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One Family Scarred By Genocide

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  • One Family Scarred By Genocide

    ONE FAMILY SCARRED BY GENOCIDE
    By Peter Reuell, Daily News staff

    MetroWest Daily News, MA
    Oct 21 2007

    ARLINGTON - For Kevork Norian, the question of whether the mass
    killing of Armenians after 1915 should be acknowledged as a genocide
    isn't one of righting the historical record, or musty academic debate.

    For Norian, the genocide was frighteningly personal.

    Norian, 89, and born at the end of World War I, was one of thousands of
    Armenians whose families were caught up in what would later be called
    the Armenian genocide, in which more than 1.5 million Armenians were
    killed and thousands more forced from their homes.

    "My name is Kervork Norian and I am a survivor of two genocides,"
    the Arlington resident said this week, from a couch in his living room.

    "How did I survive? My father was in manufacturing clothing. When
    the Turks entered the war (World War I) they drafted two million
    soldiers, and they need clothing, so they took my father...and the
    families of those draftees were exempt from deportation. So that's
    why we survived."

    Though recognized by most scholars and historians as meeting the
    traditional definition of genocide, the killings have returned to
    the headlines in recent months.

    Earlier this year, Watertown officials pulled out of an Anti-Defamation
    League program due to the organization's refusal to recognize the
    killings as a genocide. Watertown has a large Armenian population.

    The question of whether to recognize the genocide has in recent
    weeks erupted into an international controversy, as Democrats push
    ahead with a bill to recognize the genocide, while Turkish officials
    threaten to withdraw their support for the U.S. military in the region
    if the bill passes.

    For Norian, though, the killings remain intensely personal.

    At the end of World War I, the Turkish government began the forced
    deportation of thousands of Armenians to the desert of Syria, where
    they lived in what essentially was a refugee camp.

    "So we settled in Syria, and lived a refugee life, that was (the)
    second genocide," he said of the forced relocation of Armenians to
    the Syrian desert.

    Norian's entire family - seven people - was forced to live in a small,
    one-room shack, in an area where there was one toilet for every few
    hundred people.

    The conditions were so bad, he said, his grandmother was killed by
    cholera which was spread through the water.

    "But somehow we survived," he said. "I was five years old when we
    moved to Syria, and we remained there until 1964, and then we came
    to the United States.

    "We were welcomed in the United States, we were accepted. We were
    treated with respect and dignity. I say, 'Thank You, USA for saving
    us from this hell."'

    To see the killings again go unrecognized, Norian said, is as if they
    are being committed all over again.

    "This is another genocide," he said. "They are not recognizing what
    happened. Americans say they are for justice and human rights, but
    when it comes to recognizing it, they are denying it.

    "We suffered so much, and our wounds will not be healed until the
    world recognizes it. We are not asking more than that."
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