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The revisionist film “Karavan 1915” filming in Turkey

July 11, 2015 By administrator

arton113946-400x300The famous Turkish director İsmail Güneþ began shooting the movie denial of the Armenian Genocide to be titled “Karavan 1915”. The film minimizes the scope of the 1915 genocide crimes and turns the simple misfortune of war and deportation. According to the Turkish newspaper “Sabah” were made for filming in studio two cities that resemble the cities of the Ottoman Empire in 1915. The film “Karavan 1915” has a large budget. But the director refused to give the name of its main sponsor (probably the Turkish state …). 300 players -including some very connus- take part in the shooting. İsmail Güneþ also claims he does not by his movie to prove whether there was genocide or not. He says to stage the story of a caravan of 200 deported Armenians who are moving to Kerisan to Aleppo. Obviously the Turks who “protect” Armenians in the road of deportation have the spotlight … The film will hit theaters in 2016.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: armenian genocide, filming, Karavan 1915, rfilm, Turkey

İsmail Beşikçi Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The #ArmenianGenocide

June 18, 2015 By administrator

By:Hambersom Aghbashian,

İsmail Beşikçi

İsmail Beşikçi

İsmail Beşikçi (born in 1939 in İskilip, district of Çorum Province of Turkey) is a Turkish scholar. He studied at the Faculty of Political Sciences of Ankara University, and graduated in 1962. After his military duty he became an assistant professor at Atatürk University in Erzurum. He prepared his first anthropological study, an investigation of one of the last nomadic Kurdish tribes, the Alikan, which he submitted in 1967 to the Ankara Faculty of Political Sciences. His book “The order of East Anatolia”, first published in 1969, made him a public enemy because of his way of analysis, and it led to a trial after the 1971 coup. He was detained and put on trial and was sentenced to 13 years imprisonment for violating the indivisibility of the Turkish nation. He was then sentenced many times for imprisonment, totally 100 years, and has spent 17 years in and out of jail. After his first imprisonment, he never found academic employment again and was henceforth to do his research as an independent scholar. He has become a powerful and important symbol for the Kurds and for the human rights movement of Turkey. In 1987 he was a candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize. Beşikçi is a PEN* Honorary Member and Turkey’s best-known dissident. He has published 36 books and 32 of them have been banned in Turkey.
According to bianet.org, “A day after journalist Hrant Dink’s murder on 19 January 2007, writer Temel Demirer read a press statement in central Ankara, saying that the journalist had not only been killed for being Armenian, but also because he had spoken of an “Armenian genocide.” He continued saying  “There is a genocide in our history, it is called the Armenian genocide……”. The statement was signed by  Fikret Başkaya, İsmail Beşikçi, Yüksel Akkaya, Mehmet Özer, Necmettin Salaz, Ahmet Telli and  more than forty other Turkish intellectuals.
On April 24, 2010, as genocide commemoration events were being held one after the other in different locations in Istanbul, a groundbreaking two-day conference on the Armenian Genocide began at the Princess Hotel in Ankara. The conference, organized by the Ankara Freedom of Thought Initiative, was held under tight security measures. The conference attracted around 200 attendees, mostly activists and intellectuals who support genocide recognition. Among the prominent names from Turkey were Ismail Besikci, Baskin Oran, Ragip Zarakolu, Temel Demirer, and Sait Cetinoglu and many others.
According to “http://www.mirak-weissbach.de”, “The 2012 International Hrant Dink Award was presented to laureates İsmail Beşikçi from Turkey and “Memorial” from Russia, on September 15, 2012. The Chair of the Award Committee Ali Bayramoğlu stated that on his 58th birthday, the name of Hrant Dink, and the awards given in his name were once again to meet with people who work for a world free of discrimination, racism, and violence, and take personal risks for their ideals. And added that the Laureates are determined by an international jury and a two-round system of voting, after an open nomination process.
On November 6, 2012, the temporary exhibition titled “Armenian Genocide and Scandinavian Response” was opened in the Humanitarian Research Library which is a part of the Copenhagen Royal Library. The Turkish government demanded the Royal Library of Denmark to open “an alternative” exhibition about “So-Called Armenian Genocide” and that was agreed by the Library authorities. In response to that a group of Turkish citizens–including academics, writers, former members of parliament, and mayors, have signed an open letter to the Royal Library saying “The support that you are extending to a regime that has made opposition to confronting history and denial of the truth a fundamental principle is equivalent to supporting a regime of apartheid. We want to remind you that your support constitutes an obstacle to democratization efforts in Turkey today.” İsmail Beşikçi was one of the prominent intellectuals who signed it. (1)
On October 29, 2014, armenianow.com wrote ” The Western Armenian National Congress granted prominent Turkish scholar, journalist, sociologist Ismail Besikci with a medal of “Gevorg Surenyants Catholicos” for his well-known theory of the Armenian Genocide as a part of the Turkish national project of ethnic cleansing of all Middle Eastern local peoples. Through his studies about the Armenian Genocide Besikci fixed two realities, one of them is that from the very beginning Kurd-Turkish political competition was based on the clash of interests for the Armenian property and land. Besikci published numerous article in the Turkish media where he emphasized that the base of the wealth of the Turkish bourgeoisie is the Armenian wealth. Besikci said, any nation can commit a genocide, in 1915, Ottoman Turkey, in 1945,  Germany, these two are big states, but unfortunately nowadays even the small states do it. To prevent this, the young generation must be informed and aware of all this.”(2)
During their visit to Armenia in October 2014, Turkish and Kurdish public and intellectual figures met with students at Yerevan State University. During the meeting, renowned Turkish scholar Ismail Besikci spoke on genocides being committed in the world including the Armenian Genocide.(3)
On April 19, 2015, in Bitlis, Turkey’s most prominent human-rights advocate, Ismail Beşikçi, participated in a public commemoration titled, “What Happened to Bitlis Armenians?” Among the 200 or so people present were the co-mayors of Bitlis, Hüseyin Olan and Nevin Daşdemir Dağkıran, who recently renamed one of the city’s streets after William Saroyan; the Fresno-born writer’s parents had been driven from Bitlis.. The event was organized by The Turkish Human Rights Association (Bitlis branch), Bitlis Bar Association and the Gomidas Institute (London). The main speakers were Enis Gül (Head of Bitlis Bar Association), Barzan Serefhanoglu (Journalist), Ara Sarafian (Gomidas Institute) and Ismail Besikci (Sociologist and veteran human rights’ activist). This was the first public commemoration of the Armenian Genocide in Bitlis.(4)
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* PEN International is a worldwide association of writers, founded in London in 1921 to promote friendship and intellectual co-operation among writers everywhere. The association has autonomous International PEN centers in over 100 countries.
1- http://www.genocide-museum.am/eng/19.12.12.php
2- http://armenianow.com/genocide/58056/armenia_turkey_ismail_besikci_medal
3- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=je2YWm2aQVs
4- http://www.hyebiz.com/2015/04/29/officials-and-society-in-eastern-turkey-confront-legacy-of-the-armenian-genocide/

