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CARDIFF: Feature - 20th Century's First Genocide

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  • CARDIFF: Feature - 20th Century's First Genocide

    FEATURE - 20TH CENTURY'S FIRST GENOCIDE
    by Ray Davies

    Morning Star, UK
    November 7, 2007 Wednesday

    Despite pressure from the Foreign Office, enormous efforts from
    official Turkish delegations and the day-long attempt by 150 Turkish
    pro-government demonstrators to break up the event, Cardiff played
    host to the successful unveiling of a monument to the 1915 Armenian
    Genocide on Saturday.

    The Welsh capital has become the first city in Britain to dedicate
    a public space to a memorial to the estimated 1.5 million victims of
    this, the first modern genocide.

    Two-thirds of the Armenian population were killed or exiled and the
    surviving diaspora was scattered across the world.

    Hundreds of Armenians made the journey from across Britain and as
    far afield as Australia to come together on this historic occasion,
    to remember, mourn and celebrate their survival.

    Welsh Assembly presiding officer Dafydd Elis-Thomas joined the
    Armenian ambassador to Britain to unveil the monument in the Temple
    of Peace gardens.

    The Armenian bishop, backed by the Armenian church choir, consecrated
    the carved stone or khatchkar, an ancient symbol of Armenia.

    The unveiling was the culmination of years of dedicated campaigning led
    by Eilian Williams, supported by the Welsh Centre for International
    Affairs and the Cardiff branch of the United Nations Association to
    achieve recognition for the Armenian tragedy.

    Speeches and dedications were interspersed with music, dance and
    poetry.

    The vociferous Turkish demonstration stood in the gardens below
    the meeting chanting slogans and holding large banners denying the
    Armenian genocide.

    But the police contained them and songs of peace inside the hall
    drowned out their shouting.

    It was an emotional and humbling experience to see the effect on the
    Armenian audience as they joined in singing the civil rights song We
    Shall Overcome.

    They listened to Cor Cochion's rendition of Gehat Hob Ikh A Haym,
    written in 1944 in the Polish ghetto, and Mae Gen I Freuddwyd -
    Martin Luther King's "I have a dream" speech in Welsh.

    Other entertainment was provided by the 50 members of Cor Aelwyd
    Hamdden from north Wales, a group of young Armenian dancers and
    traditional duduk players.

    The Armenian ambassador spoke passionately about the shared historical
    links between Wales and Armenia, from the father of the Eisteddfod
    Iolo Morgannwg to his grandson Aneurin Williams MP, who helped build
    the League of Nations, the organisation which brought the Temple of
    Peace into being.

    Williams was also the most passionate defender of the Armenian cause
    in the House of Commons.

    The angry Turkish protest has only succeeded in drawing the world's
    attention to this wrong and begun to reverse the global historic
    amnesia about Armenia among those who need to maintain Turkey as an
    ally in NATO wars.

    There is no doubt that the unveiling of this Celtic/Armenian cross
    will bring forward the day when the world accepts the reality of the
    tragedy of the first genocide of the 20th century and, in remembering,
    help to heal the century-old injustice.
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