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Armenian Evangelicals Remember Their People's Tragic History

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  • Armenian Evangelicals Remember Their People's Tragic History

    FAITH & CHARITY: ARMENIAN EVANGELICALS REMEMBER THEIR PEOPLE'S TRAGIC HISTORY
    By Linda Rubin

    Patch.com
    http://studiocity.patch.com/articles/faith-charity-armenian-evangelicals-remember-their-people-s-tragic-history#video-9716152
    April 26, 2012

    Sunday's service was devoted to commemorating Armenian Martyr's Day

    In the Armenian diaspora, April 24 marks the date when 250 Armenian
    intellectuals were rounded up in the Ottoman capital of Constantinople
    (now Istanbul) and executed or deported.

    Reverend Ron Tovmassian, senior pastor of Studio City's United Armenian
    Congregational Church said in the video interview that the seizure
    of the poets, musicians, publicists, editors, lawyers and doctors
    was the government's way of "cutting off the head" of the Armenian
    people in Turkey.

    While the Armenians, along with other Christians in the Ottoman Empire,
    had already been subjected to repression - even violent pogroms - for
    years, the deportation of Armenian notables, also known as Red Sunday,
    is regarded as the historic start of a campaign of displacement and
    murder now known as the Armenian Genocide*.

    An estimated 1 to 1.5 million people died as a result of massacres,
    forced marches, rapes and starvation as the population was forced into
    the Syrian desert. A reporter for The New York Times in August 1914
    repeated an unattributed report that "the roads and the Euphrates are
    strewn with corpses of exiles, and those who survive are doomed to
    certain death. It is a plan to exterminate the whole Armenian people."

    Assyrians, Syrians, and Anatolian and Pontic Greeks were also among
    those victimized.

    Every year members of Southern California's Armenian Evangelical Union
    hold a joint service to commemorate the sad date. This year the program
    took place in Studio City. Prior to the traditional Protestant Sabbath
    service, a standing room only crowd watched two historical lectures.

    Rev. Vatche Ekmekjian of Downey's Immanuel Armenian Congregational
    Church presented, in Armenian, a slide show depicting significant
    churches and educational institutions in the old country, as well as
    their leaders, all lost to Armenian evangelicals between 1895 and 1923.

    Zaven Khanjian, a member of the Studio City congregation who describes
    himself as an activist, showed a DVD narrated in Turkish by Hrant
    Dink an Armenian journalist and newspaper editor in that country who
    was decrying the 1980 seizure of an Armenian-owned summer camp by the
    Turkish government. Shortly after recording the video, and only two
    months after visiting the Studio City church in 2007, 52-year-old
    Dink was assassinated on an Instanbul street by a teenaged Turkish
    nationalist.

    Following coffee and traditional honey-soaked pastries, the audience
    and dozens more took seats in the church sanctuary where they heard
    hymns from a joint choir, messages in English and Armenian and a
    recital by students of Merdinian Armenian Evangelical School in
    Sherman Oaks. Highlights are captured in the video.

    *In 1997 the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS)
    passed a resolution unanimously recognizing the Ottoman massacres of
    Armenians as genocide however United State, Turkey and Israel are
    among the nations that have not yet accepted the resolution. In a
    sad irony, Jews of Israel and the diaspora commemorated Yom Hashoah,
    Holocaust Remembrance Day, on April 18.




    From: A. Papazian
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