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, İsmail Beşikçi, recognize

Belgian Prime Minister recognizes the Armenian Genocide

June 18, 2015 By administrator

By Siranush Ghazanchyan

Charles-Michel-620x300Belgian Prime Minister said that the tragic events committed between 1915-1917 in the Ottoman Empire should be “considered a genocide,” Public Rdaio of Armenia reports, quoting Belgian Le Soir.

Prime Minister Charles Michel acknowledged Thursday on behalf of his government, the Armenian genocide a century ago committed by the Young Turk government.

“The relationship between history and the future are occasionally complicated. My position is well known, I am of the view that the tragic events should be labeled as genocide, and that is the position of the Belgian government,” Charles Michel declared in the Parliament today.

Welcoming this statement, MP Peter De Roover (N-VA) announced the filing of a resolution allowing to move forward on this issue.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Belgian, prime minister, Recognizes

UK House of Lords holds debate on #Genocide recognition

June 17, 2015 By administrator

193894On June 16, the UK House of Lords held a debate on the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, Public Radio of Armenia reports.

“Her Majesty’s Government recognizes the terrible suffering inflicted on the Armenian people and other groups living in the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th century,” James Stopford, the Earl of Courtown, said in response to a question by Baroness Caroline Cox on the Government plans to recognize the killings of Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians in 1915 as genocide.

“While remembering and honoring the victims of the past, we believe that the UK’s priority should be to help the peoples and Governments of Turkey and Armenia to face their joint history together,” he added.

