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Armenian, Turk show the way to peace

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  • Armenian, Turk show the way to peace

    Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, CA
    Aug 24 2007

    Armenian, Turk show the way to peace


    By Imani Tate, Staff Writer
    Article Launched: 08/23/2007 11:00:00 PM PDT


    In the summer of 2004, a stranger hugged him at the Martyrs Monument
    in Armenia and Garbis Der Yeghiayan wondered, "Who are you? How do
    you know me?"
    "Truly an ambassador of peace to the world" is the way La Verne Mayor
    Jon Blickenstaff describes Der Yeghiayan, a La Verne resident and
    past Rotary International District 5300 governor.

    The man at the monument thought so, too.

    When Der Yeghiayan goes to Armenia, he goes directly to the monument
    from the airport to pay his respects to the 1.5 million Armenians
    murdered by the Young Turks in an early 20th century holocaust.

    The stranger went to the monument to find Der Yeghiayan.

    "He said there's an event this evening honoring you as the founder of
    the Rotary club in Yerevan, Armenia, and I'm here to speak on that
    occasion," recalled the still baffled Der Yeghiayan. "Again, I am
    curious and ask him, `Who are you? I don't know you.'

    "He said `I know you. You're a peacemaker. I'm a peacemaker, too, so
    we have something in common."'

    The stranger was Erhan Ciftcioglu, the Rotary district governor in
    Turkey. The historic meeting became even more so as the Armenian and
    the Turk then kneeled at the monument and prayed for peace.


    "My sister Knar and everyone are shocked to see an Armenian and a
    Turk together, especially at the Martyrs Monument," Der Yeghiayan
    said.

    "What united us," Der Yeghiayan explained, "was Rotary International,
    an organization promoting peace. We hugged and said, `we are
    brothers, you and I. Together, we will accomplish the impossible.'
    The peace conference idea was born at the Martyrs Monument."

    Ciftcioglu returned to Mersin, Turkey, and initiated a peace
    exchange, starting with 25 Armenian children hosted by local Turkish
    families. The cultural exchange prompted the children and families to
    become peace-and-reconciliation advocates themselves.

    In March 2005, a peace conference was held in Ankara, Turkey,
    bringing together Rotarians from Armenia, Turkey and Azerbaijan for
    the first time.

    Der Yeghiayan and Ciftcioglu served as conference co-chairs. The
    former gave an emotionally charged speech that left Armenians and
    Turks hugging and crying.

    "It's almost impossible to describe in words because of all the mixed
    emotions you feel when descendants of the martyrs show any
    camaraderie with descendants of those who martyred them," Der
    Yeghiayan confessed.

    "As the great-grandson of a martyred archpriest, I had this very
    special feeling that I was making a difference. This was a very, very
    rare moment in the history of our two people," he continued.

    Armenians, recognized as loyal by the Ottoman Empire, had peacefully
    lived as good neighbors with Turks for 700 years before the genocide,
    he noted. Many Turks hid Armenian neighbors and helped them survive
    the slaughter, he added.

    Denying the genocide and re-writing history to say Armenians were the
    perpetrators rather than victims "doesn't change historical fact,"
    Der Yeghiayan said. "Our cultural and religious monuments are our
    witnesses, in ruins, but still proof."

    Forgiveness, not hatred, heals human hearts, he said.

    Blickenstaff cited an example of Der Yeghiayan's "quietly relentless"
    efforts for friendship and peace.

    Shortly before they departed for the 1985 trip to the then
    USSR-controlled modern Armenia, a Glendale family asked Blickenstaff
    to facilitate the release of relatives still in Armenia.

    "I had no idea what that would involve, but I promised I'd try," the
    mayor said.

    He and Der Yeghiayan met with the Glendale family's relatives in
    Armenia. Der Yeghiayan constantly appealed to political officials to
    let the relatives come to America, but leaders left them guessing.

    "One day after we came home I got a call from the Glendale family,
    telling me their relatives were arriving at Los Angeles
    International," Blickenstaff said.

    "We all went to the airport and celebrated."
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