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Retrial of military officers accused of plotting coup starts in Turkey

November 3, 2014 By administrator

184349The retrial of 236 military officers accused of plotting a coup to overthrow the government of then-Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan began Monday, Nov 3, months after the country’s highest court ruled that the suspects’ right to a fair trial had been violated, the Associated Press reports.

In 2012, a total of 326 officers were convicted of plotting to overthrow the country’s Islamic-based government in 2003 in a plot dubbed “Sledgehammer,” receiving sentences of up to 20 years imprisonment.

In June, Turkey’s constitutional court ordered many of the officers released pending a retrial.

The original trial helped curtail the military’s hold on Turkish politics, but the case was marred by the suspects’ long pre-trial confinement and judicial flaws, including allegations of fabricated evidence.

 

AP. Retrial begins in Turkey of alleged coup plot

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: military, Trial, Turkey

102 years old, the survivor of the Armenian Genocide Hope yet (Video)

November 2, 2014 By administrator

arton104906-480x351Anahit Minasyan and Tatevik Gregoras

Photos Arthur Harutyunian

Armenpress

Aknalich October 21

The Armenian Genocide, undertaken by the Ottoman Empire during the First World War the beginning of last century, is one of the greatest crimes against humanity. As we approach the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the new project set up by Armenpress agency is dedicated to the history of witnesses and survivors of the disaster to show the world once again that our request for Genocide recognition Armenian is fair and justified. This time the story is Arshaluys Muradyan, citizen of the town of Echmiadzin Aknalich District, in the region of Ararat. She was born in 1912. “Do you think we came voluntarily? The Turks attacked us and killed and we came here. Thank God we survived, “- it was with these words that the old lady of 102 years begins his story. Arshaluys to save his parents were lying in a cart and have covered in grass.

Those who lived those events reported that many at that time have used this method to hide their children and prevent it from being removed. The family was able to Armenia is without the loss of one of its members. It was established in the village of Alagyaz before moving to Aknalich.

Armenian Genocide
102 years old, the survivor of the Genocide Hope yet
 Anahit Minasyan and Tatevik Gregoras

Photos Arthur Harutyunian

Armenpress

Aknalich October 21

The Armenian Genocide, undertaken by the Ottoman Empire during the First World War the beginning of last century, is one of the greatest crimes against humanity. As we approach the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the new project set up by Armenpress agency is dedicated to the history of witnesses and survivors of the disaster to show the world once again that our request for Genocide recognition Armenian is fair and justified. This time the story is Arshaluys Muradyan, citizen of the town of Echmiadzin Aknalich District, in the region of Ararat. She was born in 1912. “Do you think we came voluntarily? The Turks attacked us and killed and we came here. Thank God we survived, “- it was with these words that the old lady of 102 years begins his story. Arshaluys to save his parents were lying in a cart and have covered in grass.

Those who lived those events reported that many at that time have used this method to hide their children and prevent it from being removed. The family was able to Armenia is without the loss of one of its members. It was established in the village of Alagyaz before moving to Aknalich.

“The Turks have confined forty young in a barn and set it on fire. We Armenians went through terrible days because of the Turks, “says Arshaluys Muradyan.

In 1933, the heroine of this story Sahak married a man from her village, and gave birth to ten children. Despite the many difficulties in his life, the old lady believes she was lucky. She has helped over a hundred unborn children.

The Muradyans surrounded the older members of the family for all their care and all their affection. They talk smiling passion of their grandmother for Armenian serials. There are three years, the whole family celebrated the 100th anniversary of grandmother Arshaluys; On this occasion, she sang and danced. Those who lived the time of the massacres wants peace on the world and that youth is happy and healthy.

