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AAA: Armenian Community, Assembly Hold Memorial Svc for H Dink in DC

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  • AAA: Armenian Community, Assembly Hold Memorial Svc for H Dink in DC

    Armenian Assembly of America
    1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600
    Washington, DC 20036
    Phone: 202-393-3434
    Fax: 202-638-4904
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: www.armenianassembly.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    January 26, 2006
    CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
    E-mail: [email protected]


    ARMENIAN COMMUNITY, ASSEMBLY HOLD MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR HRANT DINK IN
    WASHINGTON

    State Department Official Hails Dink For Bridging Armenians, Turks

    Washington, DC - More than 200 members of the Armenian community in the
    Washington area attended a memorial service Tuesday night for slain
    journalist Hrant Dink, whose tragic death last week sent shock waves
    throughout the Armenian community. A senior U.S. State Department
    official attending the service called Dink "a proud son of the Armenian
    people," who advocated for understanding and dialogue between Armenians
    and Turks.

    Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried expressed awe and admiration
    for Dink, saying that he "stood for a civic virtue higher than hatred,
    higher than ethnic stereotypes, higher than fears and repression and
    ignorance. His was a vision of a better world."

    "The measure of how our world falls short must be judged by his murder
    at the hands of an ignorant, hate-filled nationalist," he continued.

    Turkish journalists, who have been reporting extensively on Dink's
    assassination, also attended the memorial service, broadcasting news of
    the commemoration to various media outlets in Turkey and beyond.

    Bishop Vicken Aykazian, Legate of the Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church of America (Eastern) and Diocesan Director of Ecumenical
    Relations, presided over the memorial service with Reverend Father
    Vertanes Kalayjian at St. Mary's Armenian Apostolic Church.

    "I had the honor of [Hrant Dink's] personal friendship," said Bishop
    Aykazian, who is also president-elect of the National Council of
    Churches of Christ in the USA (NCC). "But more than being my personal
    friend, he was a friend to all Armenians, in Turkey, and in the Diaspora
    Armenian communities throughout the world."

    "Hrant Dink called upon the world - and Turkey in particular - to
    acknowledge and admit the truth of the Armenian Genocide," the Bishop
    continued. "Not to shame or humiliate the Turkish people, but to engage
    our two neighboring people in a fruitful dialogue for the betterment of
    their relations."

    Reverend Father Kalayjian said that Dink was a man who put his life on
    the line for his beliefs and convictions. He read, in tribute, a
    heartfelt poem authored by Adam Garrie of UCLA.

    Executive Director Bryan Ardouny said that the Armenian Assembly grieves
    Dink's tragic death and calls upon people of goodwill to denounce his
    assassination and join the Assembly's efforts to ensure that the cycle
    of genocide and its denial ends.

    "We remain deeply concerned with Turkey's continued failure to adopt
    standards and practices of both domestic and international conduct that
    would reverse and overturn the climate of intolerance, prejudice and
    repression as exemplified by Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code which
    precipitated this crime," said Ardouny.

    "The murder of Hrant Dink challenges America and the rest of the
    civilized world to stand up against political violence, and the
    atmosphere that fosters it," he added.

    Alen J. Salerian, M.D., a longtime friend of Dink's, said that "[Dink]
    is more than a hero, he's more than a heart. He's a brain, he's a
    peacemaker, he's an orphan who became a father and husband and a loving
    citizen."

    The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
    nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness of
    Armenian issues. It is a 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt membership organization.


    ###


    NR#2007-017

    Editor's Note: The full text of the remarks made by Assistant Secretary
    of State Daniel Fried, Bishop Vicken Aykazian and Assembly Executive
    Director Bryan Ardouny, are attached to this release and also available
    on the Assembly Web site at www.aaaainc.org.

    Adam Garrie's poem below is also available on the Assembly Web site.

    Elegy For An Armenian
    A Tribute To Hrant Dink

    By: Adam Garrie, UCLA

    The questions with answers that dare not speak,
    A life dedicated to all who seek,
    To lift the veil from tired eyes,
    Craving justice's shelter from both truth and lies.

    The adopted children of a wandering world,
    Where dreams are written but scarcely heard,
    A warrior armed but with a pen,
    And by the bullet met untimely end.

    The stewardship of a refugee,
    So perhaps a shrunken world could see,
    The fields of death whose blood is dry,
    When overdue tears do cease to cry.

    The debt of honour without a price,
    Ignorance for paradise,
    The consequence of the words one speaks,
    In times of bounty when men grow meek.
    But undeterred by time and place,
    Running marathons in a thankless race,
    A progressing world on a circular track,
    History is the shadow behind your back.

    Modern men with medieval souls,
    Could not hallow such noble goals,
    The ancient streets a witness bear,
    Soldiers are those who dream to dare.

    Time makes legends but martyrs are made by man,
    Forgiveness is for the living and those who understand,
    The shadow that walks behind you-once was a child too,
    Your world is always given-but your path you have to choose.

    >From India's rivers and Persia's ancient sands,
    On both sides of the Bosporus to the New World's foreign lands,
    A people live not by soil but by unspoken fact,
    That no swords, empires, or bullets can from this world extract.

    With mourning comes tomorrow,
    And duty must fulfill,
    To answer destiny's horn call,
    That bows before our will.


    Photographs are available on the Assembly Web site at the following
    links:

    http://www.aaainc.org/images/pre ss/2007-017/2007-017-1.jpg

    Caption: Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried addressed members of
    the Armenian-American community at the memorial service on January 23 at
    St. Mary's Armenian Apostolic Church in Washington, DC.

    http://www.aaainc.org/images/press/2007-017/2 007-017-2.jpg

    Caption: Bishop Vicken Aykazian, Legate of the Diocese of the Armenian
    Apostolic Church of America (Eastern) and Diocesan Director of
    Ecumenical Relations, presided over the memorial service. Bishop
    Aykazian and Dink were lifelong friends having attended the same
    seminary school together.

    http://www.aaainc.org/images/press/2007 -017/2007-017-3.jpg

    Caption: Reverend Father Vertanes Kalayjian led the memorial service for
    Hrant Dink at St. Mary's Armenian Apostolic Church in Washington, DC.

    http://www.aaainc.org/images/press/2007-017/2 007-017-4.jpg

    Caption: Assembly Executive Director Bryan Ardouny called Hrant Dink a
    catalyst for mutual understanding, tolerance and dialogue.
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