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  • Armenians, legislators remember genocide

    Watertown TAB & Press, MA
    April 28 2006

    Armenians, legislators remember genocide
    By Melody Hanatani/ Belmont Citizen-Herald
    Friday, April 28, 2006 - Updated: 11:05 AM EST


    It was a solemn day at the State House last Friday when local
    officials and the Armenian community came together to commemorate the
    91st anniversary of the Armenian genocide.

    Generations of Armenians, many of whom are from Watertown and
    Belmont, filled the House of Representatives chamber from top to
    bottom for the annual ceremony sponsored by the State House Genocide
    Commemoration Committee.

    Several candidates for the upcoming statewide election, including
    gubernatorial hopeful Deval Patrick, were among those in attendance.



    State Rep. Rachel Kaprielian, D-Watertown, opened the event by
    calling it a commemoration of "91 years of grief ... 91 years of
    resilience and survival."

    The Rev. Raphael Andonian of Belmont's Holy Cross Armenian
    Catholic Church gave the invocation, and the Rev. Antranig Baljian of
    St. Stephen's Armenian Apostolic Church in Watertown gave a requiem
    prayer.

    Many speakers called for the Turkish and United States
    governments to recognize the atrocities in order to begin healing and
    to prevent future genocides.

    U.S. Rep Edward Markeym, D-7th, demanded that President George W.
    Bush go on the record and recognize the killings as genocide.

    Lt. Gov. Kerry Healey presented the Governor's Proclamations to
    four survivors, three of whom attended the ceremony. The son of Areka
    DerKazarian accepted the proclamation on behalf of his mother, who
    was unable to attend.

    "Our country is richer because of you," Healey said to the
    survivors.

    Healey was filling in for Gov. Mitt Romney, R-Belmont, who was in
    Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on Friday.

    This year's ceremony honored Dr. Taner Akcam, a visiting
    professor at the University of Minnesota, who was one of the first
    Turkish scholars to recognize the genocide.

    For speaking out, Akcam received a 10-year prison sentence in
    1976. He escaped after serving one year, and has lived in exile since
    then.

    For the past 20 years, Akcam has worked on human rights issues,
    in particular the Turkish government's denial of the genocide. He
    said truth and recognition would deter further human rights
    violations and abuse.

    He called for Turkey and Armenia to work together to deal with their
    pasts as part of the democratization process.

    Dr. Henry Theriault, the keynote speaker, said an apology alone
    could simply be "empty rhetoric."

    Theriault, who is the coordinator for the Center for the Study of
    Human Rights at Worcester State College, said recognition must come
    in the form of land and reparations.

    In his closing remarks, state Rep. Peter Koutoujian, D-Waltham,
    talked about why the Armenian community continues to commemorate the
    genocide.

    He said the commemoration is not about dwelling on the past, but
    understanding that the genocide was the first of many that occurred
    over the past 100 years.

    "We know the events of the past are important today," he said.

    Clara Mandasian of Watertown has lived in Massachusetts for the
    past seven years and has attended the commemoration every year. She's
    been to similar ceremonies around the United States.

    For Mandasian, the commemoration is a way for her to honor the
    victims of past genocides. Her grandmother survived the Armenian
    genocide.

    "It's very frustrating," she said of the Turkish government's
    denial of the genocide. "It's so painful to have a history, to know
    what your family endured, and have the perpetrator deny it."

    It was a first-time ceremony for the younger generation of
    Armenians. Araxie Poladian of Belmont brought her grandchildren for
    the first time.

    She hopes her grandchildren can keep the history alive.

    "I hope people will tell other people that this shouldn't happen
    to anyone," she said.
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