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  • Starved for recognition

    The Oregonian - OR
    Nov 3 2007

    Starved for recognition
    Armenians wait anxiously as Congress considers labeling as genocide
    the deaths of 1.5 million countrymen by the Turks

    Saturday, November 03, 2007
    NIKOLE HANNAH-JONES
    The Oregonian Staff

    Hunched at a table in a dim corner of Ararat, Portland's Armenian
    bakery, Albert Bedrosian peeks through a heavy halo of Marlboro
    smoke. Tar stains the prickly gray whiskers at his mouth, and he holds
    his cigarette with a hand callused by the building of successful
    businesses.
    Bedrosian is 80, an Armenian immigrant who pulled himself up by his
    bootstraps. Yet, when he speaks, it's of sad things. "I have six
    grandchildren," Bedrosian says softly, in words drenched with an
    accent. "But I never know what it is to call someone grandmother."
    Neither age, nor prosperity, nor distance has erased the longing. For
    family he never knew because they were killed by the Turks during the
    World War I era. For an acknowledgement from his adopted country of a
    genocide.
    The longing intensified recently as a congressional committee debated
    a resolution that recognizes the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians
    around World War I by the Ottoman Turks as genocide. Bedrosian finds
    himself fanatically watching and reading the news and then weighing
    odds with his countrymen that the resolution will finally pass
    Congress. It consumes the conversation at Ararat bakery.
    "A whole generation was killed; we can't ever, ever forget," Nelli
    Grigorian tells the three men who munch on nazook, a sweet bread. They
    sit in the bar of Grigorian's bakery, which moonlights as a restaurant
    and international disco. "So I feel in my heart it's going to be the
    right decision."
    Albert Keuftedjian isn't so sure. He loves this country, he says,
    because it gave him freedom and opportunity. He voted for President
    Bush. Now he feels betrayed by Bush's decision not to support the
    resolution because it could harm the relationship with Turkey, an Iraq
    war ally.
    "For him to come on TV and say it's not the right time is very
    disappointing," Keuftedjian says, pounding his open hand against the
    table. "It is a sad point when the greatest nation in the world says
    it's not time. It's time to ease the pain that we have."
    Keuftedjian takes a sip of sweet, thick liquid from a tiny cup
    embellished with a Grecian motif. They never call it Turkish coffee,
    he points out; it's Armenian coffee. The group of four laughs. But
    brevity is fleeting. "Why now?" Rafael Saakyan voices the question in
    many Armenians' minds. "We've been fighting for this for 92 years."
    Saakyan is just 26. His great-grandfather survived the annihilation of
    his town by hiding under the bodies of his dead parents. It's a
    generational wound, Saakyan says, that won't heal until the world
    acknowledges the genocide.
    One by one, they recount horrible family tales.
    Keuftedjian, a 47-year-old business owner, says his great-grandparents
    both died in the genocide. Grigorian is 48, came to the U.S. in 1991
    and started the bakery before she even learned English. She stares
    into the next room as she speaks of her grandparents' deaths at the
    hands of the Turks.
    Bedrosian, his voice even and low, says both of his parents were
    orphaned in the genocide. His mother watcher her own mother being
    killed, he says, from between the mattresses where she was
    hidden. Bedrosian grew up with no aunts, no uncles, no
    grandparents. Who, he asks, can expect us to forget that this
    happened?
    "It's an example for all humanity, for what is happening in Darfur and
    all over the world," he says. "It is an example so that it doesn't
    happen again."
    The old man stumps out his cigarette, shakes his head, then reaches
    for another.
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