Baroness Cox reminded that over 20 states have recognized the Genocide, including France, Canada, Poland, Chile and Austria, as well as the European Parliament and the Welsh Assembly, on the basis of irrefutable evidence of the systematic slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians. Noting that His Holiness Pope Francis has emphasized the necessity of genocide recognition for healing, reconciliation and moving forward, she asked whether Her Majesty’s Government would seriously consider reviewing their position.

“Her Majesty’s Government is aware of His Holiness the Pope’s comments during the papal mass to commemorate the victims of 1915, which was held in Rome. We respect his view and agree that it is important to face the lessons of history with courage and do all we can to prevent such atrocities. Her Majesty’s Government reviewed their position of recognition in 2013 and, at present, we have no plans to conduct another review,” the Earl of Courtown said.

Lord Lyndon Harrison noted, in turn, that “it is true that it was genocide that was practiced on the Armenians and other peoples in 1915.” He emphasized the necessity of bringing together the Armenians and Turks in order to find reconciliation.

James Stopford said in response: “We are trying to promote links between Turkey and Armenia in a number of ways. We have had a successful exchange of Turkish and Armenian Chevening alumni, who have visited each others’ countries for the first time. We have also targeted funding on projects such as CivilNet TV, which is a media source for Turkey-related news in Armenia.”

“In addition, we have supported an initiative of our Armenian NGO to publish a book of personal stories from survivors about Turks who saved the lives of Armenians during the massacres and deportations of 1915,” he said.

“Our priority should be to promote reconciliation between the peoples and Governments of Armenia and Turkey and to enable the two countries to face their joint history together,” the Earl of Courtown said. In this context, he said “it’s pleasing to see MPs of Armenian background in the Turkish Parliament.”

Speaking about the Karabakh conflict, James Stopford said: “The status quo is not sustainable.”

“Twenty-one years have now passed since the ceasefire brought the active phase of the conflict to an end. For over 20 years the parties have not been able to reach a peace settlement. That has also meant over 20 years of continued hostility, hatred and suffering. The status quo is certainly not sustainable,” he stated.

Related links:

Public Radio of Armenia. UK House of Lords holds debate on Armenian Genocide recognition
Tert.am. Բրիտանիայի Լորդերի պալատում քննարկվել է Հայոց ցեղասպանության հարցը

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, House of Lords, UK

Turkey recalls ambassador to Brazil over Armenian genocide legislation

June 8, 2015 By administrator

ISTANBUL

17777216124_b4978ab6c3_k(Reuters) The Turkish Foreign Ministry said on Monday it had recalled its ambassador to Brazil for consultation, after the Latin American country’s Senate passed legislation recognizing the massacre of Armenians during World War One in Turkey as genocide.

The ministry also summoned Brazil’s ambassador to Ankara on June 3 over the matter, it said in an emailed statement.

Muslim Turkey accepts that Christian Armenians died during the upheaval of World War One but rejects declarations or legislation by foreign governments that classify the deaths as genocide.

“We view the decision by the Brazilian Senate that distorts reality and overlooks the law as irresponsible and we condemn it,” the Foreign Ministry said.

Armenians, two dozen countries and most Western scholars consider the killings genocide.

(Reporting by Ayla Jean Yackley; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

 

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Ambassador, armenian genocide, Brazil, recalls, Turkey

