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  • Plan For Armenian Park Moves Ahead

    PLAN FOR ARMENIAN PARK MOVES AHEAD
    By Thomas C. Palmer Jr., Globe Staff, [email protected].

    Boston Globe, United States
    September 11, 2007

    But full genocide memorial might not come to pass

    An Armenian-American group's proposal for a park on the Rose Fitzgerald
    Kennedy Greenway to recognize the Armenian genocide in the early 20th
    century is suddenly moving forward.

    Despite longstanding opposition to Greenway memorials - by park
    advocates and by the conservancy that is assuming control of the
    parks corridor - the Mayor's Central Artery Completion Task Force,
    the Boston Redevelopment Authority, and others are working to clear
    the way for the Armenian-American group.

    It wants to donate and maintain the park, which would be built on a
    small block near Faneuil Hall Marketplace in downtown Boston.

    Yet to be determined is whether the block in question, called Parcel
    13, would be a park, a memorial, or some combination.

    "We're trying to understand what a memorial is," Rob Tuchmann,
    cochairman of the task force, said yesterday.

    "We're trying to work with the proponents to have words on a plaque
    which give recognition and appreciation to the donors, as opposed to
    a message of commemoration or a memorial."

    The mayor's task force was scheduled to take up Parcel 13 at a meeting
    this morning, where it will ask an established North End community
    group to review the proposal.

    That group, the North End Central Artery Advisory Committee, will be
    charged with setting up guidelines for a park on the half-acre between
    Commercial Street and Atlantic Avenue, near Christopher Columbus Park.

    "We have been asked to participate in a public process, and we
    look forward to doing so," said James M. Kalustian, president of
    the Armenian Heritage Foundation, the group that is advancing the
    park plan.

    Armenian-Americans in Watertown recently convinced the national
    Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish group, to acknowledge that the deaths
    of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of Turks starting
    in 1915 amounted to genocide.

    The memorial issue is highly charged.

    Greenway planners and community members intended the string of parks,
    created when the old Central Artery was put underground as part of
    the Big Dig, to be free of memorials - unlike, say, the National Mall
    in Washington, D.C.

    In addition, the Armenian proposal did not go through a "tripartite"
    process - involving the surrounding community, the Massachusetts
    Turnpike Authority, and the City of Boston - as other Greenway
    proposals did.

    Rather, it emanated from special legislation in 2000 that directed
    the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority to try to find a place for a
    genocide memorial in Boston.

    The authority has since promoted a park, designed by a team led by
    Tellalian Associates Architects & Planners LLC of Boston, for the spot.

    The state got involved in June when Ian A. Bowles, secretary of
    the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, ruled the
    Turnpike Authority "did not follow the 'joint development' process
    outlined for the Greenway open space parcels." He directed the
    authority to help "frame an appropriate application of that process."

    The proposed design of the park won praise from many, including
    opponents of locating it on the Greenway. It includes a 12-sided
    sculpture to recall the 12 former provinces of Armenia, a water jet
    and pool, and a labyrinth of paved stone and grass 60 feet in diameter.

    City officials and others have suggested other locations for
    a full-fledged Armenian genocide memorial park, but the Armenian
    Heritage Foundation has said it isn't interested in other sites.

    City officials have not pressed the issue.

    "I think there's a hope everything can be worked out," said Peter
    Meade, chairman of the Greenway conservancy. His group's opposition to
    memorials on the Greenway, he said, "has been clear and longstanding
    and coincides with the spirit of what folks have been talking about
    for a long time."

    Meade declined to say whether the conservancy would oppose a plaque
    that refers specifically to genocide.

    Bernard Cohen, secretary of the Executive Office of Transportation
    and Public Works and chairman of the Turnpike Authority, said,
    "The process remains open to all proposals."
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