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Detroit Begins Fundraising For Syrian-Armenian Relief

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  • Detroit Begins Fundraising For Syrian-Armenian Relief

    DETROIT BEGINS FUNDRAISING FOR SYRIAN-ARMENIAN RELIEF
    By Georgi-Ann Oshagan

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/11/15/detroit-begins-fundraising-for-syrian-armenian-relief/
    November 15, 2012

    Greater Detroit's Armenian community kicked off its ongoing fundraising
    program on Oct. 26 to support Syrian-Armenian relief efforts, as
    ongoing violence envelops the country's major cities that have been
    home to Armenians for hundreds of years.

    Mouradian during his presentation

    Sponsored by the Greater Detroit United Committee for Syrian Armenian
    Relief Fund, the event at St. Sarkis Lillian Arakelian Hall raised over
    $7,500. The committee continues to meet frequently to engage greater
    segments of metro Detroit's Armenian community in its work, with
    ongoing phone-banking and planning of additional fundraisers underway.

    Led by co-chairs Shakeh Basmajian and Shant Jamgotchian, the committee
    is comprised of representatives from the following metro Detroit
    churches and organizations: St. Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church, St.

    Vartan Armenian Catholic Church, and Armenian Congregational Church;
    ARF Detroit "Azadamard" Gomideh; ARS "Maro," "Shakeh," "Sybille,"
    "Tsolig," and "Zabel" Chapters; Homenetmen of Detroit; Hamazkayin
    of Detroit; Tekeyan Cultural Association; AYF Detroit "Kopernik
    Tandourjian" Chapter; Knights of Vartan of Detroit, Daughters of
    Vartan of Detroit; Detroit Armenian Women's Club; and Armenian
    Engineers and Scientists of America-Michigan Section.

    Master of Ceremonies Hayg Oshagan set the tone with a moment of silence
    for those who have lost their lives in the beleaguered country. Oshagan
    noted that he accepted the master of ceremonies job because he felt
    a particular responsibility to the Syrian-Armenian community for
    personal and political reasons connected to the 1915 Armenian Genocide
    and creation of the Armenian Diaspora. Oshagan's grandfather, noted
    author and literary critic Hagop Oshagan, is buried in Aleppo, and
    was a 1915 Armenian Genocide survivor who joined his compatriots in
    creating the Armenian Diaspora, which survives and thrives to this day.

    "We need to feel a responsibility to our families," Oshagan said. "As
    diasporans, we are from different countries and we need to remember
    our major diasporan cities: Beirut, Aleppo, and now Los Angeles and
    New York. We share a sense of responsibility toward our nation when
    our nation is suffering in some part of the world. We are suffering
    when they are suffering. The Syria-Armenian community is part of the
    Armenian nation."

    Oshagan also emphasized that the Oct. 26 effort was not merely "an
    educational event." Rather, he said, "This is an event to connect
    with our nation and we want this to be a successful fundraiser. The
    organizing committee here in Detroit is finding ways of creating unity
    because no matter where we are from, we are one nation. Fundraisers
    have occurred in many places and now it is our turn to help."

    The program's emotional underpinning was also expressed by Dr. Taline
    Hagopian in her recitation of poet Baruyr Sevag's "Gank ou ge Menank,"
    which was translated into English in the evening's program booklet.

    (L-R) Khatchig Mouradian, Hayg Oshagan, and Greater Detroit United
    Committee for Syrian Armenian Relief Fund co-chairs Shakeh Basmajian
    and Shant Jamgotchian.

    "We are few, but they call us Armenians," she recited in Armenian.

    "When we were forced to leave our own land, wherever we reached,
    wherever we went, everywhere we left an indelible trace. We do not
    put ourselves above anyone, but we know ourselves. We are called
    Armenians."

    Guest speaker Khatchig Mouradian continued to highlight the
    genocide-diaspora connection to current events in Syria with his
    slideshow and presentation entitled, "When Elephants Fight: The
    Syrian-Armenian Community in Crisis." The Armenian Weekly editor,
    journalist, and genocide scholar explained, "When elephants fight,
    it is the grass that suffers most," and in today's Syrian conflict,
    the citizens are the "grass" that is being flattened by opposing
    political forces.

    Mouradian shared fresh news about Syria's Armenian community and
    political conditions on the ground and in the region, noting that
    the ancient cities of Aleppo and Damascus are living museums that are
    being destroyed and looted as communities are caught in the conflict.

    "Several dozen Armenians have been killed that we know of," he added.

    Mouradian offered the poignant story of an Armenian who left Der Zor
    to move to Aleppo, thinking the city would be safer that the small
    desert community. Shortly after his move, he was killed by a bomb.

    Mouradian used the story to connect 1915 genocide survivors and
    orphans who arrived in Der Zor from the death marches to the current
    death and injury resulting from the continued political upheaval,
    which envelops Armenians whose links to that past connect them to an
    unstable present and an unknowable future.

    "With the link to Der Zor, we have come full circle," Mouradian
    observed.

    Concerns over Syria's Armenian and other minority populations center
    on preserving civil and religious rights, staving off censorship
    and oppression, and being watchful of Turkey's influential role
    in the Syrian conflict and its pointed effort with other allies
    to overthrow the Assad regime and impose its own agenda. It's an
    agenda that threatens to result in chaos and havoc in a country whose
    minority Christian populations "are not in the mix for cutting deals"
    with big political players.

    Some economic experts in Ankara view and approach Aleppo as a province
    of Turkey, Mouradian added, noting the additional destabilizing threats
    of the Kurdish Question and Turkey's continuing denial of the Armenian
    Genocide as factors that impact the Syrian-Armenian community and its
    future security. "This is a huge regional game that Turkey is trying
    to play."

    With regard to diasporan relief efforts, Mouradian reported that
    supplies are reaching the Syrian-Armenian community. He also showed
    a video clip of activity at a school that recently opened in Yerevan
    for about 250 children of Syrian-Armenian families who escaped the
    country for a safer haven in the homeland.

    "But for every child who is in Armenia, there are 10-20 more in Syria
    who deserve their education, and they need our help," Mouradian said.

    He concluded his presentation by noting that the Armenian community
    has survived in Syria by supporting the state, and that the current
    official community position is that the Syrian-Armenian community
    is neutral.

    United Committee co-chair Shakeh Basmajian thanked attendees and
    donors, reminding them that the community has responded to emergency
    situations in the past-including helping Beirut's Armenian community
    during the Lebanese civil war and in the aftermath of the 1988 Armenian
    earthquake-and must again respond to this newest crisis facing Syria's
    Armenian community.

    "The time to help is now," Basmajian said, noting that with the
    Christmas and New Year gift-giving season approaching, families should
    "promise to give one gift less and use that money to donate to the
    Armenians of Syria."

    The evening began with an invocation by St. Sarkis host-church pastor
    Rev. Fr. Hrant Kevorkian and ended with a benediction by Rev. Dr.

    Vahan Tootikian of the Armenian Congregational Church and Father Andon
    Atamian of St. Vartan Armenian Catholic Church. The national anthems
    were sung by Rubik Mailian, who was accompanied by Helen Movsessian.




    From: A. Papazian
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