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Panel Member: Move Armenian Memorial

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  • Panel Member: Move Armenian Memorial

    PANEL MEMBER: MOVE ARMENIAN MEMORIAL
    by Thomas C. Palmer Jr. Globe Staff

    The Boston Globe, MA
    First Edition
    May 9, 2007 Wednesday

    Trying to defuse a long-simmering dispute, a member of a group that
    oversees the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway is suggesting that
    a memorial to the Armenian genocide, planned for the new downtown
    Boston parks corridor, be built somewhere else.

    The Massachusetts Turnpike Authority, which effectively controls the
    Greenway, meets tonight in the North End to hear public comment on
    the plan for an Armenian park.

    Last summer, the authority tapped the Armenian Heritage Foundation
    to construct the park on nearly a half-acre close to the Christopher
    Columbus waterfront park.

    Tonight's meeting could become heated: Community groups and civic
    leaders have said that the new parks were not intended to host
    memorials, and that Turnpike Authority officials did not follow the
    standard public process in choosing the Armenian plan for the Greenway.

    Robert B. O'Brien, who is executive director of the Downtown North
    Association, a neighborhood group, and a member of the Mayor's Central
    Artery Completion Task Force, wrote to the Turnpike Authority this
    week, proposing other locations for the memorial.

    His suggestions: a spot outside the Edward Brooke Suffolk County
    Courthouse, a few blocks away, or an unspecified location on the
    new parks corridor along the lower Charles River, in East Cambridge
    or Boston.

    The plan for an Armenian heritage park, to commemorate the deaths
    of Armenians by Turks in 1915, has won praise from many, including
    opponents of the Greenway location. It would include a 12-sided
    sculpture recalling the 12 former provinces of Armenia, a water jet
    and pool, and a labyrinth of paved stone and grass 60 feet in diameter.

    O'Brien said the park is generally acknowledged to be a "well-designed
    and thoroughly fitting testament to an important historical event."

    James Kalustian, president of the Armenian Heritage Foundation, said
    the group is complying with a Turnpike Authority request to hold
    another public meeting for comment on the design.

    Kalustian said the group would go along with "whatever process the
    MTA suggests" if the space were opened up to other bidders.

    The $4 million park would be paid for and maintained by the Armenian
    group, saving the Turnpike Authority and the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy
    Greenway Conservancy money.

    But Peter Meade, chairman of the conservancy, a private group, said
    that's not enough reason to accept the proposal. "It is clear to
    me some people in the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority a while ago
    decided this would be a way to get off on the cheap," he said.

    A spokesman, Jon Carlisle, said the authority scheduled the meeting
    because "We want to ensure that this is an open and inclusive public
    process. The turnpike as an agency remains open to all options and
    suggestions."

    Thomas C. Palmer Jr. can be reached at [email protected].
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