Translation Gilbrt Béguian for Armenews

Sunday, November 2, 2014,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: 102 years old, armenian genocide, survivor

FRANCE, MARSEILLE 100th Anniversary of Genocide: Everest for memory

November 2, 2014 By administrator

arton104907-480x349With a draft amended Ara Khatchadourian extreme athlete, to conquer Everest in spring 2015

This is a man who constantly challenge the taste of the challenge and the desire to push the limits. Armenian born in Lebanon, Ara Khatchadourian left the country ravaged by war in 1983 and arrived in France. Jeweler by trade, he became a sport of extreme passion. He ran his first marathon in Lebanon in 2004 at the age of 40 years. For ten years, his record has been enriched by several legendary races like the Iron Man Nice and 100 km of Millau in which he participated. And above all, Ara has made the climb more mountains of legend, such as the Mont Blanc in 2007, Mount Ararat in 2011, Kilimanjaro in 2012 and this year, the Lenin Peak in Kyrgyzstan.

Surrounded by Gerard Kirkorian, Running for President of Memory and Pascal Chamassian, honorary president, Ara Khatchadourian presented Thursday, October 30 at the association’s headquarters in Marseille, his next goal: the ascent of Everest in occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in 1915.

“This expedition, says Pascal Chamassian, will deliver a message of peace, justice and memory. The names of those who helped make this happen Ara, will be placed on a flag that will be planted at the top of Everest. There is a collective dimension and universal scope in the ascent of Everest and a Marseille dimension. Marseille has hosted many survivors of the Genocide is known worldwide. We are proud, says Pascal Chamassian that this project be left Marseille with Ara Khatchadourian is Marseille. “

“My father gave me a taste of the challenge. I like to go after my goals, says Ara. I have nothing more to prove on a sporting level. In achieving this feat, I want to bring something of value. I started my preparation by performing all 1h 30 days of weight training, running 1 hour, 1 hour of swimming and cycling. In the evening, I jog. Yoga is the basis of my mental preparation, “says Ara which starts with thirty people, including German and Spanish climbers.

To finance this project, it takes 100 000 euros. A subscription was launched with businesses and individuals with the slogan “Your name at the top of the world” and a symbolic initial bet of 10 euros per meter Everest! Thursday, October 30th, in the evening, a hundred people were present at the launch of the project at the headquarters of the JAF.

All information of the “1915-2015: the Everest memory” are available on the official website of CCSM and various social networks.

http: //www.courirpourlamémoire.com mail: contact@courirpourlamémoire.com
Facebook: Run For The Memory
Twitter:CPLM
A donation form will be available on the site. It is possible to send a check. It will soon be possible to make an online donation in a simple, fast and totally secure.
According to the donation to the association, it is possible to receive a tax credit (see the conditions: http://impotsurlerevenu.org/reductions-et-credits-d-impots/101-dons-aux -associations.php   Gilbert DULAC

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Ara Khatchadourian, France, Genocide

Russia test-fires Topol-M intercontinental ballistic missile

November 2, 2014 By administrator

Topol-MThe Russian Strategic Missile Forces test-fired on Saturday a Topol-M intercontinental ballistic missile from a launch site in northwestern Russia, the country’s Defense Ministry said, according to RIA Novosti.

“The (MBR) RT-2PM2 ,Topol-M’, a silo-based intercontinental ballistic missile, was launched on November 1, at 9:20 a.m. [local time, or 6:20 GMT] from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome,” the ministry said in a statement.

The launch was carried out to test Topol-M’s technical features. According to the statement, the missile demonstrated its high precision capabilities and overall good performance, hitting a designated target at a test range on Russia’s Kamchatka peninsula.

The Defense Ministry said previously that Topol-M and RS-24 ballistic missiles would be the mainstays of the ground-based component of Russia’s nuclear triad and would account for no less than 80 percent of the SMF’s arsenal by 2016.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ballistic missile, Russia, topol-m

Turkey’s move for Kobani skeptical, suspicious – analyst

November 2, 2014 By administrator

Erdogan-Brazanyon-the-lapTurkey’s move to allow Iraqi Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) forces, known as Peshmerga, to enter the Syrian town of Kobani is skeptical and suspicious, says an activist.

