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Peabody Remembers Armenian Genocide

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  • Peabody Remembers Armenian Genocide

    PEABODY REMEMBERS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Jenny Amaral

    The Daily Item of Lynn
    April 18 2008
    MA

    PEABODY - The deep red, blue, and orange colors of the Armenian flag
    stood out against the cloudless sky as it was raised in front of
    City Hall Thursday afternoon in remembrance of the 93rd anniversary
    of the Armenian Genocide.

    The ceremony has become a meaningful tradition in Peabody since
    former Mayor Peter Torigian, whose father was a Genocide survivor,
    first organized the event 30 years ago.

    "Pete was not only a great mayor, he was someone who had a great love
    for Armenian people," said Mayor Michael Bonfanti. "He made me see
    the light."

    The day began with the raising of the flag by the only Genocide
    survivor able to attend this year's event, 98-year-old Carl Mootafian
    of Salem. All of 4-foot-11 and dressed for the occasion in a black pea
    coat, slacks, and dress shoes, topped with a scally cap, he proudly
    and loudly led the singing of the Armenian national anthem in his
    native tongue.

    Moving inside to Wiggin Auditorium, Bonfanti addressed the dozens
    of supporters in attendance. He said that he was proud of the city's
    religious, ethnic, and cultural tolerance, as well as their support
    in recognizing what many parts of the world deny ever happened.

    "Let us not forget," he said. From 1915-1923, the Turkish Ottoman
    Empire organized the brutal killing of over 1.5 million Armenians
    living in Turkey. Many were slaughtered and others were forced out
    into the ocean to drown or sent to the dessert to die beneath the
    hot sun. To this day, the Turkish government remains in denial of
    any such massacre.

    "We must never forget atrocities that were and are still being
    committed by man to his fellow man," Bonfanti said, adding that he is
    both "horrified and repulsed" by what he's seen and "can't comprehend
    the inhumanity."

    Recently, Bonfanti announced that Peabody would no longer associate
    with the Anti Defamation League's No Place For Hate Program because
    they do not recognize the Armenian Genocide as a historical fact.

    "I thought it was the right thing to do," said Bonfanti, who earned
    the title of "honorary Armenian."

    After the Rev. Stepan Baljian of St. Stephen's Church in Watertown
    gave a blessing and requiem, local Armenian filmmaker Apo Torosyan
    showed his short documentary "Witnesses."

    "It's not a wonderful story, but it's something that'll remain
    forever," he said. The film told the horrific stories of two women
    who experienced the Armenian Genocide at the tender ages of 8 and 11.

    Several others spoke, including Patrice Tierney, wife of state
    Rep. John Tierney; the daughters of former Mayor Torigian; and Tom
    Vartabedian of the Armenian Genocide Commemorative Committee of the
    Merrimack Valley.

    "We as Armenians have recovered from a terrible blow," said
    Vartabedian, who urged audience members to spread their message to
    today's youth. "This is not a persecution of a race, but a preservation
    of a nation."
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