Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Glendale:Genocide commemoration

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Glendale:Genocide commemoration

    Glendale News Press
    April 22, 2006
    Genocide commemoration
    Local events gather community members to observe the 91st anniversary of the
    Armenian Genocide.
    By Tania Chatila, News-Press and Leader

    NORTHEAST GLENDALE -- Celine Mackerdichian doesn't want to just
    slap an Armenian flag on her car and miss out on school on Monday in
    recognition of the 91st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

    The senior at Clark Magnet High School -- like many other students
    in the Glendale Unified School District -- wants to do more.

    She wants to educate her fellow Armenian and non-Armenian peers on
    the events of 1915 to 1918, when 1.5 million Armenians died at the
    hands of the Ottoman Turks.

    Mackerdichian was one of more than 75 students from the Armenian
    clubs from all four high schools in the district who helped put on
    the fifth annual genocide commemoration event at Glendale High School
    Friday night.

    advertisement More than 800 people, including city and school board
    officials, residents and students, packed the school's auditorium to
    attend the event. Many of them wore black T-shirts emblazoned with
    the words "Stop the Denial."

    The Turkish government denies the genocide ever happened and the
    United States Congress does not recognize it as a genocide.

    "I couldn't be more proud of these kids for taking on this social
    responsibility, learning the history and organizing this event,"
    school board member Greg Krikorian said.

    Krikorian first encouraged the idea of a collaborative commemoration
    event among the Armenian clubs from Glendale's four high schools
    five years ago, as a way to provide something that all students
    could attend.

    The students from Glendale, Hoover, Clark Magnet and Crescenta Valley
    high schools have been planning the event since September.

    "It's my Armenian community and I feel like they have given me so
    much, so I want to give back by teaching about the genocide," said
    Ateena Pirverdian, a senior at Crescenta Valley High School.

    Like Mackerdichian, Pirverdian wants to spread awareness about the
    Armenian Genocide.

    "Especially even in Glendale, where there is a large Armenian
    population, it's important to let people know why half of the student
    body is not there [on Armenian Genocide remembrance day, April 24],"
    she said.

    At Friday's event, all four of the district's high schools put on
    performances, including a poetry reading, skit and video.

    Several dance groups also performed traditional Armenian dances,
    the singer Arax performed and students from R.D. White Elementary
    School sang traditional Armenian songs.

    "They have done an effort here to reactivate the memory, in fact,
    and to ask for the stopping of the denial," said Vatiter Mandjikian,
    a La Crescenta resident who attended the event.

    Friday's event was one way to recognize the historical event that
    has affected and continues to affect millions of lives, district
    superintendent Michael Escalante said.

    "The Armenian Genocide is a tragedy in history that needs to be
    recognized," he said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X