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  • Not forgetting genocide victims

    Edgewater View (Bergen, North Jersey)
    May 2, 2014


    Not forgetting genocide victims

    by Chris Perez


    HACKENSACK - Friends, families, and neighbors gathered on April 24 in
    front of the Bergen County Courthouse on the anniversary of the
    Armenian Genocide for a day of remembrance and reflection.

    County officials and local members of the Armenian community,
    including The Knights and Daughters of Vartan, were in attendance to
    remember the 1.5 million lives that were lost at the hands of the
    Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1920.

    Every year, Armenians of Bergen County have held a requiem service at
    the Genocide Memorial in Hackensack in remembrance of those who lost
    their lives.

    This is the 24th meeting since the memorial was dedicated in the
    summer of 1990, and is the 99th anniversary of the day these events
    took place.

    "The Armenian Genocide should not be forgotten," said John Lawrence
    Shahdanian, past commander of the Knights of Vartan. "We have to speak
    about it, we have to tell the story, and we have to let others know."

    Beginning on April 24, 1915, this genocide, which forced countless
    numbers of people from their homes and into prison, was the first of
    the 20th century.

    The systematic destruction took place during and after World War 1,
    and forced people to march hundreds of miles without food or water,
    where they were ultimately massacred indiscriminately of age or
    gender.

    Shahdanian opened the program with the story of his grandfather, a
    U.S. citizen who had been murdered during the genocide.

    "He was taken from his home, thrown into jail with other Armenians in
    Turkey, and one day, he just wasn't there anymore," he said. "The word
    was they had taken them into a field and shot them all. They were
    never found, they were never buried."

    At that point, Shahdanian said his father, who was 9 years old, had
    convinced his mother to leave the area and relocate to a family
    business in Istanbul.

    "The most important thing we can do is remember our ancestors and what
    happened to them so our children don't forget and so the world doesn't
    forget," he said.

    The keynote speaker for the event was Khatchig Mouradian, an adjunct
    professor at Rutgers University and editor of the Armenian Weekly.

    "There is an importance in our environment for recognizing injustice,"
    Mouradian told the crowd. "If we can find time to dedicate ourselves
    to truth and justice, the world would be a better place."

    After the program, Mouradian said that events like these are great
    opportunities to once again renew their call for the United States and
    eventually Turkey to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    Mouradian believes that the United States, which has hosted and
    embraced many survivors of this tragedy, has a duty to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide on the federal level.

    "We must acknowledge the stories of the children and grandchildren who
    are gathered here today and who are first-hand witnesses to the
    stories of the survivors," Mouradian said.

    The Armenian clergy led guests in prayer, sang hymns and laid red
    carnations in front of the memorial stone in remembrance of those who
    lost their lives.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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