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Marking Armenian genocide, many feel snubbed by Obama

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  • Marking Armenian genocide, many feel snubbed by Obama

    Los Angeles Times
    April 25, 2009 Saturday
    Home Edition


    California;
    Marking Armenian genocide, many feel snubbed by Obama

    Teresa Watanabe and Christi Parsons


    As Southern California Armenian Americans laid wreaths at memorials
    and marched in memory of ancestors slaughtered by the Ottoman Empire
    nearly a century ago, their enormous hopes that President Obama would
    at last give official U.S. recognition to the genocide were bitterly
    dashed Friday.

    During his campaign last year, Obama called the genocide "a widely
    documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of evidence,"
    pledged he would officially recognize it and criticized the Bush
    administration for not doing so. Such outspoken positions sparked
    overwhelming support from Armenian Americans, who expected he would be
    the first U.S. president to acknowledge the genocide on the April 24
    memorial day.

    On Friday, however, news that he had failed to fulfill his pledges
    provoked despair, disappointment and some anger that the century-long
    Armenian quest for recognition had once more been thwarted.

    "Everybody's upset because he got all of our hopes up that he would
    recognize the genocide," said Adreneh Krikorian, a Van Nuys High
    School senior who joined thousands of others at a somber service and
    memorial ceremony at the Armenian Martyrs Memorial Monument in
    Montebello.

    Some Armenian American activists said they were as annoyed at Armenia
    as they were with Obama over the failure to push the genocide
    issue. As Turkey and Armenia announced an agreement this week on a
    framework to normalize relations, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan
    told the Wall Street Journal that he did not want the genocide issue
    to obstruct the talks and was not pushing for U.S. recognition.

    "Almost all Armenians in the world are very passionately concerned
    about genocide recognition, and there is despondency targeted at what
    appears to be Armenia playing along" with attempts to minimize the
    issue, said Andrew Kzirian, executive director of the Armenian
    National Committee of America's western regional office in Glendale.

    Obama's statement Friday pointed only to his previous remarks, while
    avoiding the term many Turks find offensive. The Armenian genocide
    began in 1915 and claimed more than 1 million Armenian lives under the
    Ottoman Empire, which became the modern republic of Turkey. The
    Turkish government disputes that a genocide took place.

    "I have consistently stated my own view of what occurred in 1915, and
    my view of that history has not changed," Obama said in his
    statement. "My interest remains the achievement of a full, frank and
    just acknowledgment of the facts."

    His words provoked a range of emotions at memorial events that
    included a Los Angeles City Council commemoration, a march down
    Hollywood Boulevard to Little Armenia, the Montebello event, a protest
    at the Turkish Consulate on Wilshire Boulevard and a memorial concert
    in West Hollywood.

    At the Turkish Consulate, thousands of protesters waved signs that
    said "Obama Keep the Promise" and "Shame on Turkey," while chanting
    "1915, never again!"

    Arek Santikian, 21, a UCLA economics major who helped organize the
    protest for the Armenian Youth Federation, said he worked for a year
    on Obama's campaign and was devastated that the president skirted the
    genocide issue.

    "When we are promised something this meaningful and it doesn't happen,
    it leaves us without hope," Santikian said. "And that was not his
    message."

    As he leaned against a tree at the consulate, Zorik Mooradian, 52,
    held up a large canvas splashed with the Armenian flag colors of red,
    orange and blue and the words, "Obama . .. Keep the Promise."

    "The founding fathers did not envision that we would compromise truth
    for politics," said the disappointed Mooradian, who has been coming to
    the protests for three decades.

    The scene was more somber in Montebello, where clergy with the
    Armenian Apostolic, Catholic and evangelical churches held a service
    with incense, hymns and an Armenian-language liturgy. Rows of Armenian
    youths in youth-group uniforms lined a path for participants to walk
    as they laid roses, carnations, lilies and other flowers at the base
    of a genocide monument.

    There, several people expressed disappointment at Obama but also
    political pragmatism and a renewed effort to work for recognition.

    "Obviously we're disappointed but what can you do?" asked Artak
    Arakelian, 22, a USC student who was working at a table selling
    remembrance paraphernalia. "It just makes us work harder to make sure
    he fulfills his promise the next time."

    Arshak Nazarian, a 48-year-old Glendale sculptor, views the issue as a
    matter of semantics and said it was far more important that Obama
    recognized and lamented the massacres. "If you say everything about
    genocide, what difference does it make if you don't use the word?" he
    asked. "As far as I'm concerned he has kept his promises."

    Meanwhile, the Turkish Coalition of America applauded Obama for
    "deferring to historians" on the question.

    "President Obama has sent a clear message to America and the world,"
    said Lincoln McCurdy, coalition president. "His administration will
    not sacrifice long-term strategic allies for short-term political
    gains."

    Obama's administration has a lot riding on U.S. relations with
    Turkey. Offending Ankara could put U.S. supply routes to Iraq and
    Afghanistan in danger and complicate other critical issues on the
    Obama agenda, including Middle East peace and Iran.

    In his statement, Obama used the words "meds yeghern," the Armenian
    phrase for great calamity.

    "Ninety-four years ago, one of the great atrocities of the 20th
    century began," the president wrote. "Each year, we pause to remember
    the 1.5-million Armenians who were subsequently massacred or marched
    to their death in the final days of the Ottoman Empire. The meds
    yeghern must live on in our memories, just as it lives on in the
    hearts of the Armenian people."
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