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A Story Of Survival: Armenians Remember Those Slain By Turks

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  • A Story Of Survival: Armenians Remember Those Slain By Turks

    A STORY OF SURVIVAL: ARMENIANS REMEMBER THOSE SLAIN BY TURKS
    By Renee K. Gadoua Staff writer

    Religion News Service
    The Post-Standard (Syracuse, New York)
    Final Edition
    November 27, 2007 Tuesday

    Richard Roomian's father left his family in Armenia - then a part of
    the Ottoman Turkish Empire - in 1915 to come to America and earn a
    living as a tailor.

    He settled in Syracuse and soon sent money for his family to flee
    oppression from the Turks and join him. His parents never made it.

    His mother - Richard Roomian's grandmother - was killed before she
    could board a boat. His father - Roomian's grandfather - died on a
    forced march out of Armenia that left an estimated 150,000 people dead.

    "That's the story of every Armenian. They have immediate relatives
    that were killed," said Roomian, a leader in Central New York's
    Armenian community.

    A recent failed congressional resolution would have labeled as genocide
    the deaths of Roomian's grandparents and hundreds of thousands of
    other Armenians by Turks beginning in 1915.

    Roomian says the resolution would have been a cathartic step toward
    forgiveness, while opponents say such a resolution was not an
    appropriate congressional action. Others pointed out a resolution
    could harm U.S. relations with Turkey.

    Many scholars view the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians during the
    World War I era as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey's
    leaders say the deaths occurred during inter-ethnic conflict.

    Roomian says it's important that people understand the Armenians'
    story of survival. He was born and grew up in Syracuse, home to an
    Armenian community of about 350 families. He now lives in Rochester
    and serves as chair of the parish council of St. Paul's Armenian
    Apostolic Church, 310 N. Geddes St., Syracuse.

    The church serves as a cultural center for many Central New York
    Armenian-Americans.

    St. Paul's is one of 10 Armenian Apostolic churches in New York.

    Others operate in Binghamton, Rochester and Niagara Falls. A second
    Armenian church in Syracuse, St. John's, 372 W. Matson Ave., closed
    a few years ago.

    About 1.3 million Christian Armenians worship in about 110 churches
    in the United States, said Michael O'Hurley-Pitts, spokesman for the
    Armenian Church headquarters in New York.

    The church, a branch of the Oriental Orthodox Christian Church, was
    founded at the foot of Mount Ararat in ancient Armenia, which is now
    in Turkey. Mount Ararat is believed to be where Noah's ark came to
    rest after the biblical flood.

    Christianity became the national religion of Armenia in 301 A.D.,
    a fact that's still significant, O'Hurley-Pitts said.

    "Armenians' Christian identity is tied up in their national identity,"
    he said.

    O'Hurley-Pitts is disappointed the resolution was abandoned.

    "If we favor the passage of the resolution, it is because we cannot
    pick and choose which crimes against humanity are worth recognizing
    and which are not," he said.

    At the very least, he said, the proposed resolution raised interest
    in Armenian history.

    "The Armenian people don't need an act of Congress to tell them there
    are gaping holes in their family trees," he said.

    Armenians began arriving in Syracuse about 1894, according to "Like
    One Family: The Armenians of Syracuse," a 2000 book by Arpenia
    S. Mesrobian, former director of Syracuse University Press.

    "Even while the recently arrived immigrants sought to establish
    themselves in a new land, their minds and hearts remained with the
    families and compatriots they had left behind in a homeland which
    most of them would never see again," she wrote in the preface.

    That's how Nevart Apikian, of Syracuse, remembers her youth. Her
    father came from Armenia to America about 1910.

    She was a charter member of the now-defunct St. John's Armenian Church
    and remembers attending picnics with Syracuse's Armenians.

    "Everybody would talk, and people gave $25 or $50 to $100 for people
    who needed it in Armenian organizations," she said.

    She said people were passionate about their homeland, but rarely
    talked openly about what they experienced.

    "You didn't ask questions," she said. "You got little snippets."

    Renee K. Gadoua can be reached at [email protected] or 470-2203.

    To learn more

    Learn about the Armenian church: www.armenianchurch.net.

    Read House Resolution 106: Affirmation of the United
    States Record on the Armenian Genocide Resolution:
    www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd? bi ll=hr110-106.

    Support for resolution

    The National Council of Churches is bucking the conventional wisdom
    in Washington by criticizing Congress for shelving a measure that
    would label the deaths of thousands of Armenians in 1915 "genocide."

    The council and its affiliated humanitarian agency, Church World
    Service, approved a resolution at the groups' annual General Assembly
    Nov. 6-8, calling it "unacceptable that the United States has yet to
    officially recognize the Genocide of 1915."

    The resolution "strongly urges the leadership of the U.S. House of
    Representatives to bring forth this legislation before the end of
    this Congress." The National Council of Churches, an umbrella group
    of 35 mainline Protestant and Orthodox denominations, includes the
    U.S. branch of the Armenian Orthodox Church. Armenian Archbishop
    Vicken Aykazian is beginning a two-year term as council president.

    Speaking "as persons of faith," the National Council of Churches and
    Church World Service expressed their "concern that the truth was not
    upheld by our elected representatives."
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