Kemal Yalcin Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide

June 4, 2015 By administrator

By: Hambersom Aghbashian,

Kemal Yalcin

Kemal Yalcin

Kemal Yalçın (born 1952 in Turkey’s southwestern Denizil province), is a bilingual German-Turkish writer who has won several awards. After earning degrees in education and philosophy, Mr.Yalcin went on to become a journalist and was the editor of the Halkin Yolu (The way of the people) newspaper in Turkey until he was forced to flee in 1981 for political reasons to Germany. Currently he works as a teacher in Bochum. He was also for some time a lecturer in the Department of Turkish Studies at the University of Essen. He is the author of many book, including books for children.
Kemal Yalcin is the author of “You Rejoice My Heart”. This book is based on a quest made by the author to find Turkey’s hidden Armenians, those who survived the Armenian Genocide of 1915 and remained in Turkey. Yalcin is a very sympathetic observer, which make his account all the more powerful. His account finds crypto-Armenians and donmes, people who survived discrimination and anti-Armenian riots in Istanbul, as well as others who eloped with Muslim Turks.(1)
The translation of “You Rejoice My Heart”, was published by the Tekeyan Cultural Association, and according to “http://agbu.org/news”, The Tekeyan Cultural Assn. welcomed Turkish author Kemal Yalcin back to the AGBU Chicago Center in collaboration with a host of other Armenian organizations and churches, in celebration of the release of the English edition of his book, “You Rejoice My Heart”, which was produced by Tekeyan.”
On March 16, Kemal Yalcin, in the Glendale Public Library auditorium, explained how he embarked on a project to seek out Armenians living in Turkey as Muslims or Turks, and wrote  his book “You Rejoice My Heart”. His journey took him on a trajectory that started with his native Honaz and included Amasya, Erzurum, Askale, Kars, and ended in the ancient city of Ani. Through the story of a woman called Safiye (her Armenian name was Zaruhi), he reflected  the lives of other Armenians living in Amasya after 1915. Amasya once had a thriving Armenian population. The community, along with its churches and schools, was utterly devastated during the Genocide. After 1915, only about 60 Armenian families remained. All they knew was that they were Armenians and their religion was different. “We didn’t let a lot of people know about it,” Madame Safiye says”. “Even so, we were so afraid!” Armenians tried their best to marry within their tiny community. They prayed in secret and adopted Armenian orphans who had survived the massacres. While some Armenians eventually fled, most of those who remained stopped speaking their native tongue and denied ever being Armenian. “There is big work to do,” Mr. Yalcin added. “As humans we have to address and expose this inhumanity.” You Rejoice My Heart has been published in English, Italian,  Armenian, Spanish, French, in addition to Turkish.(2)
According to www.news.am,  April 4, 2011, “In his speech delivered at a conference in Brussels, Turkish writer Kemal Yalcin addressed the participants in Armenian, Assyrian and Turkish. He said if there was no Genocide, non-Muslims population could have been 15 million today.” History will never forgive the crimes against humanity. Let our grief become basis for peace and justice. As a Turkish writer I apologize to Armenians and Assyrians. I wish that Silk bridge on the border between Armenia and Turkey [the historical bridge in Ani] was renovated and became a symbol of brotherhood between the Armenian and Turkish nations,”. (3)
“A Century of Silence: Terror and the Armenian Genocide” was published in Volume 79, Number 3, September 2010 of The American Journal of Psychoanalysis, where the author Jack Danielian wrote ” If rape, torture, sex slavery, massacre, and ethnic cleansing are on a continuum of major human rights violations, then genocidal impulse occupies the extreme pole of that continuum. Crimes of genocide involve psychogenic and psychodynamic underpinnings that can be terrifying to contemplate.” Many specialists, historians and others were quoted or interviewed and the following is an abstract from the research, ” The fear and terror such linkages can bring to an already traumatized people is obvious. It was with great difficulty that Kemal Yalçin got Armenian interviewees to speak to a hugely sympathetic Turkish chronicler like himself. He describes a conscious or unconscious drive amongst Armenian survivors to hide their past, above all in any contact with a Turk, the survivors bury their secret. Historic memory tells them that those who stood out in any way were the first to be selected for torture and liquidation.” (4)

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1- http://www.amazon.com/You-Rejoice-Heart-Kemal-Yalcin/dp/1903656729
2- http://armgenocide.blogspot.com/2008/03/kemal-yalcin-speaks-in-glendale.html
3- http://www.aina.org/news/20110411205940.htm
4- http://araratmagazine.org/2010/10/terror-and-armenian-genocide/

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Kemal Yalcin, Recognized

Glendale man Agasi Vartanyan ends 55-day fast for Armenian Genocide victims

May 29, 2015 By administrator

By Susan Abram, Los Angeles Daily News

"Agasi Vartanyan, completes 55 day fast for Armenian Genocide

“Agasi Vartanyan, completes 55 day fast for Armenian Genocide

After 55 days spent in a small enclosure with no food and only jugs of water, a thinner and thick-bearded Agasi Vartanyan emerged from his perch Thursday, his voice weak but his spirit swelling with victory for a mission accomplished.

