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CR: Rep. Capuano Commemorates Armenian Genocide

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  • CR: Rep. Capuano Commemorates Armenian Genocide

    [Congressional Record: April 23, 2007 (Extensions)]
    [Page E834-E835]
    From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
    [DOCID:cr23ap07-50]




    COMMEMORATING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    ______


    HON. MICHAEL E. CAPUANO

    of massachusetts

    in the house of representatives

    Monday, April 23, 2007

    Mr. CAPUANO. Madam Speaker, I rise today to commemorate a people who
    despite murder, hardship, and betrayal have persevered. April 24, 2007,
    marks the 92nd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.
    Throughout three decades in the late 19th and early 20th centuries,
    millions of Armenians were systematically uprooted from their homeland
    of 3,000 years and deported or massacred. From 1894 through 1896, three
    hundred thousand Armenians were ruthlessly murdered. Again in 1909,
    thirty thousand Armenians were massacred in Cilicia, and their villages
    were destroyed.
    On April 24, 1915, two hundred Armenian religious, political, and
    intellectual leaders were arbitrarily arrested, taken to Turkey and
    murdered. This incident marks a dark and solemn period in the history
    of the Armenian people. From 1915 to 1923, the Ottoman Empire launched
    a systematic campaign to exterminate Armenians. In 8 short years, more
    than 1.5 million Armenians suffered through atrocities such as
    deportation, forced slavery and torture. Most were ultimately murdered.
    Many of our companions in the international community have already
    taken this final step.

    [[Page E835]]

    The European Parliament and the United Nations have recognized and
    reaffirmed the Armenian Genocide as historical fact, as have the
    Russian and Greek parliaments, the Canadian House of Commons, the
    Lebanese Chamber of Deputies and the French National Assembly. It is
    time for America to join the chorus and acknowledge the Armenians who
    suffered at the hands of the Ottoman Empire. And let me stress that I
    am not speaking of the government of modern day Turkey, but rather its
    predecessor, which many of Turkey's present day leaders helped to
    remove from power.
    As I have in the past, as a member of the Congressional Armenian
    Caucus, I will continue to work with my colleagues and with the
    Armenian-Americans in my district to promote investment and prosperity
    in Armenia. And, I sincerely hope that this year, the U.S. will have
    the opportunity and courage to speak in support of the millions of
    Armenians who suffered because of their heritage.

    ____________________
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