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  • Events mark somber anniversary

    Albany Times Union, NY
    April 21 2007

    Events mark somber anniversary

    Memorials worldwide to pay tribute to the nearly 1.5 million
    Armenians killed in Turkey during World War I

    By JENNIFER PATTERSON, Staff writer

    WATERVLIET -- The Rev. Bedros Kadehjian is somber and reflective when
    he talks about the Armenian genocide.

    Nearing the end of his first month at St. Peter Armenian Apostolic
    Church, the assistant pastor is anticipating the annual commemoration
    of Armenian Genocide Day, which marks the 92nd anniversary of the
    beginning of what has come to be known as the first genocide of the
    20th century.

    Memorials worldwide will pay tribute to the nearly 1.5 million
    Armenians killed in Turkey during World War I, when the Young Turk
    political faction sought to create a new Turkish state extending into
    Central Asia.

    The ideology of Pan Turkism viewed the Armenian minority as an
    obstacle to be removed by any means necessary, Kadehjian said.

    "The Armenian genocide was a holocaust in itself, a premeditated,
    systematic plan to eliminate the male Armenian population and deport
    women and children out of Turkey," Kadehjian said. "The fact that
    Turkish authors are now coming out and admitting the country's role"
    after nearly a century is significant, even though many have been
    punished.

    One such writer was Hrant Dink, former editor in chief of the
    bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos and a prominent member of
    the Armenian minority in Turkey.

    Dink was best known for his work on Turkish-Armenian reconciliation,
    and human and minority rights in Turkey. On Jan. 19, he was
    assassinated in Istanbul allegedly by an ultra-nationalist Turk.
    Almost 100,000 mourners walked in protest at his funeral.

    "He was killed for his beliefs, and for discussing the Armenian
    genocide, which is forbidden under article 301 in Turkey," said
    Lucille Sarkissian of Guilderland, whose mother was a survivor. "I,
    like all the other people waiting for acknowledgment by the Turkish
    government, am hoping that it will come soon to resolve this issue
    and allow us to move on."

    The massacre began on April 24, 1915, when several hundred Armenian
    community leaders and intellectuals in Constantinople (modern-day
    Istanbul) were arrested, sent east and put to death.

    For years, adult and teenage men were separated from deportation
    caravans and killed. Women and children were driven for months over
    mountains and desert, raped, tortured and left for dead, Kadehjian
    said. By 1923, most of the Armenian population in Turkey had been
    uprooted from its homeland.

    "It's important to remember what happened and those that were lost,
    especially since Turkey continues to deny what happened to this day,"
    Kadehjian said. "Our commemoration is open to anyone wanting to
    reflect on the past and look toward a better future."

    Patterson can be reached at 454-5340 or by e-mail at
    [email protected].

    Paying tribute

    Armenian Genocide Day Observance What: Film "The Trail of Soghomon
    Tehlirian" and panel discussion

    When: 6:30 p.m. Tuesday

    Where: Troy City Hall

    Info: 331-8559

    Commemoration in Words and Music

    Speakers: Revs. Stepanos Doudoukjian and Bedros Shetilian, Mayors
    Harry Tutunjian of Troy and Robert Carlson of Watervliet

    Performers: Armenian Men's Choral Ensemble and Armenian students.
    When: 1:30 p.m. Sunday, April 29

    Where: St. Peter Armenian Apostolic Church, 100 Troy-Schenectady Road


    Information: 274-3673
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