Sabah Jawad, director of the Iraqi Democrats against Occupation from London, said in an interview with Press TV that the move by Turkey and supported by Masrour Barzani group in Iraqi Kurdistan is a bit “skeptical and suspicious.”

“The Turkish government does not hide its intention of creating an exclusion zone near the frontiers of Turkey and Syria, and Barzani group actually has very strong alliance with Erdogan government against the central government in Iraq and they have been collaborating to basically isolate the central government in Iraq and plot against it,” the activist stated, referring to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Peshmerga forces await further reinforcements to enter the Syrian town of Kobani on the Turkish border to assist Kurds in the fight against the ISIL Takfiri militants.

The Syrian Kurdish fighters in Kobani say a group of ten Peshmerga fighters entered the besieged city on Thursday through the border crossing with Turkey to study the geography of the area. The group has temporarily left the city.

The Turkish government had long been refusing the Kurds to join the anti-ISIL fight, but Ankara unexpectedly announced last week that it would allow the Peshmerga to enter Kobani through the Turkish border.

The activist said Turkey considers the Kurdish resistance fighters in Kobani as terrorists but at the same time it declares that it wants to help the Kurds with the support of Barzani group in Iraq.

Kobani and its surroundings have been under attack since mid-September, with the ISIL militants capturing dozens of nearby Kurdish villages and killing hundreds of people. More than 200,000 people have also fled across the border into Turkey.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Barazani, Erdogan, kobani

Karabakh court issues details from Azerbaijani saboteurs’ video recordings

November 2, 2014 By administrator

saboteursThe court hearing of the criminal case into the two members of an Azerbaijani intelligence-gathering sabotage team continued Friday at the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR), or Artsakh, capital city Stepanakert Court of First Instance.

At this hearing, the court issued details from the video recordings which the Azerbaijani saboteurs had made.

Artsakhpress reported that to Prosecutor Karen Gabrielyan’s question to defendant Dilham Askerov as to why he had earlier stated that they had not come across any soldiers when crossing the Karabakh-Azerbaijan border in the case when it was noted in the respective video recording that the Azerbaijani soldiers were telling them that, as if, they would die of starvation in the Shahumyan Region of Karabakh, whereas there is a lot of food here, the defendant denied this fact saying that he had not made any such comment, or video recording.

Askerov, who is also charged with the murder of Smbat Tsakanyan, also denied the prosecution’s evidence, according to which, meaning Tsakanyan, he had said in another video recording that they have picked up and are taking along with them a nearly twenty-year-old “piggy,” whom they cannot yet release, but Shahbaz Guliyev is watching over him.

Askerov agreed that even though the examination of his automatic weapon and the dead body of this Armenian teen prove to his guilt, he denied his involvement in the murder.

It is also noteworthy that Dilham Askerov has given contradictory testimony. On the one hand, he stated that Hasan Hasanov had picked up his automatic weapon wherewith they had killed Tsakanyan, and on the other hand, he noted that he had not exchanged his weapon with none of the sabotage team members.

According to the NKR Police, Azerbaijani citizens Shahbaz Guliyev (born in 1968), Dilham Askerov (born in 1960), and Hasan Hasanov, who was shot by law enforcement agents at the spot, illegally crossed the state border of Karabakh armed with a weapon and ammunition on June 29. The three entered the territory of the Shahumyan region of Karabakh as enemy spies to collect information and carry out espionage tasks.

On July 4, they kidnapped and murdered the citizen of Karabakh, 17-year-old Smbat Tsakanyan, whose body was found on July 15 with gunshot wounds in the forest at Shahumyan region. In addition, in the evening of July 11, on Vardenis-Karvachar highway Hasanov killed the resident of Yerevan Sargis Abrahamyan (born in 1971), and severely wounded the resident of Armenian Dzoraghbyur village Karine Davtyan.

