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  • Urging Action On Armenians

    URGING ACTION ON ARMENIANS
    By Kathryn Skelton , Staff Writer

    Sun Journal , Maine
    Oct 30 2007

    After watching his father, an Armenian priest, cut to pieces when
    he wouldn't forsake God, Negoghos DerBoghosian escaped their Turkish
    village. Years later he fled to America. Before he had raised enough
    money to bring his wife and three children over with him, they were
    killed, too, victims of a long, bloody period in Armenian history.

    Negoghos married a woman named Baizar in 1922, an Armenian immigrant
    with her own sad story. They raised a new family. Neither said a word
    about their brutal past.

    Jerry DerBoghosian of Lewiston, their oldest son, says it all came
    out several years ago at a family reunion through written accounts.

    Baizar's first husband had been killed in a raid. Her children starved
    to death.

    "I don't remember my mother being there, and there it was, in black
    and white," said DerBoghosian, 84.

    Early this month, the Foreign Affairs Committee in the U.S. House
    agreed to pass along a measure to the full body that calls on
    the U.S. to affirm that the killing of 1.5 million Armenians from
    1915 to 1923, carried out by the Ottoman Empire, was genocide. The
    congressional action is something Turkey's leaders vehemently oppose.

    DerBoghosian thinks it's time.

    All four members of Maine's congressional delegation have backed the
    bill or a Senate version of it. Despite the activity, U.S. Rep. Mike
    Michaud said last week through a spokesperson it looked unlikely the
    resolution would get a vote. There's a possibility it could linger
    indefinitely.

    "Many have expressed concerns about damaging our relations with Turkey
    and further destabilizing the situation in northern Iraq, potentially
    putting our soldiers in greater danger," Michaud said. "I believe
    that this consequence is worth very serious consideration."

    Gerard Kiladjian is president of the Armenian Cultural Association
    of Maine, a group with 1,000 members, some of them second- and
    third-generation Americans. At their peak, Armenians ran 27 grocery
    stores in Maine and 24 barber shops, most in Portland, where Kiladjian
    lives.

    In his role as state chairman of the Armenian Assembly of America,
    he planned another round of congressional lobbying this week.

    "It's a way to get closure. It's always been in our history something
    that had happened, but it's difficult to talk to our kids (about it).

    It's not studied, yet it's the first genocide of the century,"
    Kiladjian said.

    Related Info PDF PDF Text of the House bill describes Adolf Hitler
    referring to the mass slaughter of Armenians by the Young Turks right
    before he invaded Poland unprovoked, saying "(w)ho after all, speaks
    today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

    On his wife's side, Kiladjian said, an uncle, then a little boy,
    escaped one of the frequent attacks that targeted every man in a
    village by hiding in his sister's clothes.

    She "put him under her skirt and walked out of the city," he said.

    "That's how he survived."

    In 2001, the Maine Legislature passed a joint resolution to honor
    Armenian Americans and commemorate the genocide. And last April 24,
    on the 92nd anniversary of the genocide's start, a Portland state
    senator sponsored a legislative sentiment.

    On that date, in 1915, hundreds of Armenian intellectuals, business
    and religious leaders were taken from their homes and killed. Among
    the many sources of conflict, Armenians were largely Christian and
    Turks largely Muslim.

    Nearly a century later, the killings are a source of fierce debate
    among scholars and others. Turkish leaders, for instance, reject the
    characterization of the killings as genocide.

    DerBoghosian, who retired from the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, said
    quite a few Armenians used to live in Lewiston-Auburn when the shoe
    shops were booming here. The community's much smaller now.

    Most of his family lives in Massachusetts. His parents died within
    10 months of each other in 1968.

    "The sweetest people I ever met in my lifetime, God bless them,"
    he said.

    The stories uncovered in his family tree were gruesome. After her
    father and her first husband was killed, Baizar was forced into the
    desert with her children. The kids died of malnutrition.

    His grandfather on his father's side survived a raid on his village
    only to be attacked and slaughtered two days later.

    "They cut him up. My grandmother died of a broken heart," he said. "I
    hope to live to see the U.S. Senate and House pass this so it will be
    known they did this genocide. After that, I can rest in peace. Then
    I can die."

    U.S. House Resolution 106 calls for:

    "... 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 and the consequences of the failure to realize a just
    resolution and ... (in an annual message) accurately characterize
    the systematic and deliberate annihilation of 1,500,000 Armenians as
    genocide and to recall the proud history of United States intervention
    in opposition to the Armenian Genocide."

    http://www.sunjournal.com/story/2 36271-3/MaineNews/Urging_action_on_Armenians/
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