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BUDAPEST: An Armenian Genocide

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  • BUDAPEST: An Armenian Genocide

    AN ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    by Kinga Kali

    Budapest Sun, Hungary
    April 25 2007

    April 25, 2007 08:00 am | The Armenian Genocide of 1915-17 is
    commemorated around the world on April 24, wherever Armenians are
    living - and that includes Budapest, where cultural events have
    accompanied a solemn remembrance of one of the worst massacres of
    the last century.

    After more than 90 years, the Mets Yeghern (The Great Calamity,
    in Armenian) that killed 1.5 million Armenians in Turkey (as well as
    many Greeks and Assyrians), it is still a matter of much controversy,
    officially denied or not recognized by many countries, despite
    eye-witness accounts, documentary and photographic evidence, the
    testimony of thousands of survivors and decades of historical research.

    Silence often shrouds the issue in Hungary as well and, despite,
    or perhaps because of, Hungary's 150 years of Ottoman occupation,
    Hungary still doesn't officially recognize the Armenian genocide.

    The Turkish state denies that its Ottoman predecessor committed
    genocide, and protests vehemently against countries and individuals
    who insist otherwise.

    Armenians may shiver, in fact, that an alley in Budapest's beautiful
    Castle District is named after Kemal Ataturk, founder of the modern
    Turkish state - and if that state is the successor of the Ottoman
    Empire, then isn't Turkey responsible of the crimes committed by the
    Young Turk Party, of which Ataturk was once a member?

    Ataturk himself was, in fact, scathing about his people's behavior
    towards the Armenians. At a military tribunal in January 1919, he
    said, "Our compatriots committed inhuman crimes, they resorted to
    every kind of despotism, they organized deportations and massacre,
    they burnt babies alive sprinkled with petrol, they raped women and
    girls. They brought such insupportable conditions to people, that no
    other people had seen before in history."

    Failing to punish

    But, as President of Turkey, Ataturk, failed to punish the perpetrators
    of those crimes, and the barbarous events of 1915-17 fell into a deep,
    silent and secure whirlpool of oblivion.

    Due to this terrifying ethnic cleansing, the Armenian Diaspora is
    now much bigger than the population of Armenia itself, and Hungary
    is home to a significant Armenian community.

    Armenians first arrived in Hungary in the 13th century, when legend
    says 300 Armenian families fled Ani, one of Armenia's ancient capitals,
    the so-called city of the Thousand Towers, to escape the Tatars.

    After wandering in Crimea, Poland, and Moldova, in 1672 they arrived
    in Transylvania, where they were settled by Duke Mihaly Apafi and
    functioned independently as traders.

    They established four towns and initially used their own tongue,
    before learning the language of the surrounding people: Hungarian,
    Romanian and German. In the late 18th century, Armenian traders
    migrated to the Hungarian Plain, and the descendants of these traders
    are the foundations of the Armenian community in Hungary.

    Over time, they assimilated the culture of the Hungarians they lived
    alongside and, nowadays, Hungarian-Armenians don't speak the language
    of their ancestors, although they are well aware of their Armenian
    origins. "We are Hungarians during the week, and Armenians on the
    weekends, in church," they often say.

    The second "layer" of the Armenian community constitutes descendants
    of those who arrived after the events of 1915 in Turkey. There is
    often tension with the earlier arrivals, because the "newcomers"
    refuse to accept those who use Hungarian as their mother-tongue as
    real Armenians.

    Paradoxically, this year's Week of Armenian Culture was organized by
    the Hungarian-Armenian group, mainly the Transylvanian Armenian Roots
    Cultural Association and the Metropolitan Armenian Self-Government,
    which was not directly affected by the events in Turkey.

    Paying homage

    They paid homage to the Armenian martyrs of the Mets Yeghern by putting
    flowers at the Armenian Khachkar (a stone cross made by Armenian
    monks) near the Danube, close to Petôfi ter, and, from April 19-25,
    several cultural events commemorated the genocide.

    These include an exhibition of archive photos, entitled The First
    Genocide of the Twentieth Century, in Árkad Galeria (Pest, District
    VIII, Rakoczi út 30.), at the opening of which a book Nikolaj
    Hovhanniszjan: The Armenian Genocide, was presented.

    On April 22 at Bela Bartok's Memorial House, there was a concert
    introducing music from the Armenian Miniatures for Piano album,
    released during the week. The CD includes a selection of music by
    Aram Hachaturian, Komitas and Bartok.

    These events surely deserve the support of all those who would give
    a belated reply to Hitler, architect of the Holocaust, who allegedly
    asked his Nazi aides on August 22, 1939, "Who, after all, speaks
    today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

    The First Genocide of the Twentieth Century - Archive Photographs
    Until April 27.
    Árkad Galeria Pest, District VIII.
    Rakoczi út 30.

    http://www.budapestsun.com/cikk.php?id=26317

    --Boundary_(ID_SOT9khE/WmKljHs0AOOsLg)--
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