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ANC FL: Author Target of Turk Threats Following Genocide Book Readin

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  • ANC FL: Author Target of Turk Threats Following Genocide Book Readin

    PRESS RELEASE
    October 17, 2007
    Armenian National Committee of South Florida
    931 NE 48th St., Oakland Park 33334
    Contact: Albert Mazmanian
    Tel. 561-628-8982

    AUTHOR TARGET OF TURKISH THREATS
    FOLLOWING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BOOK READING

    FORT LAUDERDALE, FL - Amid security concerns and ongoing Turkish
    death-threats, author Margaret Ajemian Ahnert led the Fort
    Lauderdale book reading of her Armenian Genocide family memoir,
    "The Knock at the Door," reported the Armenian National Committee
    (ANC) of South Florida. Over 80 people attended the event hosted
    by the Broward County Main Library, sponsored by the Florida Center
    for the Book.

    The subject of the book, a skillful retelling of her mother's
    traumatic battle to survive as a young girl during the Armenian
    Genocide, comes at a crucial time when the United States House of
    Representatives is set to vote on H.Res. 106, calling upon the
    President to ensure that the foreign policy of the United States
    reflects appropriate understanding and sensitivity concerning
    issues related to human rights, ethnic cleansing, and genocide
    documented in the United States record relating to the Armenian
    Genocide.

    Among the audience were the influential members of the Writers
    Network, and civic leaders from South Florida. Despite a high
    turnout, "I was uncomfortable from the threats I received from
    angry Turks," said Ms. Ahnert. To assure the safety of the public,
    the Fort Lauderdale Police Department (FLPD) provided security for
    the night.

    "Turkish death threats to Ms. Ahnert are an insult to American
    values upon which our country was founded. The threats demonstrate
    the incompatibility of Turkish nationalism and the first amendment
    of the US constitution; the freedom of speech and to assemble,"
    said Albert Mazmanian, chairman of the ANC of South Florida.

    Threats to proponents of genocide affirmation are not
    unprecedented. Last January, Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian
    journalist, was assassinated by a 17-year old nationalist for
    speaking about the Armenian Genocide. Article 301 of the Turkish
    Penal Code outlaws criticism of Turkish identity, and academicians
    have been victims of such laws.
    On the state level, Turkey threatened to cut-off supplies to US
    troops in Iraq in response to the House Foreign Affairs Committee
    vote on H.Res 106. "Turkey's threats against U.S. interests are
    outrageous and must not be tolerated. I applaud the House Foreign
    Affairs Committee for adopting the Genocide resolution and look to
    House Members to show the same courage and principles," said Sandra
    Lalaian, an activist and resident of Key Biscayne, Florida.

    During the Q&A session, a Turkish-American from the audience asked
    Ahnert, "if you want to remember something, why do you remember the
    bad things," citing Seljuk liberation of the Armenian Church from
    the Byzantines. Ahnert rebutted that fifteen of the sixteen
    chapters of her book are "happy memories," and only one chapter is
    a "bad memory."
    ####
    Photo Caption: Margaret Ahnert speaking at Broward County Main Library
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