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BEIRUT: Armenian-Lebanese Mark 'Genocide Day'

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  • BEIRUT: Armenian-Lebanese Mark 'Genocide Day'

    ARMENIAN-LEBANESE MARK 'GENOCIDE DAY'
    By Anthony Elghossain

    Daily Star - Lebanon
    April 25 2008

    Thousands attend vigil to remember massacres

    BEIRUT: "History has not yet witnessed a more terrible crime - a crime
    against humanity - than that of genocide," the Tashnak Party said
    Thursday in a statement issued to commemorate the 93rd anniversary of
    "Genocide Day," which marks the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turkish forces during World War I.

    Nerses Bedros XIX, the Armenian Catholic patriarch, in a ceremony
    held at an Achrafieh cemetery for victims of the massacre, said that
    "we are here today to plead the conscience of the global [community]
    in hopes of bringing wider recognition of the massacre of Armenians."

    The patriarch emphasized "our [the Armenian population's] commitment
    to the Armenian struggle and to the active role we have played in
    the Christian struggle in Lebanon and the world."

    The Armenian Apostolic (Orthodox) Church in Lebanon held
    a Wednesday-evening gathering in the mountain town of Bikfaya to
    remember the victims of the killings and reflect upon the meaning of
    those events on the Armenian community today.

    Aram I, archbishop of Cilicia, sought to convey the need for
    remembrance and unity in the Armenian Lebanese experience, touching
    upon memory, the assertion of rights and unity as a source of force.

    "Memory is one of the more important facets of human existence -
    indeed, human beings live in memory," the archbishop said. "The
    Armenian genocide, organized and executed by the Ottoman state,
    will forever remain etched in the Armenian memory."

    The archbishop added that "peoples have, alongside their duties, rights
    that must be asserted in case of marginalization [of those rights]."

    Referring to divisions that have plagued the Armenian community and
    stressing the need for communal unity, Aram I urged Armenians in
    Lebanon to coalesce around their "national struggle," saying that
    "a people can only grow strong through the unification of its sons
    and placing common cause above all differences."

    He also linked the Armenian and Lebanese "struggles" to one another,
    stressing that "while Turkey oppressed the Armenian people, Lebanon
    embraced [them] ... Turks butchered Armenians, but in Lebanon we
    found a nation of renaissance, life, and continuity."

    Despite an intensifying political standoff, both the Lebanese Forces
    and the Free Patriotic Movement issued statements "on this painful
    commemoration" condemning the "massacre of the Armenian people."

    During World War I, beginning in 1915, Ottoman Turks executed over
    1.5 million Armenians in present-day Turkey, and prompted thousands of
    others to flee to neighboring areas in the region, including Lebanon.

    Several states recognize the killings as genocide, but Turkey neither
    recognizes the killings as genocide nor assumes legal responsibility
    for their execution.
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