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One Watertown family remembers the Armenian Genocide

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  • One Watertown family remembers the Armenian Genocide

    WatertownTab
    One Watertown family remembers the Armenian Genocide
    http://www.townonline.com/watertown/homep age/x1359807993
    Photo by David Gordon
    As an Armenian family living in Watertown, Tatoul Badalian, his wife, Varteni, and daughter Narini, are actively involved in speaking out and supporting their community in recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

    By Jillian Fennimore, Staff Writer
    GateHouse News Service
    Thu Aug 23, 2007, 12:29 PM EDT
    WATERTOWN, MA

    Narini Badalian, 25, represents the next generation of Armenians and
    local residents who stand proud to speak out about their history and
    the reality of what they know as the Armenian Genocide.

    Her parents, Tatoul and Varteni, are sure to stand by her side, their
    own lives representing a long history of pain and emotion.

    Born and raised in Watertown, Narini said her community is in the
    middle of a historical moment as they break away from a `No Place for
    Hate' controversy.

    Just one week ago, she took the podium moments before the town
    dissolved its `No Place for Hate' committee and severed ties with the
    program's sponsor, the Anti-Defamation League, for the ADL stance on
    the mass deaths of Armenians from 1915-1923. Many historians agree it
    was a campaign of extermination waged against ethnic Armenians by the
    Ottoman government. As many as 1.5 million Armenians died.

    The attention on the ADL's stance was first sparked from a letter
    published in the TAB & Press. And now, ever since Watertown took a
    stand and claimed independence from the organization, many other
    communities are looking to follow.

    Over the past week, the ADL fired Regional Director Andrew Tarsey
    after he publicly acknowledged the Armenian Genocide. Then the ADL's
    national director, Abraham Foxman, issued a statement that the tragic
    events of more than 90 years ago were `tantamount to genocide.'

    Narini said her community is heading in the right direction.

    `I'm very proud with what has been happening in Watertown,' she
    said. `At a certain point, people have to say enough is enough.'

    As residents of the East End, Narini and her parents, along with
    brother, Shirvan, live among close to 8,000 other Armenians in
    town. After leaving her home in Istanbul, Turkey, her mother, Varteni,
    came to the United States to `escape racism' and focus energies on her
    art as a painter.

    Just on her maternal side, Varteni said more than 200 people perished
    in the Armenian Genocide. Her grandparents where exiled and `lucky to
    survive,' but their brothers were not so fortunate.

    `[They died] only because they called themselves Armenians,' she
    said. `What pains me is that we were silenced in Turkey. I came to
    this country to breathe.'

    Inside their Walnut Street home, photographs, books and artwork cover
    the walls and fill the shelves. Stirring a pot of strong,
    Armenian-style coffee, Varteni pours it into cups and waits for the
    last sip to read fortunes and predict people's futures from the
    grinds.

    Tatoul said the future is in their hands now. He came to this country
    from Iran `in search of liberty.'

    `Here I am, in the strongest country in the world, a part of the world
    where we can do something about it,' he said about taking a stand
    against the ADL. `I'm the energy that makes it move.'

    When the word `controversy' comes up, he says what's happening now
    shouldn't be classified as such.

    `It's been part of our struggle ... a dialogue going on for years,' he
    said. `I'm now discovering why I'm here. You can actually feel it in
    this country ... I can still feel it.'

    In January, Varteni said she felt like she lost a relative when
    Armenian journalist and activist Hrant Dink was assassinated. Dink,
    52, was shot outside his office on a busy Istanbul street, simply
    because he spoke out about the freedom of expression regarding the
    Armenian Genocide.

    Now Varteni feels the need to fight and seek justice for human rights
    in his honor.

    `This is something that is touching our life chord,' she said.

    Narini said both tolerance and activism should continue in
    town. Regardless of the ADL coming out in apparent recognition of the
    genocide, the key is whether the ADL will support the Congressional
    resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide. Foxman has come out with
    a statement saying that the legislation is a `counterproductive
    diversion' that may `put at risk the Turkish Jewish community and the
    important multilateral relationship between Turkey, Israel and the
    United States.'

    `It's not going to end here,' said Narini. `The denial is very
    real. It's now.'

    Hitler's infamous invocation

    Narini Badalian read the following infamous quote from Adolph Hitler
    during her presentation to Town Council on Aug. 14. Hitler was
    speaking to his generals on the eve of the invasion of Poland in 1939:

    `I have issued the command - and I'll have anybody who utters but one
    word of criticism executed by a firing squad - that our war aim does
    not consist in reaching certain lines, but in the physical destruction
    of the enemy. Accordingly, I have placed my death-head formation in
    readiness - for the present only in the East - with orders to them to
    send to death mercilessly and without compassion, men, women and
    children of Polish derivation and language.

    Only thus shall we gain the living space [Lebensraum] which we
    need. Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the
    Armenians?'

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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