Hasanov was armed and resisted during the arrest; as a result, he was neutralized by the NKR special forces. The two others, Shahbaz Guliyev and Dilham Askerov, were arrested and detained.

Dilham Askerov is charged for espionage; unauthorized border trespass; kidnapping and violence against a minor, committed by an organized group; murder committed by an organized group motivated by ethnic hatred; attempt of murder of two persons, committed by an organized group, motivated by ethnic hatred. Shahbaz Guliyev is charged for espionage; unauthorized border trespass; kidnapping and violence against a minor, committed by an organized group; murder committed by an organized group motivated by ethnic hatred.

report news.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Karabakh, saboteurs

Turkey, Thousands march in Diyarbakır, Istanbul for Kobane

November 1, 2014 By administrator

DİYARBAKIR / ISTANBUL

n_73749_1Thousands of people march in Turkey’s southeastern province of Diyarbakır and Istanbul in a peaceful support rally for Syrian city under ISIL fire

Protesters carried posters of Abdullah Öcalan, the jailed leader of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) at the Diyarbakır rally. DHA photo

Thousands of people marched Nov. 1 in Turkey’s southeastern province of Diyarbakır and Istanbul in a peaceful support rally for Kobane, the Syrian city under jihadists’ attack for more than one month.

Dozens of people were killed last month October in a string of Kobane protests as 12 were murdered in the Oct. 6 and 7 street clashes in Diyarbakır only, making the Nov. 1 rally rather crucial.

The government has blamed political parties for irresponsibility for making a call for such street action.

Speaking at a ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) event in the western province of Afyon today, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu said the state backed the right to hold meetings but would take active measures against those who pick violence. “Do you remember any peaceful calls by the HDP [People’s Democratic Party] in the past two months,” Davutoğlu asked.

However, no violence emerged at demonstrations in Diyarbakır and Istanbul as the organizers also took measures in the southeastern province along with the police and military precautions.

Rather smaller rallies were held in some European cities.

The rallies came at a day when Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga fighters entered Kobane from Turkey to join the battle against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) militants.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Diyarbakir, murch, thousands, Turkey

Kobanê, kobani, kobane, genocide by proxy Turkey

November 1, 2014 By administrator

canard-480x359-480x359The sharp eye, the line provided, always at the forefront of the news, the famous cartoonist of the Canard Enchaîné * René Pétillon did not fail to put the record straight about the cynical position of Turkey the face of genocide perpetrated by the Islamic State Kobanê populations.

 

 

 

 

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=104491

 

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: kobane, kobani

French-Armenians launch active campaign ahead of Genocide centennial 1915-2015

November 1, 2014 By administrator

french-armenianAhead of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, a civic group of French-Armenians has launched a website as part of the pan-national efforts towards raising awareness of the tragic event and demanding recognition and reparation.

Speaking to Tert.am, Hrachya Aslanyan, Head of the Diaspora Ministry’s Department of Armenian Communities of Europe, said the campaign, “#2015RTAG. Recognize The Armenian Genocide”, has been initiated by Armenians of Marseilles under the leadership of the community activists Ani Stepanov and Richard Findikyan.

“My connection with this initiative is limited only to the extent that I am from Marseilles, and I was asked to offer my assistance to make the movement more popular. I informed the minister of the initiative, and the very first day, she was photographed with the poster [bearing the slogan] ‘#2015RTAG. Recognize The Armenian Genocide’ and later spread it. First Lady Rita Sargsyan and Minister of Culture Hasmik Poghosyan followed suit; they were later joined by Fetin Çetin, an ethnic Armenian lawyer in the Hrant Dink [case], and well-known public figures,” he said.

Aslanyan added that the Ministry later called for active efforts towards involving all the Diaspora communities, individuals, officials and foreign legislators in the movement.

The group later embarked on creating the seven-language website which has already attracted over 6,000 fans on Facebook since its launch last week.

