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A tragedy they will never forget

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  • A tragedy they will never forget

    A tragedy they will never forget
    By DAVID SILVERSTEIN, Sun Staff

    Lowell Sun, MA
    April 23 2006

    LOWELL -- As he stood at City Hall, the plackard Joseph Dagdigian was
    holding didn't offer a pleasant picture. Though cartoonish, there was
    nothing funny about the female figure depicted at the forefront of a
    long procession, cradling in her arms the apparently lifeless form of
    an infant. Tragedy was portrayed through the picture -- a tragedy
    Armenian-Americans throughout Greater Lowell came to remember.

    Yesterday, city and state officials, as well as members of the
    Armenian-American community, gathered in downtown Lowell to
    commemerate the 91st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

    On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman Turks, who were then in power over a
    large portion of Eastern Europe, initiated a systematic cleansing of
    their population by rounding up and either murdering or deporting any
    Armenian residing within their borders. This movement began with the
    execution of Armenian intellectuals, including educators, religious
    figures, and other social leaders, but was soon extended to the
    general population. About 1.5 million Armenians were murdered and
    nearly 500,000 were forced to flee their homeland.

    Yesterday, a crowd of about 50 people, both young and old, gathered
    beneath a chilly gray sky and formed a small procession. Led by an
    honor guard of Armenian-American veterans, they marched from the
    intersection of Merrimack and John streets to City Hall.

    Following addresses from state Sen. Steven Panagiotakos, Armenian
    National Committee representative Tom Vartabedian, Mayor Bill Martin,
    the Rev. Vartan Kasabian of St. Gregory Armenian Church in North
    Andover and several others, a flag-raising ceremony took place.

    According to a pamphlet passed out by Joseph Dagdigian, a member of
    the Merrimack Valley Chapter of the Armenian National Committee, the
    Turkish government refuses to formally acknowledge that these murders
    were an act of genocide. As part of this ongoing denial, the pamphlet
    says the Turkish government pursues a bevy of avenues, including
    paying lobbyists in Washington, D.C., to help maintain their image
    and prevent others from recognizing the genocide. The U.S.
    government, the flier said, conceded to Turkish influence because it
    couldn't afford to lose the air bases in Asia Minor during the Cold
    War.

    In his address to the assembly, Vartabedian said, "When tragedies of
    this magnitude occur, it is our responsibility to ensure that we do
    not forget."

    Currently, legislative measures that would officially recognize the
    genocide and create a formal day of remembrance are pending in both
    the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. These measures, which
    have the support of prominent scholars, writers and religious
    leaders, as well as a number of Armenian organizations, are called
    the Armenian Genocide Resolution.
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