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Young Victims Of Armenian Genocide Commemorated In Lebanon

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  • Young Victims Of Armenian Genocide Commemorated In Lebanon

    YOUNG VICTIMS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATED IN LEBANON

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    May 10, 2011 - 11:46 AMT

    Hundreds of visitors flocked to a new shrine Sunday, May 8 evening at
    the Lazarist Saint Joseph College in Aintoura, Lebanon, to remember
    more than 350 orphans who perished there under Ottoman rule.

    The shrine, which sits atop a grave of young victims of the Armenian
    Genocide, was built several months ago and has become a somber and
    meaningful site for Lebanese and foreign visitors alike.

    On Sunday evening, the Armenian Catholic Church held a mass service
    for the orphans at Aintoura's grand 19th-century chapel, nearly 100
    years after the end of World War I, The Daily Star reports.

    "Among the children buried in the grave were more than 300 young
    Armenian orphans who were the victims of [a policy of] "Turkification"
    at the hands of Turkish officials assigned by Jamal Pasha in 1916,"
    said Missak Kelechian, an engineer who researched the history of the
    site, uncovering the location of the mass grave.

    Kelechian's research took over five years to complete and began with
    a photograph in a book by Stanley Kerr, a volunteer of the American
    Near East Relief Agency. The photograph showed Jamal Pasha on the
    steps of the Saint Joseph College at Aintoura in 1916.

    "It is important today that more Lebanese know about the tragic fate
    of Armenian orphans in Aintoura," said Vazken Nurpetlian, as he lit
    a candle at the shrine. "The finding [of the grave] shows that the
    international Armenian cause [for the recognition of the Armenian
    genocide] is also a Lebanese cause."

    Of the 1,200 orphans at Aintoura, around 1,000 children were Armenian
    and the remainder were Kurds. On his arrival to the college, Jamal
    Pasha assigned Halide Edip Adivar, a well-known Turkish feminist,
    to conduct the "Turkification" of the Armenian orphans, to erase
    their identity. After suffering defeat in World War I, Ottoman forces
    were forced to withdraw from the college and when the French Lazarists
    arrived, Father Ernest Sarlout helped the surviving orphans to remember
    their original names and speak Armenian again.




    From: A. Papazian
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