“If we achieve something great, we’ll clearly decide on, and coordinate with different communities, the next steps. We are now planning on a footage featuring scenes of Genocide, each episode of which will be introduced by well-known Armenians from across the globe,” he said, expressing further his hope that the initiative will really gain popularity.

Minister of Diaspora Hranush Hakobyan says she really feels happy that the initiators were Marseilles-Armenians and local city authorities. “We, naturally, work with our communities every day, and our first approach was that we have to be a direct participant. As different public figures visit the Ministry, we offer them to join the movement,” she said.

Hakobyan described the move as a major moral impetus in terms of raising the youth’s awareness of history. “I think recognition is a for politicians of those countries which are still lingering and haven’t recognized the Genocide to date,” she added.
The minister said she believes that the initiative will have a great impact on the world community, whose active involvement in the campaign will be a great stimulus in moving ahead with the Genocide recognition efforts. “Our slogan is, I Remember and Demand. And remembering, we demand the reinstatement of the lost rights, the community and pan-national rights.”

The minister further hailed the Greek parliament’s September 9 bill criminalizing the Armenian Genocide. “I think any step is a success,” she said, adding that she doesn’t any surprise move by Turkey ahead of April 24. “I don’t think Turkey will recognize the Genocide on or ahead of the centennial day, but Turkey too, faces an identity crisis, with the society beginning to recognize its history. And that’s a fact. That’s an outcome of the movement. The fact that hundreds and thousands of people in Turkey have started identifying themselves is already a big achievement.”

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 2015, Armenian, French, Genocide

LOS ANGELES ‘Champions of Human Rights’ To Be Recognized At ANCA-WR Banquet

November 1, 2014 By administrator

BY VANNA T. KITSINIAN, ESQ.

five-mediumLOS ANGELES—The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region (ANCA-WR) announced that it will recognize three individual champions of human rights – U.S. Ambassador Henry Morgenthau, Cleveland H. Dodge, and Jackie Coogan — who, in working with the Near East Relief, were instrumental in bringing worldwide attention and rendering aid to the orphans and refugees during and in the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide from 1915 through 1930.

Ambassador Henry Morgenthau

Perhaps the most vocal American political figure in history to speak on behalf of the Armenian people was Henry Morgenthau. Morgenthau was born in Mannheim, Grand Duchy of Baden in 1856 into an Ashkenazi Jewish family of twelve children. He was a lawyer, businessman, and United States Ambassador, most famous as the American Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1913 through 1916. As an early Woodrow Wilson supporter, Morgenthau, like other prominent Jewish Americans, was posted as the ambassador to the Ottoman Empire under an assumption operating at the time that Jews somehow represented a bridge between Muslim Turks and Christian Americans. Although the safety of American citizens in the Ottoman Empire—mostly Christian missionaries and Jews—was a major concern during his ambassadorship, Morgenthau stated that the one issue he was most preoccupied with was the Armenian Question, meaning the protection and the freedom of Armenians from their neighboring communities in the Ottoman Empire.

As Ottoman authorities began the extermination campaign of the Armenians in 1914-1915, it is reported that Morgenthau’s desk was flooded with reports nearly every hour by the American consuls residing in different parts of the Empire, documenting the massacres and deportation marches that were taking place. Faced with overwhelming evidence of genocide, and having witnessed the atrocities first-hand, Morgenthau sparked the American, and thereafter, international, relief effort for the Armenians by sending a cablegram to the Secretary of State in Washington DC on September 6, 1915, stating, “ Destruction of [the] Armenian race in Turkey is progressing rapidly…” Meanwhile, Morgenthau held high-level meetings with leaders of the Ottoman Empire, including Talaat and Enver Pasha, to help alleviate the suffering of the Armenians, but his protestations were blatantly ignored. As a result, Morgenthau famously admonished the country’s Interior Minister Talaat Pasha, stating, “Our people will never forget these massacres.”

