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Author target of Turkish threats following Armenian Genocide book

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  • Author target of Turkish threats following Armenian Genocide book

    Author target of Turkish threats following Armenian Genocide book
    reading

    armradio.am
    20.10.2007 11:01

    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.

    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."
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