Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenians, Too, Vow To Never Forget Their Genocide

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

  • Armenians, Too, Vow To Never Forget Their Genocide

    ARMENIANS, TOO, VOW TO NEVER FORGET THEIR GENOCIDE
    By David Silverstein, [email protected]

    Lowell Sun (Massachusetts)
    April 23, 2007 Monday

    LOWELL -- John Dulgarian never met his grandparents.

    They died in 1915, 12 years before he was born and five years before
    his father fled from the Ottoman Empire and made a home in Lowell.

    Their deaths came at the start of an 80-year period that remains
    an open wound for the world's Armenian communities. Yesterday,
    remembering that era was the focus of a parade and flag-raising
    ceremony in downtown.

    About 60 people gathered at Merrimack and John streets and marched
    to City Hall to recall that dark chapter in which 1.5 million people
    lost their lives at the hands of the Ottoman Turks.

    A color guard of Armenian-American veterans led the way, followed by
    children holding a banner reading "Remember our Armenian martyrs."

    They were tailed by the remainder of the procession, some of whom
    brandished miniature Armenian flags or carried placards adorned with
    somber messages and images.

    For those in attendance, there is no question as to what it was
    their ancestors endured, and what they were there to commemorate;
    an act of genocide.

    However, Turkey officially insists that from 1915 to 1923, the area
    was embroiled in civil war, which led to the deaths. That position
    has been decried by Armenian activists, intellectuals and governments
    around the world which maintain that facts point toward genocide.

    The United States government does not officially recognize the killings
    as genocide, a stance proponents for Armenians said is motivated by
    political undertones.

    "People are trying to rewrite history," said Joseph Dagdigian, chairman
    of the Merrimack Valley branch of the Armenian National Committee.

    Dagdigian distributed a pamphlet signed by prominent scholars and
    writers such as Howard Zinn and Kurt Vonnegut. The pamphlet alleged
    that America's inaction in regards to classifying the killings as
    a genocide stems from American military concerns dating back almost
    60 years.

    "Beginning in the Cold War era, Turkey has periodically coerced the
    U.S. government ... by threatening to close U.S. air bases in Turkey,"
    the pamphlet said.

    "A mature society should admit its guilt. It is time Turkey
    acknowledges its role in the Armenian genocide," said Dina Apovian,
    25, of Newton.

    Speakers included Mayor Bill Martin, councilors Jim Milinazzo and
    Rita Mercier, Khatchig Mouradian, editor of The Armenian Weekly,
    and Fred Simon, representing state Sen. Steve Panagiotakos.

    "The world has to not let the status quo remain," Simon said.

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