Vartanyan needed no help as he used a ladder to climb down from a glass enclosure built on a high platform outside St. Leon Armenian Cathedral in Burbank. A flock of doves was released and a crowd of people clapped as he stepped on the ground, raised his arms to give the peace sign, then sat in a wheelchair. The 55-year-old Glendale man had entered the 12-foot-by-12-foot enclosure on April 3 promising to fast for 55 days to draw attention to the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

He went in weighing 224 pounds and emerged nearly 60 pounds lighter. After a quick check-up by a medical crew, Armenian television reporters swooped in and Vartanyan told the crowd he felt well and that he was grateful for all their support.

“I have great satisfaction,” the Armenian man said through a translator. “You wouldn’t believe the reaction I had from around the world.”

• PHOTOS: Agasi Vartanyan ends his 55-day fast to bring attention to Armenian Genocide

Vartanyan’s hunger strike was meant to cast global attention on what he and many have called an injustice to the 1.5 million Armenians killed under the command of the Ottoman Turks starting a century ago this year. From 1915 to 1923, Armenians were forcibly deported from their homes and killed as part of a systemic ethnic cleansing that also affected Assyrians and Pontic Greeks.

Historians, scholars, human rights activists and even Pope Francis call it the first genocide of the 20th century, but the Turkish government maintains the deaths were a result of betrayal and civil unrest in what was then a collapsing Ottoman Empire.

Vartanyan couldn’t participate in the March for Justice last month when more than 100,000 people walked for six miles through the streets of Los Angeles to mark the April 24 centennial. But he said he watched television and saw news reports and was filled with pride when he learned of the great outpouring.

His efforts were supported by the nonprofit Crimes Against Humanity — Never Again (CAHNA), which formed to raise global awareness on genocides past and present. The organization set up a live stream camera of Vartanyan, which drew some 19 million viewers.

That sort of attention will help the organization’s next goal, which will move away from trying to garner recognition of the Armenian Genocide to fighting for justice for those who are descendents, said CAHNA’s president Harut Sassounian, who lost relatives to the genocide. That includes pursuing legal actions against the Turkish government, which has refused to call the events of that time a genocide.

“We Armenians went through hell,” Sassounian said. “We’re continuing the struggle. We want to get back all the lands we lost, the churches that are gone.”

Vartanyan said his goal was to encourage the Armenians of the diaspora to keep fighting for justice. More than 200,000 people of Armenian descent call Los Angeles County home. It is the largest Armenian diaspora outside of the Republic of Armenia.

“I believe you’ll never achieve anything unless you fight for it, struggle for it,” he said. “I did this so that no one will forget the genocide that was committed against my people.”

Vartanyan said he prepared a year for this fast, although he had gone on a similar hunger strike almost 10 years ago in Russia. Back then, he abstained from food for 50 days, in part he said to break illusionist David Blaine’s 44-day fast in London.

It was unclear Thursday if Vartanyan broke any records.

“We do not have a current record holder as we do not currently recognize this category,” said a spokeswoman from Guinness World Records in an e-mail reply.

But those in the crowd said they were proud of him and inspired by his efforts.

“I was very worried about what he was doing,” said Hamlet Pogosian, Vartanyan’s cousin. “I didn’t like what he was doing for health reasons, but I’m proud of what he did for our nation.”

Vartanyan would not discuss the mental and physical struggles he endured, saying he preferred to let the public use their imagination. But halfway through the ordeal, he admitted to reporters he thought a lot about “meat, all kinds of meat.” The front of the enclosure where he spent all his time had one glass wall, allowing the public to see him day and night, though there was some privacy. He was given 55 gallons of water, a few clothes, a cot and a television. He often could be seen pacing back and forth or looking out on the street.

He also wouldn’t say what his first meal would be, but offered a hint through a smile.

“Whatever I eat will be the most delicious thing in the world,” he said.

Source: Daily-news

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Agasi, armenian genocide, End, fast, Glendale, Vartanyan

Armenian genocide anniversary stirs memories for descendants in S.C. (+ video)

May 2, 2015 By administrator

By JAMIE SELF

 armenian_tg0067Targeted by Turks and accused of treason at the end of the 19th century, Samuel Yaghjian “came to the conclusion that there will be no justice for Armenians in Turkey” and brought his family to the United States.

The words, written in a two-page typed history, shed light on why the Armenian grandfather of Columbia’s Candy Waites and David Yaghjian moved his family to the Rhode Island, fleeing hostilities toward Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in the early part of the 20th century.

