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Liu Honors Armenian Genocide Survivors

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  • Liu Honors Armenian Genocide Survivors

    LIU HONORS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SURVIVORS

    Western Queens Gazette, NY
    May 18 2006

    Arshalous Dadir received a City Council citation from Councilmember
    John Liu. Dadir is a survivor of the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

    City Councilmember John Liu hosted a commemoration of the Armenian
    Genocide at the New York Armenian Home, 13731 45th Ave., Flushing,
    on May 9. Liu specifically chose the date because May 9, "Victory
    and Peace Day", celebrates the end of World War ll in Europe and has
    special significance for many Armenians.

    Between 1915 and 1923, two million Armenians living in Turkey were
    driven from their historic homeland through forced deportation or were
    massacred. Currently, eight million Armenians live in communities
    throughout the world where they were dispersed or to which they
    immigrated, but only three million live in Armenia.

    Liu presented four Genocide survivors, Israel Arabian, Ornorik Eminian,
    Arshalous Dadir and Kristine Naldjian, with City Council Citations
    in recognition of their courage and strength in the face of adversity:

    + Israel Arabian was born in Harpert in 1905. He was orphaned early
    in life and raised by an older sister. During the Armenian Genocide,
    his sister was captured and enslaved. Arabian escaped capture because
    his sister screamed to him in Armenian to run away. He hid in a forest
    and moved only at night. Eventually, he met other Armenian runaways
    who were able to board a ship traveling to Greece, where Arabian was
    placed in an orphanage.

    Standing (l. to r.): Chuck Apelian, Community Board 7 vice chairman;
    Liu; Robert G. Kallem, chairman, New York Armenian Home board of
    directors; Aghavni "Aggie" Ellian, New York Armenian Home executive
    director; seated l. to r.): Arshalous Dadir, Israel Arabian, Kristine
    Naldjian and Onorik Eminian, all recipients of city Council citations
    as 1915 Armenian Genocide survivors.

    + Ornorik Eminian was born in 1912. Her parents, sister, and two
    brothers were killed in the Armenian Genocide. She was picked up by
    the Red Cross and put in an orphanage in Turkey. Turkish soldiers
    later came to the orphanage and took away all the teachers. All the
    children were later transferred to Greece, where Eminian remained
    until she came to the United States in 1930.

    + Arshalous Dadir was born in Shapenkaresar, Turkey. Her father was
    murdered in the Armenian Genocide. Her uncle, her father's brother, a
    doctor, was one of 300 martyrs killed on April 24, 1915 when Armenian
    leaders, including members of the Turkish parliament, were arrested
    and murdered. The resulting lack of leadership was to have a profound
    political and emotional effect on the survivors. The loss is felt
    even today.

    + Kristine Naldjian was born in 1907 in the village of Boursa,
    Turkey. Her entire family was murdered, but before her mother was
    killed, she told Naldjian to hide. Naldjian passed out and woke to
    find herself surrounded by dead bodies. She was taken in by a Turkish
    couple who renamed her Fatima and kept her as a slave for many years.

    When she was a teenager, she went to the market one day and met some
    friends from Boursa who helped her to escape.

    "The lives of the four honorees are a testimony to the triumph of the
    human spirit," Liu declared. "All of them endured horrific loss of
    family and country during what is often called 'the first Holocaust of
    the 20th century'. The four citizens we honor were able to rise above
    the horrors of the Armenian [Genocide] and go on to lead admirable
    and productive lives."

    http://www.qgazette.com/news/2006/0517/fe atures/028.html
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