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Vallejo Armenian Will Join In Genocide Remembrance

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  • Vallejo Armenian Will Join In Genocide Remembrance

    VALLEJO ARMENIAN WILL JOIN IN GENOCIDE REMEMBRANCE
    By Robert Mccockran/Times-Herald Staff Writer

    Vallejo Times-Herald, CA
    April 16 2007

    During World War I, hundreds of Armenian community leaders were rounded
    up and killed by Ottoman Turks seeking to expand their territory.

    Mass deportations into the Syrian desert followed. The teenage and
    adult men were killed; the women were raped and tortured. Hundreds
    of thousands died en route to the desert. An estimated 1.5 million
    Armenians were killed.

    On April 24, the 92nd anniversary of the genocide, Ashken Mouradian
    of Vallejo will join fellow Armenians in remembering the tragedy.

    "We are going to have a very big memorial program in San Francisco,"
    said Mouradian, a member of the Armenian General Benevolent Union.

    The event features the 70-piece Oakland Youth Orchestra and speakers
    from Amnesty International, Save Darfur and the Genocide Education
    Project. The victims of Darfur, Sudan will also be honored.

    On April 22, youths will go up to Mount Davidson. The 103-feet high
    Mount Davidson Cross at Dalewood and Myra ways in San Francisco is
    dedicated to the genocide victims.

    "The youth will be camping there - and they will have chants, liturgy,"
    she said.

    The Armenian General Benevolent Union was formed in 1906, said
    Mouradian, by a group of oil-wealthy Armenians in Egypt led by Bughos
    Noubar Pasha to help orphans and the needy after "the first genocide"
    in 1906.

    "We do not only work for Armenian causes or charities, but we are
    very involved helping the soup kitchens around the Bay Area," she said.

    Mouradian said she is a grandchild of a genocide survivor.

    "My grandparents ended up in Ethiopia - East Africa," she said. "And
    that's where my mother was born and my father was only 6 years old
    when he re-located to Ethiopia because his parents were survivors of
    the genocide. I was born in Ethiopia."

    She said Armenians are "scattered" all over the world, but "most of
    us now are in Canada, Australia and the USA."

    There is a "small" Armenian community in Solano County. "Mostly,
    Armenians are around their Armenian Apostolic Church."

    Mouradian recently visited Armenia and attended the AGBU Centennial
    along with representatives from Argentina, England, France, Austria,
    Greece, Syria, Lebanon, Ethiopia - and other countries with AGBU
    branches.

    photo: ASHKEN MOURADIAN, left, of Vallejo is a member of the Armenian
    General Bene-volent Union, based in New York. At right is her husband,
    Anton. (J.L. Sousa/Times-Herald)

    http://timesheraldonline.com/ ci_5678701

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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