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Genocide Escaped Armenians Tell About Turks' Brutalities

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  • Genocide Escaped Armenians Tell About Turks' Brutalities

    GENOCIDE ESCAPED ARMENIANS TELL ABOUT TURKS' BRUTALITIES

    Panorama.am
    12:24 25/03/2010
    Society

    "The Queens Gazette" New York based magazine referred to Armenian
    Genocide in one of its publications stating that thousands of Armenians
    living in America will pay tribute on 25 April to 1.5 annihilated
    Armenians under Ottoman Empire.

    "Known as the first genocide of the 20th Century, the Armenian Genocide
    lasted from 1894 until 1923," paper writes.

    Referring to some historic details, the reporter spoke at the New York
    Armenian Home with Genocide escaped Armenians about their experiences
    during the Armenian Genocide.

    97-year-old Charlotte Kechejian, recollects walking for miles through
    the desert with her mother to escape persecution by the Turks. She
    remembers them feeling tired, thirsty, and hungry in the desert and
    her mother kept promising her that if she would walk a little while
    longer she could then rest and be comfortable. "We kept walking and my
    mother kept saying a little bit more, a little bit more," Kechejian
    said. "But the end never came." Only when an adult she learnt that
    Turks killed her father.

    Another resident of New York Armenian home, Oronik Eminian born in
    Izmir told she was only 3 when Turkish cavalry officers rode into her
    town. The officers arrested her father. Some time later they returned,
    this time with a bag. When young Eminian answered the door, a young
    officer knelt down and asked "Do you want to see you father?" He
    then opened the bag, revealing bloody clothes and gore. "Here is your
    father!" the officer said. Eminian started to scream and the officer
    cracked her head open with the butt of a rifle. Her mother began to
    cry. The group of soldiers entered the home and killed her mother and
    grandmother. They bashed her two-month-old brother against a wall,
    killing him, too. Rescued by the Red Cross, Eminian left for Greece
    and remained there before coming to the United States in 1930.

    Third genocide escaped Arsalo Dadir born 1913 in Shabin Karahisar had
    seen her father and her uncle, a doctor, murdered during the April
    24 massacre in Constantinople.

    "I can remember the Turks removing hundreds of people from their homes
    and taking them to the town square where they were shot," Dadir said.

    "I saw hundreds of bodies piled up."

    "The most incriminating document is the record kept by Talaat Pasha,
    the chief instigator and sponsor of the Armenian Genocide. In it is a
    minute record of the progress of the genocidal expulsions. He counted
    900,000 victims in 1915 alone," Dr. Dennis R. Papazian, a professor
    of the Armenian Research Center at the University of Michigan stated.

    Paper concludes the Genocide served as a lesson for other tyrannical
    regimes. Adolph Hitler, when asked by his general staff on the eve
    of the invasion of Poland what the world would think and how they
    would be judged by history, replied, "It doesn't matter. After all,
    who today remembers the extermination of the Armenians?"
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