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  • Student Groups Remember Genocide

    STUDENT GROUPS REMEMBER GENOCIDE
    Silva Sevlian

    Daily Trojan Online, CA
    Univ. of Southern California
    April 25 2008

    Students remember Armenian genocide victims with music and speeches.

    Naritsa Kazanjian cannot trace back her family linage more than two
    generations, a fate common among Armenians because of the Armenian
    genocide, which left 1.5 million people dead.

    "My grandfather doesn't know who his parents are," said Kazanjian,
    a junior majoring in accounting.

    "Kazanjian is not even my last name - it is the name he took from
    his adopted family."

    Members of the Armenian Students' Association and the Armenian Graduate
    Students' Association hosted a one-hour ceremony Thursday honoring
    the genocide victims, and demonstrated the vitality of the Armenian
    culture both on campus and post-genocide.

    "Remembering the Past, Celebrating the Future" featured students,
    scholars and musicians and was the culmination of a week-long effort
    to raise awareness about the culture's past.

    Father Vazken Movsesian, executive director of the St. Peter Armenian
    Church, spoke about his visit to Rwanda and said the political climate
    felt familiar.

    "I had one foot in the first genocide of the 20th century and one
    foot in the last," Movsesian said. "I saw what my grandparents told
    me about, and that same evil continues in Darfur."

    Movsesian said that the genocides that have taken place in Armenia and
    in other countries such as Darfur are in the hands of the government.

    "Let it be clear in your heads that it was not a couple of Turkish men
    that got up and killed Armenians - it was a government," Movessian
    said.

    Although the event attracted many members of the USC community, others
    came from outside the university to be part of the commemoration and
    share their family's story of genocide.

    "When he was sixteen, my grandfather saw a Turkish solider smash the
    face of a 2-month-old baby with his rifle because she was Armenian,"
    Maraslian said.

    Students from the USC Turkish Student Association were at the event
    claiming the Armenian deaths arose from fighting during World War I
    and not a deliberate campaign to wipe out the Armenian population.

    Kanakara Navasartian, a graduate student studying strategic public
    relations and president of the Armenian Graduate Students' Association
    said, "The students were inappropriate and their reactive tactic was
    disrespectful on a day where California's governor and the state has
    recognized [April 24] as a day of remembrance."

    Turkish students held up signs facing the stage in front of Tommy
    Trojan and argued with members of the Armenian group who encouraged
    both the Turkish students and the current Turkish government to
    recognize the Armenian Genocide as a part of its history.

    Caroline Cha, a junior majoring in international relations, said her
    only knowledge about the Armenian genocide comes from literature she
    has read in her international relations courses.

    "The more I read about the flagrant human rights abuses and the
    systematic killing of people, the more I sympathize for the Armenians
    who have come here to honor their heritage," Cha said.

    Magdiel Ledesma, a student visiting from Mira Costa Community College,
    said the event is his first exposure to information about the Armenian
    Genocide.

    "The tone of the instruments gets inside of your heart and makes you
    feel the sadness of genocide," Ledesma said.

    Non-profit organizations such as the "Never Again" campaign, lead by
    Armenian fraternity Alpha Epsilon Omega, are raising funds to create
    educational projects to disseminate to students at junior and senior
    high school schools.

    The event on USC's campus is one of many that occurred in the Los
    Angeles County Thursday to commemorate the lives that were lost and
    to protest the denial of the genocide.

    Members of the Armenian community marched the streets of Little
    Armenia, protested in front of the Turkish Embassy and children in
    Glendale participated in a 30-hour fast.
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