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Armenians Race Against Time For Stories Of Their Devastation

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  • Armenians Race Against Time For Stories Of Their Devastation

    ARMENIANS RACE AGAINST TIME FOR STORIES OF THEIR DEVASTATION
    By Russell Ben-Ali
    Star-Ledger Staff

    Newark Star Ledger, NJ
    April 20 2007

    Hagop Bahtiarian recalls the frantic grab he made for his father's
    coat: a terrified 5-year-old clutching his dad during an arrest by
    police of the Ottoman Empire 92 years ago.

    The elder Bahtiarian was jailed in 1915 and later killed, in the early
    days of a period that would prove devastating for Bahtiarian's family
    and other Armenians. As a people, they were rousted from their homes
    and expelled from Ottoman territory now part of Turkey.

    Between 1915 and 1923, an estimated 1.5million Armenians were killed
    or died of starvation and illness while in detention or in forced
    marches into the Syrian desert during a campaign many historians call
    the Armenian Genocide.

    "These are things that are so hard for a kid to take," said Bahtiarian,
    97, a retired watchmaker who settled in Bergen County and now lives
    in the Armenian Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Emerson. "But
    it hurts so much that it's impossible to forget it. My father never
    came back. How can you not remember?"

    Historians are counting on vivid memories of survivors like Bahtiarian
    as they try to document the oral histories of the Armenian calamity
    while there is still time.

    "If they're going to remember anything, they've got to be close to 100
    years old," said Samuel Azadian of Hamburg, New Jersey, who founded
    the Armenian Genocide Commemoration in 1985.

    BELATED REGRETS

    The Armenian community has struggled for decades to promote broader
    recognition of its losses, with the Turkish government strongly
    resistant to the notion that ethnic cleansing was at work. This Sunday
    in Times Square, thousands of Armenians are expected to rally at 2 p.m.

    "Unfortunately, our community did not do the things that the Jewish
    community has done in chronicling the Holocaust," said Azadian, a
    former deputy commissioner for New York City highways. "Remember,
    there was not the technological methods available that there are
    today. Who even had tape recorders back in 1920?"

    The killings were well chronicled by publications including the New
    York Times. In the years since, some relatives have attempted to
    record and videotape personal histories of survivors.

    Azadian, 80, said he wishes he had done more to document his own
    family history through his mother, who during the genocide lost four
    children before he was born.

    "I regret to this day that I didn't sit down with a tape recorder and
    interview my mother," Azadian said. "Her memories just kept haunting
    her and haunting her."

    The memories are troubling for Anahid Boghosian, 98, who also lives
    in the Armenian nursing home. "Annie" was a child forced into exile;
    her travels took her to Syria, Cuba, Revere, Mass., and then Cliffside
    Park in Bergen County.

    "My father had gone to Istanbul to look for work," said Boghosian,
    hands trembling as she tried to recall the events during an interview
    at the nursing home. "He was never heard from again."

    'WHAT'S THE USE?'

    The stories she once told her daughters, Thelma Sarajian and Helen
    Kenajian of Cliffside Park, are difficult to recall these days,
    even with their aid and encouragement.

    Sitting in a wheelchair in a nursing home conference room with her
    daughters and the reporter interviewing her, she struggled with her
    emotions. "Why do you people wait so late?" she asked. "It's all in
    the ashes. What's the use? What's the use?"

    Around the world, Armenians generally remember the start of the
    killings with a commemoration on April 24, the date in 1915 when
    Armenian political, intellectual and other leaders were rounded up
    and eliminated.

    On Sunday, advocates will call on the U.S. government to recognize
    the Armenian genocide, as some Western countries have. They also will
    remember Hrant Dink, the prominent Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor
    who was gunned down outside his Istanbul office in January. Dink
    often chronicled the Turkish government's treatment of the Armenian
    minority in his weekly.

    They also will push for the passage of House Resolution 160, introduced
    in January by Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide.

    Although the resolution is largely symbolic, it is strongly opposed by
    the Turkish government. It is also opposed by the Bush administration,
    which recognizes the Armenian deaths as a historic tragedy but declines
    to call it genocide or accuse Turkey, its NATO ally, of participating.

    POSTWAR BEDLAM

    The Republic of Turkey, founded in 1923, has long denied initiating
    a campaign to eliminate or expel from the Ottoman Empire the
    Armenian people, who represent one of the world's oldest Christian
    communities. In the past, Turkey has attributed the Armenian deaths
    to the bedlam surrounding World War I, as the old Ottoman Empire
    unraveled and collapsed.

    The government contends many Turks were casualties of this period,
    too, killed by Armenians who aligned themselves with Russian troops
    and might have had plans to take over land in the eastern part of
    the Ottoman Empire.

    Those contentions have inspired Armenian-Americans to work harder to
    interview survivors.

    "Their stories touch our hearts," said Dennis R. Papazian of Woodcliff
    Lake in Bergen County, who is the founding director of the Armenian
    Research Center at the University of Michigan at Dearborn.

    Beginning in the 1970s, some 55 years after the genocide began,
    Papazian began amassing hundreds of oral, and, later, video recordings
    of survivor stories.

    Such work is vital, Azadian said, to thwarting future acts of genocide.

    "It's a horrible blot on mankind -- Darfur, Rwanda, Cambodia," he
    said of genocide. "That's why we do what we do."
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