Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

NY: Armenians to mark genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • NY: Armenians to mark genocide

    The Journal News, NY
    April 17 2005

    Armenians to mark genocide
    By SULAIMAN BEG


    Thousands of Armenians from the Northeast will gather in Times Square
    on April 24 to mark the 90th anniversary of the massacre of 1.5
    million Armenians in the first genocide of the 20th century.

    "If you ignore these events and allow them to be forgotten than you
    encourage them to be repeated," said Richard Sarajian of Chestnut
    Ridge, a member of the Joint Committee to Commemorate the 90th
    Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, which organized the event.

    "If people acted with respect to the Armenian genocide, there might
    not have been a Jewish Holocaust," he said.

    On April 24, 1915, the massacre began when about 200 Armenian
    religious, political and intellectual leaders were rounded up and
    killed by the Turkish Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey never has accepted responsibility for the genocide or tried to
    make reparations, said Sarajian, a New City-based lawyer whose
    great-grandfather was one of the 2.5 million Armenians living in the
    Ottoman Empire. The man was taken from his home in the middle of the
    night and later killed.

    Politicians from around the country, Armenian clergy, genocide
    survivors, scholars, civil rights leaders and author Dr. Peter
    Balakian will address the crowd at various points in the day.

    Before the noon rally in Times Square, two church services will be
    held at Manhattan's two Armenian cathedrals. After the rally, an
    ecumenical requiem service will be held at St. Patrick's Cathedral.

    "We'll also talk about genocides going on now," said Sarajian,
    chairman of the National Executive Council of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church of America, one of the sponsoring organizations. "Like the
    situation in Darfur. There is genocide going on and we remain silent.
    We can't remain silent on genocide - in the past or the present."

    Even though it happened nearly a century ago, most Armenians still
    bear the psychological scars, said Karekin Kasparian, pastor of St.
    Gregory the Enlightener Armenian Church in White Plains. The day of
    remembrance, he said, was a chance to heal emotional scars.

    "Directly or indirectly, someone from their family was a victim of
    the genocide," he said of the nearly 1,900 people of Armenian descent
    living in Rockland and Westchester counties.

    Kasparian said that 37 American states have issued proclamations
    recognizing the murder of Armenians from 1915 to 1923 and that
    recently 142 members of Congress signed a letter to President Bush
    asking him to appropriately recognize the tragedy.

    Rep. Nita Lowey, D-Harrison, a member of the Congressional Caucus on
    Armenian Issues, signed the letter and sent a commemoration letter to
    the Armenian National Committee of America and St. Gregory in White
    Plains, pledging her support to the Armenian nation.

    "Blind hatred and senseless prejudice tear at the very fabric of our
    society even today," Lowey wrote. "The victims of the Armenian
    genocide, the Holocaust, ethnic cleansing in Kosovo, Rwanda and
    Sudan, and acts of vicious terrorism remind us of the human cost of
    hate, and implore us to prevent these tragedies from happening again.
    .... Building a strong, prosperous Armenia is the best way to honor the
    memory of the Genocide victims."

    If you go

    What: 90th anniversary of Armenian genocide

    Where and when: The April 24 event begins with 9 a.m. church services
    at St. Vartan Cathedral (Second Avenue at 34th Street) and St.
    Illuminator's Cathedral (27th Street between Second and Third
    avenues). A noon memorial gathering will be held in Times Square
    (Broadway at 43rd Street) and a 2:30 p.m. ecumenical requiem service
    will be held at St. Patrick's Cathedral (Fifth Avenue at 50th Street).
Working...
X