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Reporter Arax Leaves L.A. TimesArmenian-American Covered Valley For

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  • Reporter Arax Leaves L.A. TimesArmenian-American Covered Valley For

    REPORTER ARAX LEAVES L.A. TIMESARMENIAN-AMERICAN COVERED VALLEY FOR 14 YEARS.
    By Diana Marcum

    FRESNO BEE, CA
    June 19 2007

    Fresno journalist Mark Arax has left the Los Angeles Times, ending a
    public dispute about the paper's decision not to publish a story he
    wrote about the Armenian genocide.

    His last day at the paper was Friday.

    According to Arax's attorney, Warren Paboojian, Arax and the Times
    reached a settlement to forestall a lawsuit alleging defamation and
    discrimination.

    Arax said he could not comment on the terms because of a
    confidentiality agreement.

    The controversy started over a story Arax wrote this spring about
    how the Jewish community was divided over whether to call the deaths
    of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire between
    1915 and 1923 a genocide.

    In memos leaked to the online political journal LAObserved.com,
    Los Angeles Times managing editor Douglas Frantz said Arax, an
    Armenian-American, could no longer write about the Armenian genocide
    because he had taken a position on the issue.

    Arax had once signed an internal memo reminding editors that Times
    policy was to refer to the Armenian massacres in Turkey as genocide --
    not "alleged" genocide.

    Turkey rejects the term.

    The paper's decision outraged many in Southern California's large
    Armenian-American community, and some called for Frantz to be fired.

    In a statement Monday, Times publisher David Hiller praised Arax's
    work, wished him well and said:

    "I want to emphasize that Mark's decision to leave the paper is
    not a reflection on his professional work in reporting on Armenian
    genocide, or in communicating with the paper to ensure our adherence
    to established policy in referring to the genocide, all of which are
    journalistically appropriate.

    "We regret that the situation surrounding Mark's story became a
    subject of controversy and misunderstanding. The Times does not
    tolerate any discrimination in the reporting or editing of the news
    based on ethnic heritage or other basis and our internal review found
    no such discrimination in this case."

    In his 14 years writing about the San Joaquin Valley for the Times,
    Arax told the stories of migrant farmworker children who became track
    stars, black sharecroppers who came to the San Joaquin Valley during
    the Dust Bowl and abuses inside a Corcoran prison.

    "I tried to cover the Valley as a foreign beat, write about it as
    some other world for the paper's readers, because the Valley is
    another world: It's geographically exiled and a third world in its
    own right with great poverty and pockets of concentrated wealth,"
    Arax said Monday.

    Jim Tucker, who taught journalism at Fresno State for 39 years, said
    Arax's departure from the Times is a blow for the San Joaquin Valley.

    "He was a voice about things that happened here -- a voice that
    reached a national audience," Tucker said.

    "Because of his closeness to this place, he wrote stories no one
    else could see or write. Now, strangely enough, his departure is
    precipitated by having such a closeness to a story."

    Arax grew up in Fresno and went to Fresno State before joining the
    Times in 1984. He returned to Fresno in 1990 to write "In My Father's
    Name," a book about the murder of his father, Ara Arax.

    He started covering the Valley for the Times in 1993.

    Arax also, on occasion, made news. Last year, he publicly harangued
    Fresno County supervisor Bob Waterston at a meeting of the Local
    Agency Formation Commission.

    Arax said he plans to write books and magazine articles and suspects
    that most of the time he still will write about the Valley --
    following advice that William Saroyan, another Fresno writer, once
    gave a 19-year-old Mark Arax: "Write about what you know in the
    language you know it."

    "I have to keep writing about this place," he said. "It's a mystery
    to me. I'm still trying to figure it out."

    http://www.fresnobee.com/263/story/631 85.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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