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System Of A Down To Launch Three-Day Washington,DC Campaign For Arme

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  • System Of A Down To Launch Three-Day Washington,DC Campaign For Arme

    SYSTEM OF A DOWN TO LAUNCH THREE-DAY WASHINGTON, DC CAMPAIGN FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION

    Noyan Tapan
    Armenians Today
    Apr 04 2006

    LOS ANGELES, APRIL 4, NOYAN TAPAN - ARMENIANS TODAY. Serj Tankian
    and John Dolmayan of the Grammy Award-winning band System of a Down
    will travel to Washington, DC on April 24th for a three-day campaign
    to urge Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert and other Congressional
    leaders to end their complicity in Turkey's ongoing denial of the
    Armenian Genocide, the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
    reported. On the evening of Monday, April 24th, the group members
    will join with the ANCA and Armenian Youth Federation in leading a
    grassroots demonstration outside the gates of the Turkish Embassy
    in Washington, DC. The Turkish government, through its Embassy
    in Washington, spends millions of dollars each year to bully,
    threaten, and blackmail the U.S. government not to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide. The band members will devote Tuesday, April 25th
    to providing interviews to the political media in Washington, and,
    in the evening, hosting a Congressional screening of "Screamers,"
    a new documentary by filmmaker Carla Garapedian about the band's
    worldwide campaign for Armenian Genocide recognition. On Wednesday
    April 26th, System will meet with key Members of Congress to urge
    them to allow a vote on legislation recognizing the Armenian Genocide,
    and will participate in the annual Capitol Hill commemoration of the
    Armenian Genocide. This event, now in its 11th year, is regularly
    attended by over 30 Members of Congress, diplomats, ethnic community
    leaders, human rights activists, genocide prevention advocates, and
    Armenian Americans from across the country. Congressional legislation
    recognizing the Armenian Genocide (H.Res.316 / H.Con.Res.195 /
    S.Res.320) has broad bipartisan support, but has been blocked from
    coming to a vote by Congressional leaders, despite the fact that,
    five years ago, U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert promised to allow
    Members to vote on this human rights measure. In September of last
    year, Serj Tankian and John Dolmayan from the band traveled to the
    Speaker's hometown of Batavia, Illinois to lead a rally urging him to
    allow a vote on the Armenian Genocide legislation. During the rally,
    Tankian delivered a personal and powerfully worded message calling
    on the Speaker to do the right thing, and stressing that "historical
    truths should never be denied in a democracy - especially one with
    such a proud heritage of freedom." Speaker Hastert has it in his power
    to accomplish one of System's goals - official U.S. recognition of
    Turkey's destruction of 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1923. By
    allowing Congress to vote on this legislation, Speaker Hastert can
    end U.S. denial of this crime and open the doors to justice - to
    the restoration, reparation, and restitution owed to the victims of
    genocide. By continuing to block a vote on this legislation, Hastert
    effectively joins in the denial of this crime against humanity, and the
    denial of justice to an entire nation. The members of System of a Down,
    Serj Tankian, Daron Malakian, John Dolmayan and Shavo Odadjian, who
    are of Armenian descent, all personally lost family members and family
    history to the Armenian Genocide. "Because so much of my family history
    was lost in the Armenian Genocide," said Malakian, "my grandfather,
    who was very young at the time, doesn't know his true age. How many
    people can say they don't know how old they are?" Tankian, Dolmayan
    and Odadjian all identify their grandparents' memories as the only
    links they have to their respective family heritages, as most of their
    families were obliterated during the Armenian Genocide. "It's important
    for people to be aware of the Armenian Genocide," explained Tankian,
    "and that those actions continue to be covered up by the Turkish
    government, the U.S. State Department, Turkey's allies in the defense
    and oil industries, and by our present U.S. Administration. Had the
    Armenian Genocide been acknowledged as a Crime Against Humanity as
    it was, Hitler might not have thought he could get away with the
    Jewish Holocaust. History does and will repeat itself, unless we stop
    that cycle."
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