Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian, Jewish Communities Demonstrate Solidarity on Beacon Hill

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian, Jewish Communities Demonstrate Solidarity on Beacon Hill

    Armenian and Jewish Communities Demonstrate Solidarity on Beacon Hill
    By Andy Turpin

    The Armenian Weekly
    August 31, 2007

    BOSTON, Mass. (A.W.)-On Aug. 30, State Representative Rachel Kaprielian
    (Watertown) and Boston City Councilor Michael P. Ross (District 8) hosted a
    demonstration of the strengthening solidarity between the Jewish and
    Armenian-American communities to underscore the importance of officially
    recognizing the Armenian genocide.

    The event featured Kaprielian and Ross, as well as Rabbi Ronne Friedman of
    Temple Israel Boston; Rev. Gregory V. Haroutunian of the First Armenian
    Church of Belmont; Holocaust survivor Israel Arbeiter, president of the
    American Association of Jewish Holocaust Survivors of Greater Boston;
    Armenian Genocide survivor Asdghig Alemian, 97, of Weymouth; and Nancy
    Kaufman, executive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of
    Greater Boston.

    Kaprielian prefaced her remarks by emphasizing in the broader scope, "We are
    all here to say that we need to stop what is going on in Darfur."

    Councilor Ross stated, "I'm a City Councilor in Boston and I'm a son of a
    Holocaust survivor." He put in context the pragmatism of Armenian and Jewish
    amity by saying, "It makes sense that we came together as community. Not
    just because we're both small and active communities of Jews and Armenians,
    but also because we're people. We respect our cultures and support each
    other, when we need to and when we don't need to. We need to support each
    other and back each other up."

    Rabbi Friedman spoke about the genocide and Holocaust in historical memory
    and present-day politics, and quoting Maya Angelou, said, "History, despite
    its wrenching pain, cannot be unlived, but if faced with courage, need not
    be lived again."

    Rev. Haroutunian thanked the Jewish community for its recent efforts in the
    No Place for Hate controversy, which saw the dismissal of Andrew Tarsy, the
    New England regional director of the Anti-Defamation League who spoke in
    favor of genocide recognition. "It has brought great light to the heart of
    God," Haroutunian said. "We commend Andrew Tarsy for his actions. So many
    people in the Jewish community demanded truth, not spin. After all, to deny
    the truth, even in innuendo, is dangerous. I commend the Jewish-American
    community in Boston. You stood for something, simply because it is right. We
    thank God for your community and we really do pray that others will follow
    your example."

    Holocaust survivor Israel Arbeiter spoke of his experiences with genocide,
    recalling, "I was a slave. I spent five years in a concentration camp." He
    praised the gathered crowd for their attendance, and said, "I'm very happy
    this event took place, but I'm also very disappointed the entire Jewish and
    Armenian communities did not show up. Let's hope from this small gathering
    that more will blossom. Let's join hands and work together so that it will
    never ever happen again."

    Armenian genocide survivor Asdghig Alemian remembered, "I was five years old
    at the time the Turks took me. My mother starved to death on the [death]
    march. They called it Der Zor. They were told to take three days of food and
    that they would be taken back home. It never happened."

    "We must see acknowledgement by our government while there are still
    Armenian genocide survivors still alive," Kaprielian said.

    Nancy Kaufman said that it is the moral responsibility of Massachusetts
    citizens to ensure that the state divests from Sudan and investigates that
    taxes do not finance the ongoing genocide in Darfur.

    She said of the Armenian genocide and its legacy, "The genocide represents
    the failure of the international community to prevent the worst crime in the
    world-the destruction of an entire people."

    Ross concluded amicably, saying to the Armenians present, "In the Jewish
    community, we say you are all mishpucha [family]."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X