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Timeline Of The Genocide Resolution

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  • Timeline Of The Genocide Resolution

    TIMELINE OF YHE GENOCIDE RESOLUTION
    By Carla Hall, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    Oct 26 2007

    Mixed reactions from Glendale

    Some react with frustration, others with resignation, at yet another
    delay in getting a genocide resolution.

    In the thriving Armenian metropolis of Glendale, reports Thursday
    that House sponsors had delayed action on a resolution recognizing
    the Armenian genocide prompted reactions as varied as the Armenian
    population itself. Some were resigned: If not today, then one
    day. Others were frustrated. "I've been here 30 years. We've been
    trying and trying," said 50-year-old Gary Markarian as he stood
    behind the counter of his liquor store. "Of course, we are eager to
    pass this resolution, but at the same time we understand it's not
    possible for America because of foreign policy," said Rita Demirjian,
    manager of Sardarabad, a bookstore filled with Armenian books and
    art wares. "We are Americans too. We live here." Demirjian, 50,
    an Armenian who was born in Lebanon but has lived in the U.S. for
    18 years, spoke in a calm yet determined voice. She served a visitor
    coffee and cookies from a nearby Armenian bakery and talked of a goal
    that she and fellow Armenians vow never to abandon: securing a formal
    acknowledgment by the U.S. government that the systematic killing
    of as many as 1.5 million Armenians by Turks, starting in 1915,
    is recognized by historians and experts as genocide. "It will not
    go away. It happened," Demirjian said. By some estimates, Glendale
    is home to as many as 80,000 Armenians and dozens of Armenian-owned
    businesses. Not all of them shared the bookstore manager's temperate
    view. Other Armenians voiced greater disappointment and frustration
    with this latest development. "It just shows that justice is a game,"
    said Vazken Movsesian, an Armenian American priest from St. Peter
    Armenian Church and the director of In His Shoes, a youth ministry
    that is outspoken on genocide issues. Movsesian mentioned how
    President Bush recently bestowed the Congressional Gold Medal upon
    the Dalai Lama and did "not care one minute if he offends the whole
    country of China. And then you have one word that offends Turkey and
    they pull back. It's all politics. Turkey is essentially holding the
    U.S. hostage." Movsesian said that as an Armenian he was not hopeful
    that the U.S. would proceed, yet as an American he hoped that it
    would. "I want to believe my country can step up to the plate and say,
    'Yes, this happened.' . . . What credibility do we have if we can't
    say, 'Yes, this happened'?" The priest was not the only one unmoved
    by the U.S. government's concern about relations with Turkey.

    "I think the biggest problem is that Turkey has been allowed to
    saber-rattle time after time," said Vicken Papazian, an attorney and
    activist with the Armenian National Committee here. Taking a smoke
    break at a table outside his Tonir Bakery on Glendale Avenue, Narek
    Avetyan was equally disappointed by this latest action. "They're
    not doing the right thing," said Avetyan, 24, who has lived in the
    U.S. since 1988. "It doesn't matter what culture you are, where you
    come from: If you don't recognize it, it will happen again someday,"
    Avetyan said of the genocide. Avetyan, who was born in Armenia, had
    a great-grandfather who died in the genocide. "They took him and he
    never came back," said Avetyan. The weariness was evident in some
    voices Thursday. "I don't know how long it will take before someone
    steps up and says that's it," Markarian said. But the Armenian National
    Committee's Papazian was more confident that one day this resolution
    would be a reality. "We're resilient people," Papazian said. "The fact
    that the timetable has been adjusted is not a devastating blow. Whether
    the full House votes on this later this year or next year, we'll be
    here. There's no statute of limitations on discussing genocide."
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