“They didn’t talk about getting to this country, what they went through to get here,” said Waites of her grandparents and father Edmund Yaghjian, a painter who in 1945 became the University of South Carolina’s first art department head.

“I guess it was too horrible.”


Some South Carolinians of Armenian descent are remembering the deportation and exile of their ancestors from president-day Turkey 100 years ago.That history, commemorated on April 24, has been the source of creativity and activism in some Palmetto State residents and, in others, the desire for a deeper knowledge of their ancestors. About 1,150 South Carolinians claim Armenian ancestry, according to U.S. Census data.  Report Thestate

Columbia attorney Dick Harpootlian said his grandfather and grandmother came to the United States from a town called Harput, fleeing massacres there in the early part of the century.

Having grown up hearing that history might have contributed to him becoming politically active, the former S.C. Democratic Party chairman said.

In Greenville, Haro Setian and his wife, Mariam Matossian, remembered stories of their grandparents’ deportation from their homeland. Their grandparents survived the often deadly march across the desert to Lebanon and Syria where they were orphaned.

But getting those details has sometimes been a challenge.

“So much of it was, ‘Forget and move on,’ a coping mechanism,” Setian said.

‘A crime … supposed to be recognized’

The Armenian genocide – called so by historians, more than 20 countries and 43 U.S. states, including South Carolina – spanned between 1915 and 1923.

Tensions between Turks and Armenians, the Christian minority, rose as the Ottoman Empire fell into decline, and Armenians sought more rights and protections, according to the Armenian National Institute.

While hostilities toward Armenians started earlier, the Turkish government of the Ottoman Empire began in 1915 to arrest, expel and kill Armenian leaders. Up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed, according to estimates.

A century later, some Armenians are troubled by the reluctance of some world leaders – including President Barack Obama – to use the word “genocide” when describing the actions of the Turks, now critical allies for the United States.

Aram Heboyan, who just moved from New York to Myrtle Beach, said there’s no other way to describe what his grandmother, then 7 years old, witnessed in 1915.

Warned that the Turks were coming, she hid in tall grass and watched as Turkish soldiers marched women, children and elderly villagers, including members of her family, into a circle where they were slain.

“She saw her mother in that group, but she couldn’t say a word, because someone would know they they were there and would kill them too,” Heboyan said.

World leaders, he said, must use the word “genocide” because what happened to Armenians was not incidental deaths during a time of war, but planned out by the government.

“They’ve been using ‘massacres,’ ‘killings,’ whatever, but not ‘genocide,’ ” Heboyan said. “That’s a crime, and it’s supposed to be recognized.”

‘Bitter about having to leave’

Harpootlian said Obama’s reluctance to use the word “genocide” does not mean Americans are “forgetting history. We know what happened. The Turks know what happened.”

“I’m not as vehement about the recognition of the genocide by the Turks as I am about the recognition that nobody, no nation should be allowed to systematically eliminate a population,” Harpootlian said.

Harpootlian said both his grandfather and grandmother moved from Harput in Turkey to the United States in the early 1900s, when massacres of Armenians were taking place before 1915. His grandfather went from New York City to Fresno, Calif., where he met his wife. The two returned to New York, where Harpootlian’s father grew up.

Harpootlian was born in New York, but was raised in Charlotte. Later, he went to college at Clemson University and the University of South Carolina law school.

The massacres and the family’s flight were topics of conversation at family gatherings, Harpootlian said, recalling as a boy hearing the family elders talking around the table at Thanksgiving or Christmas.

“My relatives were wealthy merchants, college educated, lived in a sophisticated town that had a college,” he said, adding “they were bitter about having to leave very good economic positions.”

History alive in song

An Armenian folk singer, Matossian of Greenville said her ancestors’ painful history is a source of creativity for her.

Named after her grandmother – one of three grandparents who survived the genocide – Matossian grew up in an Armenian community in Vancouver, British Columbia, where at first she did not understand the tearful gatherings each year in April.

She also did not understand why some children did not know she was Armenian and decided to commit herself to “making sure people know who we are.”

Folk music provides her with a “beautiful vehicle” to share Armenia’s history with non-Armenian audiences. The songs also help her maintain a bond with Armenia and her grandmother who sang the same songs but died before she was born.

The best part about performing the songs, she said, is when audience members talk to her after a concert or write to her and say, “I didn’t know this story.”

