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Religious And Community Leaders Decry White House Ban Of 'Orphan Rug

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  • Religious And Community Leaders Decry White House Ban Of 'Orphan Rug

    RELIGIOUS AND COMMUNITY LEADERS DECRY WHITE HOUSE BAN OF 'ORPHAN RUG'

    [ Part 2.2: "Attached Text" ]

    Tuesday, November 26th, 2013 | Posted by Contributor

    [communitybriefing.jpg]

    ANCA-Glendale chair Berdj Karapetian kicks off community briefing
    Tuesday

    Ahead of Obama's visit to Glendale Armenian religious and community
    leaders gather to send clear message to White House.

    Glendale Councilman Zareh Sinanyan to deliver protest letter to Obama
    during his visit.

    GLENDALE--As President Obama began his visit to Glendale, religious
    and community leaders held a briefing to call on the President to
    stop blocking the display of an Armenian Genocide-era rug woven by
    orphans of that crime against humanity.

    The rug, which took Armenian orphans 10 months to weave and has
    4,404,206 individual knots, was presented to President Calvin Coolidge
    in 1925.

    Armenian National Committee of America Glendale Chapter Chairman
    Berdj Karapetian opened the press conference and welcomed a broad
    array of U.S. and Armenian print, television and online media to the
    community-wide forum urging concrete White House action regarding
    the historic rug.

    "Today we pause, reflect and act," remarked ANCA National Board member
    Raffi Hamparian. "We pause to remember the remarkable generosity of the
    American people during the Armenian Genocide. We reflect on the little
    orphans of the genocide who carefully wove a rug that was presented to
    President Coolidge. And finally, we act, by demanding that President
    Obama stop his Administration's unusual policy of placing the orphan
    rug under quarantine. This is an exceedingly unusual way to treat a
    piece of American history - especially a piece of American history
    that speaks to our nation's greatness in responding to a crime against
    all humanity," Hamparian added.

    Western Primate Hovnan Derderian spoke eloquently about the integral
    part the Armenian Genocide orphan rug plays in American history and
    the need for the White House to arrange its permanent display.

    Western Prelate Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian noted, "The rug was
    a gracious gesture symbolizing the friendship between the American
    and Armenian peoples. It is part of American history.

    Keeping it locked away in storage is not only insulting to the
    orphaned girls who painstakingly crafted this beautiful work of art,
    it also represents a shameful effort to cover up, at the urging of
    genocide-deniers in Ankara, a truly proud chapter of American history."

    Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA), released a statement declaring
    that the [orphan] rug "is not only a symbol of the resilience of
    the Armenian people through their darkest days, but also serves as a
    tangible expression of the inherent truth that 1.5 million people were
    killed in the first genocide of the 20th Century." The Congressman,
    long a champion on human rights issues, added, "It is my intention
    to host an event in the Capitol featuring the rug, shedding light on
    the efforts made by American diplomats and charitable organizations
    to call attention to, and provide relief for, the victims of the
    genocide. I will be urging the Administration to make the rug available
    for display at that time and hope for a favorable response."

    Schiff's statement was read by ANCA-WR chairwoman Nora Hovsepian,
    who emphasized the community's frustration at the White House's
    posturing on the issue.

    In a November 8th Congressional letter to President Obama,
    Representatives Schiff and David Valadao (R-CA) were joined by a
    bipartisan group of over 30 U.S. Representatives - including House
    Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce (R-CA) - in calling upon
    the White House to reverse its decision to block the public display
    of the rug.

    The press conference ended with participants signing a letter to
    President Obama welcoming him to Glendale and urging him to "permit
    the public display of the Armenian Genocide-era rug woven by orphans
    of that crime against humanity."

    The letter referenced an earlier White House statement to LA Times
    reporter Richard Simon, noting that displaying the rug "for only half a
    day in connection with a private book launch event, as proposed, would
    have been an inappropriate use of U.S. government property, would have
    required the White House to undertake the risk of transporting the
    rug for limited public exposure, and was not viewed as commensurate
    with the rug's historical significance."

