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Armenian prayer rug to be displayed at White House

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  • Armenian prayer rug to be displayed at White House

    89.3 KPCC , CA
    May 1 2014

    Armenian prayer rug to be displayed at White House

    Kitty Felde


    After months of negotiation and Congressional pressure, the White
    House has agreed to display a nearly century-old rug made by Armenian
    orphan girls.

    The rug was a thank you gift to the United States in 1925 for American
    assistance when Armenians were targeted by Ottoman Turks. More than a
    million Armenians were killed in what is widely considered a genocide.

    In accepting the rug, President Calvin Coolidge said it "has a place
    of honor in the White House where it will be a daily symbol of
    goodwill on earth." The carpet was displayed at the White House in
    1984 and 1995, but ended up in storage.

    Now, Democratic Congressman Adam Schiff, whose district includes the
    heavily-Armenian areas of Glendale and East Hollywood, says the White
    House has agreed to display the rug this fall. Schiff says it's "one
    of the more tangible artifacts of the genocide," but also an example
    of "our proud tradition of helping others around the world in need."

    Schiff says in the early 20th century the Near East Relief
    Organization raised today's equivalent of $1 billion to help genocide
    victims and became the model for USAID and other international relief
    programs.

    The White House turned down a request last year to display the rug in
    conjunction with an event at the Smithsonian to celebrate a book about
    the tapestry. Last fall, nearly three dozen members of Congress wrote
    to the President, asking him to "release this American treasure for
    exhibition." Schiff says, "It's hard for me to believe that Turkish
    sensibilities were not also not part of the equation."

    Turkey is an important U.S. military ally. The Turkish government has
    in the past dismissed the term "genocide," saying the number of deaths
    is inflated and the victims were caught in the middle of a civil war.

    But just this month, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    publicly said his nation was "ready to confront" its history, offering
    condolences to Armenia over what he called "our shared pain," and
    saying Armenians and Turks should research together to document what
    happened. In response, Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian accused
    Turkey of "utter denial."

    It's likely that more debate will happen between now and when the rug
    is scheduled to go on display this fall. But Schiff says he doesn't
    think "there will be any going back in terms of the White House's
    commitment."

    The head of the Armenian Assembly of America, Bryan Ardouny says, "The
    display of this tangible expression of gratitude for America's
    humanitarian intervention to save the survivors of the Armenian
    Genocide is a positive development."

    http://www.scpr.org/blogs/politics/2014/04/30/16504/armenian-prayer-rug-to-be-displayed-at-white-house/

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