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Glendale: Blood Drive Honors Genocide Victims

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  • Glendale: Blood Drive Honors Genocide Victims

    BLOOD DRIVE HONORS GENOCIDE VICTIMS
    Zain Shauk

    Glendale News Press
    http://www.glendalenewspress.com/articles/20 10/04/18/news/gnp-blood041910.txt
    April 19 2010
    CA

    Armenian National Committee's fifth annual event stresses importance
    of giving back to the community.

    SOUTH GLENDALE -- The city's week of Armenian Genocide-related
    commemorative events kicked off Sunday with a blood drive in honor
    of those who died during past atrocities, organizers said.

    The Armenian National Committee's fifth annual blood drive was expected
    to draw more than 80 donors for collections facilitated by the American
    Red Cross, said Elen Asatryan, executive director of the committee's
    Glendale chapter.

    Blood collected through the event, held the Krikor & Mariam
    Karamanoukian Glendale Youth Center, was expected to be used for
    medical procedures at local hospitals, Asatryan said.

    "We wanted to establish an event that would not only remember the
    victims of the genocide but also to do something to give back to the
    community," Asatryan said.

    The event was the first of a series to be held in Glendale to reflect
    on man's acts of mass killings and atrocities throughout history.

    The Glendale Public Library hosted a panel discussion and presentation
    Sunday afternoon commemorating the 95th anniversary of the Armenian
    Genocide.

    The library will also host an opening reception at 6:30 p.m. Monday
    for the annual "Man's Inhumanity to Man" event and will also host a
    discussion as part of the event series at 7 p.m. Thursday.

    The Glendale Unified School District will host "Nine Decades of Denial"
    at 7 p.m. Thursday at Glendale High School.

    The city's commemorative events will culminate at 6:30 p.m. Friday
    with an evening of reflection at the Alex Theatre, to be attended by
    area politicians and community leaders.

    The blood drive Sunday was an important part of the commemorative
    week because it focused on taking action, Asatryan said.

    "We figured 1.5 million lives were lost in 1915, and this is our way
    of saving lives for this generation and trying to incorporate a civic
    responsibility for future generations to give back," she said.

    Visitors at the drive agreed that the blood drive offered a simple
    way to promote life.

    "If I'm healthy, why not?" Glendale resident Armine Abrahamian said.

    There is always a need for blood during medical procedures, so the
    drive offered an opportunity to provide it, donors said.

    "There may be a day that I need it too, or it could be a friend or
    family that needs my blood," said Raffi Romanossian, of Sunland.
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