    The petitioners wrote that they were "pleased that the White House
    acknowledges the historical significance of this Armenian Genocide-era
    rug. Therefore, we urge you to permit its prominent exhibition and
    eventual permanent display at a location accessible to the public
    in Washington, D.C." Joining the religious and community leaders in
    signing the letter were Glendale Unified School Board President Nayiri
    Nahabedian, Glendale City College Board of Trustees Vice President
    Dr. Vahe Peroomian, and representatives from the Armenian Relief
    Society, Homenetmen Armenian Scouting and Athletic Association, All
    Armenian Students Association, Armenian Youth Federation, Armenian
    Rug Association, United Young Armenians, Armenian American Council
    on Aging, Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural Association,
    among a broad array or community supporters.

    "I look forward to presenting the letter to President Obama to honor
    American history by displaying the rug," said Councilmember Zareh
    Sinanyan, who was scheduled to attend the Obama event at Dreamworks
    Animation.

    The briefing also featured remarks by Chamlian Armenian School
    Principal Vazken Madenlian and Executive Director of the Los Angeles
    committee for the Genocide Centennial Aroutin Hartunian.

    The Armenian National Committee of America launched a nationwide
    campaign last month on the orphan rug issue after The Washington Post
    reported that a planned December 16th Smithsonian Institution exhibit
    featuring the rug, organized in conjunction with the Armenian Cultural
    Foundation and the Armenian Rug Society, was abruptly cancelled when
    the White House, reversing an earlier affirmative decision, refused
    to lend the iconic symbol of American and Armenian shared heritage
    to the museum.

    Washington Post staff writer and Pulitzer Prize winning journalist
    Philip Kennicott, reported "There was hope that the carpet, which has
    been in storage for almost 20 years, might be displayed December 16th
    as part of a Smithsonian event that would include a book launch for
    Hagop Martin Deranian's 'President Calvin Coolidge and the Armenian
    Orphan Rug.' But on September 12th, the Smithsonian scholar who helped
    organize the event canceled it, citing the White House's decision not
    to loan the carpet. In a letter to two Armenian American organizations,
    Paul Michael Taylor, director of the institution's Asian cultural
    history program, had no explanation for the White House's refusal to
    allow the rug to be seen and said that efforts by the U.S. ambassador
    to Armenia, John A. Heffern, to intervene had also been unavailing."

    Kennicott described the controversy as "a sign of the Obama
    administration's dismal reputation in the Armenian American community
    that everyone assumes... must be yet another slap in the face for
    Armenians seeking to promote understanding of one of the darkest
    chapters in 20th-century history."

    The White House response thus far has been vague - with National
    Security Staff Assistant Press Secretary Laura Magnuson initially
    offering the following comment to the Asbarez Armenian Newspaper:
    "The Ghazir rug is a reminder of the close relationship between the
    peoples of Armenia and the United States. We regret that it is not
    possible to loan it out at this time." A statement with the same
    exact wording was released by the White House last week and included
    in Kennicott's article.

    The Armenian orphan rug measures 11â~@² 7â~@³ x 18â~@² 5â~@³ and
    is comprised of 4,404,206 individual knots. It took Armenian girls
    in the Ghazir Orphanage of Near East Relief 10 months to weave. The
    rug was delivered to the President Coolidge on December 4, 1925, in
    time for Christmas, with a label on the back of the rug, which reads
    "IN GOLDEN RULE GRATITUDE TO PRESIDENT COOLIDGE."

    According to Missak Kelechian, an expert on this topic, the gift of
    the Armenian Orphan rug was widely covered in U.S. media, including
    in the New York Times in 1925 and the Washington Post in 1926.

    Additional information about the history of the Armenian Orphan Rug
    is available in Dr. Hagop Martin Deranian's book, "President Coolidge
    and the Armenian Orphan Rug," published on October 20, 2013, by the
    Armenian Cultural Foundation and soon to be available on Amazon.com.

    http://asbarez.com/116678/religious-and-community-leaders-decry-white-house-
    ban-of-%E2%80%98orphan-rug%E2%80%99/

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