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AAA: Legate of Armenian Church, Assembly Join Interfaith Community

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  • AAA: Legate of Armenian Church, Assembly Join Interfaith Community

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Assembly
    April 16, 2010
    Contact: Press Department
    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: (202) 393-3434


    LEGATE OF ARMENIAN CHURCH, ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA JOIN
    INTERFAITH COMMUNITY IN CONFRONTING GENOCIDE

    Senator Feingold Reiterates Importance of Genocide Affirmation

    Washington, DC - Last month, representatives of nationwide religious
    groups appealed to Congress to re-focus its attention on the genocide
    in Darfur. Archbishop Vicken Aykazian, Legate for the Diocese of the
    Armenian Church of North America joined fellow members of the
    Interfaith Sudan Working Group, a coalition of Jewish, Muslim and
    Christian organizations working for lasting peace in the troubled East
    African nation. Following a prayer breakfast at the U.S. Capitol, the
    group delivered copies of the children's fairy tale book, Humpty
    Dumpty, to all 535 Members of Congress, signifying the fragility of
    the situation in Sudan.

    "April is a particularly important month and it is heartening to know
    that it has been designated as Genocide Prevention Month in
    recognition of the fact that the Holocaust and the start of the
    genocidal atrocities that befell the Armenian, Ukrainian, Cambodian,
    Rwandan, and Darfurian peoples all took place in April," stated
    Archbishop Vicken Aykazian. "It's a shame that at the beginning of the
    21st century genocides are still taking place," continued Archbishop
    Aykazian. "If the Armenian Genocide was recognized in the beginning of
    the 20th century, maybe those genocides wouldn't have followed."

    The interfaith group met with Senator Russ Feingold (D-MN) a stalwart
    for human rights and advocate for anti-genocide policies. Archbishop
    Aykazian thanked him for his efforts on Darfur and for his
    cosponsorship of S. Res. 316, the Armenian Genocide resolution.

    Senator Feingold told the Assembly that "this horrific tragedy took
    the lives of 1.5 million Armenians and forced more than 500,000 from
    their homeland. I have repeatedly called for the U.S. Government to
    officially recognize the Armenian genocide. And as a cosponsor of a
    Senate resolution recognizing the genocide, I was pleased last month
    when the House Foreign Affairs committee passed a similar resolution."

    In addition to their efforts on Capitol Hill, the Interfaith Sudan
    Working Group placed a compelling piece in the Roll Call newspaper, of
    which the Assembly was listed as a supporter during the same week of
    the House Foreign Affairs Committee's passage of the Armenian Genocide
    resolution. The coalition's anti-genocide activities were also
    highlighted in an article in The Hill newspaper.

    Sponsored by the American Jewish World Service, faith leaders who
    participated in the prayer breakfast and book delivery included: Rabbi
    David Saperstein, Director, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism;
    Rev. Gloria White-Hammond, AME Pastor; Co-Founder, My Sister's Keeper;
    Galen Carey, Director of Government Affairs, National Association of
    Evangelicals; Archbishop Vicken Aykazian, Diocese of Armenian Church
    of America; Bishop David Jones, Episcopal Church; Imam Johari
    Abdul-Malik, Director, Community Outreach, Dar Al-Hijrah Islamic
    Center; Kirk Betts, Board Chair Emeritus, Lutheran World Relief; Dr.
    Steve Colecchi, Director of the Office of International Peace and
    Justice for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops; and Ruth
    Messinger, President, American Jewish World Service.

    "The genocide in Darfur is a vivid reminder of how the consequences of
    inaction and genocide denial continue to have profound repercussions,"
    stated Taniel Koushakjian, Assembly Grassroots Director who
    participated in the coalition's work on Capitol Hill. "Our continued
    efforts also send a powerful message to genocidal regimes - that we
    will not be bystanders, but rather upstanders."

    Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest
    Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public
    understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a
    501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.
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