As the Genocide continued, Morgenthau and several other American leaders decided to form a committee to lead the relief efforts. This committee later came to be known as the Near East Relief. Through his personal friendship with Adolph Ochs, publisher of The New York Times, Morgenthau ensured that the massacres of the Armenians continued to receive prominent coverage, with 145 published in The New York Times in 1915 alone. Exasperated with his relationship with the Ottoman government, he resigned from the ambassadorship in 1916. Looking back on that decision in his report concerning the annihilation of the Armenian people, “The Murder of a Nation,” Morgenthau wrote that he had come to see Turkey as “a place of horror.” He stated, “I had reached the end of my resources. I found intolerable my further daily association with men, however gracious and accommodating . . . who were still reeking with the blood of nearly a million human beings.” Later, his conversation with Ottoman leaders and his account of the Armenian Genocide was published in 1918 under the title Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story.

The Armenian National Committee of America WR (ANCA-WR) is proud to recognize U.S. Ambassador Henry Morgenthau’s efforts to draw international attention the Armenian Genocide and for organizing private and public relief efforts to save the Armenian people. Accepting the posthumous recognition on the Ambassador’s behalf is his great-grandson, Henry Ben Morgenthau IV, MD, a pediatrician based in San Francisco, California. Dr. Morgenthau is also the grandson of Henry Morgenthau Jr., who was Secretary of the Treasury during President Franklin Roosevelt’s administration. Dr. Morgenthau IV has maintained strong ties to the Armenian community and its most important causes throughout his life. In 1999, he traveled to Armenia where he met with the President in Yerevan, the Catholicos at Etchmiadzin, and visited the National Genocide Memorial and other important cultural sites.

In receiving this honor, Dr. Ben Morgenthau stated, “I would like to thank the Armenian National Committee WR for singling out the heroic work of the Near East Relief and the Near East Foundation. My great grandfather, Ambassador Henry Morgenthau, was a founder of the Committee on Armenian Atrocities, which later became the Near East Relief. He was one of just a few heroes in positions of power willing to call attention to the horrific Genocide taking place in Armenia in 1915. We need more heroes.”

Cleveland Dodge

Following the Ambassador’s pivotal initial steps to bring international attention to this unimpeachable crime against humanity, several prominent Americans joined the Ambassador’s efforts to mobilize aid to the desolate Armenians who managed to survive the massacres. The aid that was rendered would not have been possible had it not been for the steadfast altruism of New York based philanthropist Cleveland H. Dodge.

Just ten days after Ambassador Morgenthau sent his famous cablegram with a plea seeking urgent assistance for the refugees, the Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief’s (later named Near East Relief) first meeting took place in Cleveland Dodge’s office on September 16, 1915. At the initial meeting, Dodge, along with a small group of friends, each pledged the first $60,000, which was cabled immediately for relief of the orphans and refugees. Not only was Dodge one of the organizers and founding members of NER, but was also, for several years, a personal funder of campaign and administrative expenses enabling NER to advertise that, “100 cents of every dollar go for relief – none for expenses, which are met privately.”

In 1919, when the war had left the entire Armenian population practically exiled from their homeland, stranded in the impoverished, famine-stricken regions of Southern Russia without food, clothing, or shelter, Armenians were dying of starvation at a rate of 1,000 per day. A million lives were at stake and a minimum of $15,000,000 was required to see them through the winter. Of course, as generous as Dodge had been in providing campaign and administrative expenses, $15 million could not have been raised without a larger campaign organization. At that stage, no one dreamed of asking Cleveland Dodge to do more than he had already done in spearheading and funding the relief campaign and administrative expenses. When Dodge learned that individuals other than himself would be asked to supplement what he was already doing to raise the additional funds, he requested from the Committee not to ask anyone else for additional campaign money and again generously donated an additional $100,000, and whatever else was necessary to see the winter through.

