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Glendale: Armenians get together to celebrate independence

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  • Glendale: Armenians get together to celebrate independence

    Armenians get together to celebrate independence
    Thousands gather to mark declaration of independence from Ottoman Turkey and
    Russia.
    By Fred Ortega
    (Published in Glendale Press: May 28, 2006)

    LOS ANGELES -- In a sign of their growing political clout, thousands of
    Armenians and Armenian Americans were joined Sunday by Los Angeles Mayor
    Antonio Villaraigosa for a street fair to celebrate Armenia's first
    independence day on May 28, 1918.


    The fair, held in the Little Armenia section of Hollywood along Hollywood
    Boulevard between Vermont and Alexandria avenues, featured 45 vendor booths
    selling everything from shish kebabs and Armenian bread, or lavash, to
    Armenian arts and crafts and portraits featuring traditional Armenian
    costumes.

    More than 5,000 turned out for the event, put on by the Armenian Youth
    Federation. It was the first time the event was held in Little Armenia, said
    Bo Patatian, media liaison for the Armenian Youth Federation.

    "We wanted to have it in a central place, and since 65% of the residents in
    this area are Armenian, there is no better place for this event to fit in,"
    Patatian said, adding that previous Armenian Independence Day festivals have
    been held at Glendale High School and in Pasadena.

    Armenians are blessed with two independence days, Patatian said. The first,
    in 1918, marks the date on which the Armenian National Council declared the
    country's independence from Ottoman Turkey and the old Russian Empire. That
    first Armenian republic, however, was short-lived; in 1920, the country was
    absorbed into the former Soviet Union.

    "The real independence day is Sept. 21, 1991," Patatian said, referring to
    when the modern Armenian state was born after the collapse of the Soviet
    Union. "But this first date still has a very important emotional connection
    to our people."

    Among those celebrating independence day in Little Armenia Sunday was
    Glendale Unified School District Board member Greg Krikorian.

    "This is the day on which Armenians first claimed independence, after
    surviving the genocide and stopping the Turkish armies," said Krikorian, who
    was also joined at the fair by Burbank Unified School District Board member
    and 43rd Assembly District candidate Paul Krekorian. "Being here today with
    so many different families, friends and neighbors is an emotionally moving
    time, a time to be thankful for what we have here in this country, to be
    thankful for our families, a chance to get together and enjoy life."

    Villaraigosa arrived at the event and was almost immediately mobbed by
    families who handed him their babies and shook his hand vigorously as
    Armenian love song crooner Paul Baghdadlian wailed in the background and
    dozens of people performed an impromptu, traditional Armenian dance on the
    stage.

    "This is an opportunity for all of us to celebrate not just the
    independence, but the fact that Armenians play such an important role here
    in Los Angeles, being part of the largest Armenian population outside of
    Armenia," said Villaraigosa, whose city officially declared the Hollywood
    neighborhood Little Armenia in 2000. "We appreciate all the contributions
    they have made and continue to make to our city."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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