“What I love even more is when they go home and do their own research and say, ‘I found all this stuff out.’

“That is the part I’m playing.”

‘No justice for Armenians’

A decade ago, Waites, a former state legislator from Columbia, went to Ellis Island and found the passenger manifest from the French ship that carried her grandmother and father across the Atlantic Ocean in 1907.

Waites’ grandfather already had made the crossing, settling in Providence, R.I., a town whose name held promise.

In the late 19th century in the Ottoman Empire, the Yaghjian family was “a reputable and wealthy clan” that lost its strong ties with Turkish leaders in the late 1890s as hostilities toward the Christian minority increased.

The history recalled two incidents illustrating mounting tensions between Turks and Armenians.

In 1895, Samuel Yaghjian intervened to stop Turkish soldiers from beating an Armenian shepherd.

The following year, a mob of Turks came to the home apparently to kill the family and plunder the house. The family defended themselves by throwing stones from the roof.

Yaghjian, with his rifle, “started to fire on the mob with colorful swearing,” which surprised the mob, later broken up by the arrival of soldiers.

Later, Samuel was arrested for treason but released under pressure from European embassies. Still, “something was missing in him,” the relative wrote.

“He was a rebellious person,” but “came to the conclusion that there was no justice for Armenians in Turkey” and moved his family to the United States.

‘So many things I don’t know’

Waites’ father, Edmund Yaghjian, grew up working in his father’s grocery store in Providence when a customer noticed the beautiful drawings he was making on the grocery bags and arranged for him to get a scholarship to the Rhode Island School of Design.

Yaghjian’s career carried him to New York City, where he taught art and met his wife, a student at the time. The couple then moved to Columbia, Mo., before coming to the Palmetto State, where Edmund Yaghjian led USC’s art department.

Waites and her brother David Yaghjian, like his father, an artist, said their parents seldom talked about Armenia.

Visits to their grandparents’ home in Rhode Island yielded feasts that included Armenian food, but no details about their lives – at least not any told in English.

Waites’ father never made art about Armenia except for two paintings: a family portrait and a monastery in Armenia, nestled in an idyllic landscape.

Waites wonders if the two paintings, which deviate greatly from the more modernist paintings he made of scenes in New York City and Columbia, were a sign that he was searching for something in his past, “thinking about his roots.”

Not knowing for sure has driven Waites to realizations of her own.

“If your parents are still alive, for God’s sake, talk to them and find out your history. We never ask the questions, and then suddenly they’re gone.

“There’s so many things I don’t know about my parents’ history.”

Reach Self at (803) 771-8658

About the Armenian genocide

April 24, 1915 – The warring and declining Ottoman Empire arrests and deports several hundred Armenian political and cultural figures in Istanbul, leading to more arrests, deportations and mass killings

1915-1923 — Up to 1.5 million Armenians estimated to be killed

1944 – Raphael Lemkin, a Polish Jew who escaped Nazi Germany, coined the term “genocide.” Lemkin had studied and written about the attacks against Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.

2014 – Turkey issues first public statement of condolences for the deaths of “innocent Ottoman Armenians”

2015 – Turkey permits Armenians to hold a religious service commemorating the massacres and deportations. Pope Francis acknowledges the massacre as a genocide.

SOURCES: McClatchy News, Armenian National Institute, U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, memory

Armenians should now pursue legal claims rather than further Genocide recognition

April 29, 2015 By administrator

Harut-SassounianBy Harut Sassounian
Publisher, The California Courier
TheCaliforiaCourier.com

Armenians experienced unforgettable days last week during the Centennial commemorations of the Armenian Genocide. In many respects, Turkish denialists’ much-feared ‘Tsunami’ became a reality! While Armenians around the world were busy organizing commemorative events in recent years, their efforts were amplified by some unexpected developments, including Turkish President Erdogan’s irrational rhetoric and reaction.

The year began with Erdogan’s childish maneuver, switching the Gallipoli War Centennial to April 24, to derail the observances planned for the Armenian Genocide Centennial. The international media quickly exposed the Turkish President’s ploy, providing extensive publicity for the upcoming genocide anniversary.