Moreover, through the years of NER’s existence, Dodge personally corresponded with President Woodrow Wilson, providing both emotional support for the challenging times which he and the rest of the world were navigating, as well as the financial backing of NER to help bring to fruition the much needed aid for refugees in the Near East, who the President so firmly believed needed aid. Thousands of committeemen and friends throughout United States and the Near East expressed their feelings of appreciation to Cleveland Dodge for all he did to make the mission of NER a reality.

It has been widely reported that the NER would not have existed had it not been for Cleveland Dodge, and there certainly would not have been such a rapid and far-reaching development of the organization, administering a total of $117 million of relief funds, had it not been for his inspiring leadership and generosity.

Accepting the recognition on behalf of Cleveland H. Dodge is his great-grandson Johnson Garrett, currently the Vice-Chairman of the Near East Foundation (NEF) and a Board Member of the Cleveland H. Dodge Foundation. He is also a member of the executive committee for both organizations. Garrett has worked as a digital media executive for 15 years, previously working for AOL, Viacom, Excite@Home, Ask Jeeves, and most recently, IAC/InterActive Corp. Garrett was a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a founding member of Network 20-20, a New York based foreign policy group. He graduated with a B.A. from Princeton University and a MBA from Columbia School of Business.

In response to the recognition, Garrett stated, “On behalf of the Dodge family, I am deeply grateful for this honor being bestowed upon my great-grandfather Cleveland H. Dodge. His philanthropic legacy was extraordinary, but no more evident and impactful than in helping to found Near East Relief which aided so many Armenians in their darkest hour.”

Jackie Coogan
Recognizing the immense influence of media, NER enlisted the “world’s best known boy” and most prominent child star in Hollywood at the time to carry the NER message to the masses. In the early 1920’s, child actor Jackie Coogan—later widely known as Uncle Fester on The Addams Family—lent his star power to the worthy cause of relief efforts to the starving children in the Near East.

Coogan launched “Jackie Coogan’s Circus” in Hollywood with the mission of obtaining food and clothing to donate to the dependent children of the Near East. With the aid of his side shows, band, bareback riders, acrobats, clowns, camels, lions, and everything in between, Jackie raised $3,500 by charging an admission in the form of a bundle of clothing or shoes or two cans of condensed milk. More than 7,500 people attended Jackie’s circus.

Most significantly, Jackie Coogan embarked on a tour of the United States and a four-month trip to Europe on behalf of the starving children of the Near East. In the U.S., Coogan visited 25 American cities in just August of 1924 in the interest of the relief fund, including Albuquerque, Denver, Kansas City, Chicago, Indianapolis, Louisville, Columbus, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, Pittsburg, Washington, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Newark and New York, to name a few. Every school child in the U.S. was asked to bring contributions to the collection stations. Boy Scouts, milk companies, and various organizations helped collect the supplies under the direction of the NER. Following his American tour, he then set sail for Europe, commanding a voyage to Greece, Syria, Armenia, and the Holy Land.

Thereafter, Coogan led a “Children’s Crusade of Mercy,” and with the help of his star power, successfully raised and sent a million dollar shipload of provisions to aid the orphans of the Near East. He personally set sail from New York City to Greece and made the presentation of the $1,000,000 worth of supplies to the representatives of the NER and the orphans themselves. At the time, a benefit performance of the latest Coogan film, “Little Robinson Crusoe,” preceded his departure. The Los Angeles Times reported that more than 3,500 cans of condensed milk were received, two from each Boy Scout who attended. Numerous articles were published in The Los Angeles Times and The New York Times, reporting on Coogan’s Children’s Crusade, with headlines that read “Jackie’s Circus is Great Hit,” “Master Coogan Does Good Work for Starved Tots of Armenia,” “Jackie Begins Relief Tour,” “Coogan given send-off as He Starters Long Trip in Interest of Starving Armenians”, “Child Film Star Will Lead ‘Children’s Crusade’ and Go With Ship to Near East,” “Boy Actor Back from Near East,” etc. Coogan was described as a leader of a crusade of mercy to the Bible Lands. Before his tour of the Near East, tag sales that took place in Hollywood and downtown streets aided the Jackie Coogan Near East Relief Condensed Milk Fund, with The Kiwanis Club tendering Coogan a farewell luncheon.

