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Armenian-American clout buys genocide breakthrough

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  • Armenian-American clout buys genocide breakthrough

    Reuters, UK
    Oct 12 2007


    Armenian-American clout buys genocide breakthrough


    Fri Oct 12, 2007 2:21pm EDT
    By Mary Milliken

    GLENDALE, California (Reuters) - At 93, Armenian American filmmaker
    Michael Hagopian may finally see his community's clout pay off if the
    U.S. Congress recognizes the 1915 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks as genocide.

    "U.S. representatives in Congress and state governments now realize
    the Armenian community has a lot of political power and they can make
    contributions to political causes and various parties," said
    Hagopian, best known for his film "The Forgotten Genocide".

    This week, the House of Representatives Foreign Relations Committee
    approved a resolution branding the massacre of an estimated 1.5
    million Armenians from 1915 to 1923 as genocide, brushing aside
    President George W. Bush's warnings that it would harm relations with
    Turkey, a key ally.

    Rep. Adam Schiff, whose district around the city of Los Angeles
    includes a large Armenian American community, was one of several
    lawmakers who pushed for the resolution after heavy lobbying by
    constituents.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who also represents many Armenian
    Americans, seems determined to bring the non-binding resolution to a
    vote in the full House probably next month. It is unclear if and when
    the Senate will follow suit.

    Turkey argues that both Turks and Armenians were killed in the years
    of violence and warfare that accompanied the collapse of the Ottoman
    Empire.

    It is a crime in Turkey to portray the killings as "genocide" and
    Ankara recalled its ambassador to Washington after Wednesday's vote
    to express its anger.

    There are an estimated 1.5 million to 2 million Americans with
    Armenian forefathers and many grew up hearing horrific stories of the
    massacres. After years of lobbying, they are surprised and pleased to
    see their cause making headlines around the world.

    "The community is surprised but also rather happy that an issue that
    is close to their hearts is playing out in a prominent way in
    mainstream American media," said Ara Khachatourian, editor of the
    daily newspaper Asbarez published in the city of Glendale.

    Nowhere is Armenian influence more visible than in Glendale, a city
    of 200,000 near downtown Los Angeles, where 40 percent of the
    population is Armenian.

    The community's wealth is on display in the plethora of restaurants,
    bakeries and banquet halls and the parking lots overflowing with
    luxury cars. Elders meet in shopping centers and city parks, chatting
    in Armenian and playing table games.

    Khachatourian's newspaper has played a major role in getting this
    increasingly wealthy and organized community behind the cause,
    encouraging readers to write e-mails and make phone calls to
    congressional offices.

    "You can talk to any Armenian and you can see they have had a
    survivor or victim of genocide in their family," said Khachatourian,
    39, who was born in Iran.

    But Armenian Americans stress that this genocide resolution goes far
    beyond their own community.

    "Genocides are still happening -- the Holocaust, Cambodia, Rwanda,"
    said Jerry Papazian, a third generation Armenian American.

    "Some argue that if there had been more of an outcry after 1915 maybe
    the Holocaust would not have occurred."
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