In early April, the Kardashians’ visit to Armenia generated thousands of articles and TV reports, and millions of social media posts. A few days later, Pope Francis created his own ‘Tsunami’ by uttering his courageous words on the Armenian Genocide. Once again, Erdogan made matters worse for Turkey by insulting not only the Pope, but also one billion Catholics, and the nation of Argentina, the Pontiff’s birthplace. Shortly thereafter, the European Parliament adopted a resolution on the Armenian Genocide providing further media coverage of this is- sue.

Being in Armenia for the first time on April 24, and on the occasion of the Centennial, was a deeply moving experience. The Armenian government did monumental work inviting 1,000 dignitaries from 60 countries, including prominent scholars, legal experts, political leaders, parliamentarians from 30 countries, and survivors of other genocides. On April 22-23, the distinguished guests participated in a Global Forum “Against the Crime of Genocide,” where I delivered brief remarks castigating Pres. Obama’s failure to keep his promise on using the term Armenian Genocide. I explained that contrary to a widely-held misperception, the United States has repeatedly recognized the Armenian Genocide.

On April 23, all six political parties represented in the Austrian Parliament issued a joint declaration recognizing the Armenian Genocide. As expected, Turkey overreacted by withdrawing its Ambassador from Vienna. This is the second Turkish Ambassador to be recalled to Ankara this month. As an increasing number of countries recognize the Armenian Genocide, Turkey may soon have fewer envoys, isolating itself from much of the world!

Also on April 23, German President Joachim Gauck delivered a powerful speech at a memorial service in Berlin, acknowledging not only the Armenian Genocide, but also Germany’s complicity in the Ottoman Turkish genocidal campaign. Despite heavy pressures from Turkish leaders, the German Bundestag is expected shortly to adopt a similarly-worded resolution which would send shock waves through- out the 1,000 rooms of Pres. Erdogan’s newly-built palace, since Ger- many was Turkey’s ally in 1915, and continues its close relationship until today!

In the evening of April 23, the Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II and the Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia Aram I jointly pre- sided over a historic rite of canonization in Etchmiadzin, declaring the Armenian Genocide victims to be Saints. Following this moving ritual, at the exact hour of 19:15 or 7:15 pm, churches throughout the world began ringing their bells 100 times. Later that night, the System of a Down band performed a free concert at Yerevan’s Republic Square. The thousands of young people in attendance were highly energized despite the heavy downpour. The concert was aired live, disseminating the band’s Genocide message to millions of people worldwide.

On April 24, a memorable observance took place on the grounds of Tsitsernagapert, the Armenian Genocide Monument in Yerevan, with the participation of hundreds of religious leaders, Ambassadors, officials, and presidents of Russia, France, Cyprus and Serbia. While the heads of two superpowers came to Yerevan on April 24, Turkey was unable to attract to Gallipoli the same caliber of leaders, despite its considerable efforts. It was perfectly fitting to this solemn occasion that the distinguished guests at the Yerevan Memorial spent several hours huddled in blankets like refugees, in freezing temperatures, sheltered under a large canvass from the rain.

One of the most stunning developments last week was Turkish Prime Minister Davutoglu’s declaration that the Armenian “deportations were a Crime Against Humanity” — which under international law is tantamount to recognizing the Armenian Genocide. No one should be surprised if Erdogan dismisses Davutoglu after the June Parliamentary elections.

Now that the Centennial is behind us, it is high time that Armenians turn the page on Armenian Genocide recognition and begin to systematically pursue their claims from Turkey through international, regional and local tribunals.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, armenian genocide, claim, legal, pursue

NY: Armenians mark centennial of Genocide in Times Square

April 27, 2015 By administrator

NY-Armenian-Genocide-marchThousands of Armenians held an action on the Armenian Genocide Centennial in Times Square of New York on Sunday.

The protesters marched from St. Vartan church to Times Square to demand the U.S. government recognize the Armenian Genocide. The protesters were waving Armenian flags and were carrying posters urging Turkey to recognize the Genocide.

Senator Charles Schumer, several Jewish leaders as well as famous Turkish scholar Taner Akcam were among rally speakers, NBC New York reported.

“I stand with you in making sure the deniers are not given any place under the sun,” Senator Schumer said.

Taner Akcam added that it is very troubling to see that the United States had still not recognized the Armenian Genocide.

Photo from ANCA Facebook

 

Filed Under: Events, Genocide, News Tagged With: 1915-2015, armenian genocide, march, NY, Times-Square

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