that are thirsty for justice," he said. "Now we are demanding
    justice and all reperations from the world, and particularly murderous
    Turkey which continues to deny the fact."

    Bedourain said it is important for the world to fully acknowledge
    that the Armenian massacre of 1915 and the genocide that followed
    did happen.

    "The world can be saved when it begins to practice justice and the
    truth," he said.

    The Armenian genocide began on April 24, 1915 when the Ottoman Empire
    in Turkey decided it wanted to systematically wipe out the Armenian
    race. The first 250 Armenians were massacred on that day and millions
    of others were subsequently uprooted from their homes and forced to
    march for hundreds of miles without food or water to Syria.

    Armenians who survived the massacre and genocide that followed often
    saw their families decimated by these atrocities. Some families
    couldn't even stay together and sent their children to live with
    relatives in other countries or to orphanages.

    While 20 nations recognize the Armenian massacre and genocide, the
    United States does not. Gary Barrett, who serves as the district
    director for Congressman John Tierney, read a statement from Tierney
    where he said that each year he supports legislation on Capitol Hill
    that would make the United State recognize those things did happen,
    but so far such legislation has never made it out of Congress.

    Deacon Avedis Garavanian, also of St. Gregory Church in North
    Andover, delivered an emotional account of how children of parents
    who survived the Armenian genocide struggle to explain that period
    to their families and how the psychological scars carried by their
    parents are transferred to their children.

    He said 27 members of his family died as a result of those atrocities.

    Garavanian said his father was often unable able to discuss what he had
    experienced as a child during the massacre. He said that every April
    his father would not leave their house. He recalled that whenever
    he asked his father about what he saw and his father said nothing,
    that was just as bad as what he would eventually learn.

    "Sometimes silence is deadly."

    Finally, when he was driving his father to Hartford, Conn., in 1982,
    Garavanian once asked his father what happened and this time his
    father finally shared some of those terrible memories with his son.

    Garavanian said his father told him that he came home to find Turkish
    soldiers killing some of his siblings, his grandparents and one
    soldier hit him in the eye with the butt of his rifle, which caused
    him to lose one eye.

    Even today, Garavanian said he finds it very hard to share what he
    learned from his father with his own children whenever they ask him
    about the massacre.

    "It is a terrible way for anyone, and we are all God's children,
    to grow up without a sense of what we are all about," Garavanian said




    From: A. Papazian
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