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Local Armenian-Americans Praise House Genocide Resolution

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  • Local Armenian-Americans Praise House Genocide Resolution

    LOCAL ARMENIAN-AMERICANS PRAISE HOUSE GENOCIDE RESOLUTION
    By Brendan O'brien

    Journal Times, WI
    http://www.journaltimes.com/articles/2007/10/14 /local_news/doc4712eea2bc2c8279199485.txt
    Oct 15 2007

    RACINE - In 1939, at the height of his monstrous regime, Adolf
    Hitler prophetically proclaimed that history will forget the Armenian
    genocide.

    "Who, today, speaks of the annihilation of the Armenians?" he asked
    according to news reports a week before Germany invaded Poland as he
    ordered the murder of the Polish people.

    That quote spoke volumes this weekend for local Armenian-Americans,
    who praised the approval in the U.S. House of Representatives last
    week of a resolution recognizing the World War I-era killing of
    Armenians as genocide.

    "I'm very much satisfied that they took the right route after many,
    many years of discussion," said Skarkis Cherkinian a member of St.

    Mesrob Armenian Apostolic Church in Caledonia before services began
    Sunday morning.

    "It's about time. It's the same thing the Jewish people went through.

    It's the same thing," he added.

    An estimated 200 Armenian families live in the Racine area. A handful
    of survivors of the genocide are still members of the church.

    "It's brought up a lot more awareness in that it has gotten front
    page headlines," said church member Bill Binetti, who noted that some
    members of Armenian community to whom he has spoken have expressed
    their concern with the timing of the acknowledgement on the part of
    the U.S. "Generally speaking, this is something that Armenians have
    been fighting for for decades and generations."

    On Wednesday, the House Foreign Affairs Committee voted 27-21 to
    approve the resolution that would recognize the slaughter of 1.5
    million Armenians by Ottoman Turks as a genocidal event.

    Turkey denies that the deaths constitute genocide, says the toll has
    been inflated and insists that those killed were victims of civil
    war and unrest.

    The Journal Times recognizes the Armenian genocide as historical fact.

    Turkey, a key NATO ally that has supported U.S. efforts in Iraq, has
    warned that the measure may result in impeding logistical and other
    U.S. military traffic now using Turkish airspace. President Bush
    admonished the panel vote and indicated it would damage U.S. goals
    in the Middle East.

    "Turkey needs the U.S. more than we need Turkey. Somehow we'll do what
    we have to do, but the Turks rely on us because we supply them with
    lots of cash and lots of arms," church member Perry Paragamian said.

    Paragamian's mother was the only survivor of the genocide in her
    immediate family.

    "Absolutely, every day, one way or other it's talked about," Paragamian
    said of how local Armenians discuss their history. "You can't sweep
    the truth under the carpet."

    The measure now heads to the House floor where, unless Democratic
    leadership heeds the president's warnings, it will be up for a vote.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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