In 1924, Jackie Coogan was decorated by the Greek government with the medal of an Office of the Order of George, given in recognition of his humanitarian work. The decoration ceremony took place in the Acropolis in the presence of the American Minister, government and civil officials, and 7,000 NER orphans. At that time, The New York Times reported that it was the first time this medal had ever been given to a child.

Accepting the recognition posthumously on Jackie Coogan’s behalf is his grandson, Keith Coogan. On this occasion, Keith stated, “Jackie Coogan played a very small part and was a very young man who turned to his father at the time and said, ‘Daddy, we need to do something to help.’ And his father believed that as a young boy of privilege, it was important that Jackie see what was happening in the world. And in a few short years, Hollywood came together and raised millions. It was really the children that came together, as Jackie led the Children’s Crusade of Care with his milk trains and the steam barges he took overseas via the establishment of the Near East Relief. I thank you for honoring him, California, and all of Hollywood.” Keith Coogan was born on January 13, 1970 in Palm Springs, California. Following in the footsteps of his legendary grandfather, Keith began his acting career in TV commercials, as well various TV shows and made-for-TV movies. He played the smitten Brad Anderson in the delightful teen comedy cult favorite “Adventures in Babysitting” and gave an engaging performance as Christina Applegate’s brother Kenny in “Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead.” He has made guest appearances on “Toy Soldiers,” “The Love Boat,” “Eight Is Enough,” “Knight Rider,” “CHiPS,” “Starman,” “21 Jumpstreet,” to name a few. Keith graduated from Santa Monica High School and attended Santa Monica College and Los Angeles City College, majoring in Drama. Coogan resides in Los Angeles and continues to act and runs blogs in his spare time.

The ANCA-WR is proud to recognize the humanitarian spirit of Henry Morgenthau, Cleveland H. Dodge, and Jackie Coogan, who embarked on one of the greatest international humanitarian efforts launched in the history of the American people. In addition to recognizing these three individuals, accepting the “Humanitarian Award” on behalf of the Near East Foundation will be Shant Mardirossian, Chairman of the Near East Foundation (NEF) and Charles Benjamin, President of NEF.

Mardirossian is the Chairman of the Near East Foundation (“NEF”), an international development organization founded in 1915. NEF is affiliated with Syracuse University, where its headquarters are located and operates in seven countries, which include Egypt, Jordon, Morocco, the West Bank, Sudan, Mali and Armenia. Mardirossian most recently led NEF’s effort to establish micro-economic development projects in rural Armenian villages. In his professional life, Mardirossian is a Partner and the Chief Operating Officer at Kohlberg & Company, L.L.C., a leading U.S. middle-market private equity firm. He is a graduate of the Lubin School of Business at Pace University and holds a B.B.A. in Public Accounting and an M.B.A. with dual concentration in Investment Management and Strategic Management.

Charles Benjamin has over 20 years of experience in international development, with extensive experience in community development and natural resource management throughout the Middle East and Africa. He has been involved with NEF since 1993, when he began a five-year assignment as Country Director in Morocco. Prior to becoming President of NEF in January 2010, he was a Senior Manager with the International Resources Group, an international development-consulting firm based in Washington, D.C., where he managed USAID-funded development projects in the Middle East and Africa. He holds a Ph.D. in natural resources and environment from the University of Michigan, with a focus on decentralization and local institutional development in West Africa.

The legacy of the Near East Relief and all of the selfless individuals who exemplified true humanitarian spirit reflect the deep bonds that have long existed between the American and Armenian people. The Armenian National Committee of America WR is proud to honor and recognize their work and their memory.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: ANCA-WR, henry morgenthau, recognize

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