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Armenian Genocide Commemoration, Awareness A Cross-Generational Affa

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  • Armenian Genocide Commemoration, Awareness A Cross-Generational Affa

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATION, AWARENESS A CROSS-GENERATIONAL AFFAIR

    Los Angeles Daily News
    April 2 2015

    By Adam Poulisse, Los Angeles Daily News

    Yevnigue Salibian has the mental and physical scars to prove what
    the country of Turkey won't acknowledge.

    The 100-year-old resident of Ararat Home, a Mission Hills nursing
    facility for Southern California Armenians, stayed in the Turkish
    city of Aintab with her family until 1921, after six years of seeing
    thousands of Armenians being forced out or killed at the end of the
    Ottoman empire. The Salibians were allowed to stay because the family
    was on good terms with the local mayor, but neighborhood children
    were hustled out, right by their home, screaming for food and water,
    Salibian recalled.

    Finally the Salibians too had to leave in 1921 after the Turkish-Franco
    War ended because the French were no longer going to be around to
    help protect Armenians. While fleeing she was in a horse carriage
    wreck that left the young girl badly bruised and killed another woman.

    Today marks the 99th anniversary of the start of the Armenian Genocide,
    and the Republic of Turkey still hasn't acknowledged it.

    "Let them come and see the scar on my knee," Salibian said, with a
    caregiver translating. "That's my reminder every day."

    On Wednesday, Turkey Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan released
    a statement in nine languages expressing the "shared pain" felt in
    Turkey. It was seen as an unprecedented statement of condolences,
    but most Armenian groups said it didn't go nearly far enough.

    "It is indisputable that the last years of the Ottoman empire
    were a difficult period, full of suffering for Turkish, Kurdish,
    Arab, Armenian and millions of other Ottoman citizens, regardless
    of their religion or ethnic origin," Erdogan statement reads. "Any
    conscientious, fair and humanistic approach to these issues requires an
    understanding of all the sufferings endured in this period, without
    discriminating as to religion or ethnicity."

    Few Armenians see that episode of history as a time of shared suffering
    with the Turks. The Armenian National Committee of America said his
    words were just another form of genocide denial.

    "Mr. Erdogan's statement ... is a patently transparent attempt
    to mute international condemnation and calls for justice for the
    centrally planned and systematically executed campaign of murder and
    deportation," the group said.

    This year, Armenian youngsters born generations later are keeping the
    spirit of their ancestors alive and maintaining the fight for Turkey
    to acknowledge the tragedy with vigils, protests, memorials and art
    today and Friday.

    http://www.dailynews.com/general-news/20140423/armenian-genocide-commemoration-awareness-a-cross-generational-affair

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