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Sarkisian to Attend Armenian Genocide Mass at Vatican

April 9, 2015 By administrator

Pope Francis delivers his 'Urbi et Orbi' (to the city and to the world) blessing from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica on Christmas Day. (Photo: AP \ Alessandra Tarantino)

Pope Francis delivers his ‘Urbi et Orbi’ (to the city and to the world) blessing from the central balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica on Christmas Day. (Photo: AP \ Alessandra Tarantino)

VATICAN CITY—Armenia’s President Serzh Sarkisian is on an official state visit to Italy, where he will meet with Italian leaders and will participate in a Mass in memory of the Armenian Genocide at the Vatican.

President Sarkisian will visit the Vittoriano Museum of Rome to view an exhibition titled “Armenia: People of Ark,” dedicated to the Armenian Genocide centennial.

On Saturday, the President will participate in a Mass to be celebrated by His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, and Cardinal Sepe at the St. Gregory the Illuminator Church of Naples. As part of the ceremony, a replica of one of the ancient cross-stones of Jugha, which were destroyed by the Azeri government, will be unveiled in memory of the Armenian Genocide.

On April 12, the Armenian President will visit the Vatican, where he will attend a Mass at St. Peter’s Basilica lead by Pope Francis to mark the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

“For Armenians, this centennial won’t feel much different a year, two, five, six, seven or even 200 years from now,” Mikayel Minasyan, Armenia’s Ambassador to the Vatican, said. “Armenians have been fighting their own inner war against injustice and ignorance for 100 years. This anniversary is important for the world, for Armenians, at this point, it doesn’t really change much, but it’s a way for the world to hear the truth.”

Armenia’s ambassador says history is now repeating itself. “Christians from Iraq and Syria are using the same escape routes that Armenians used 100 years ago. Why? Because governments deny history, they avoid speaking about the truth. They use cynicism to address political and historical facts.”

During Sunday’s Mass, which will follow the Armenian rite, the Pope will also officially name Armenian Saint Gregory of Narek as a Doctor of the Church.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Attend, mass, Sarkisian, Vatican

Kardashian sisters will continue fighting for Armenian Genocide recognition

April 9, 2015 By administrator

Kardashian sisters will continue fighting for Armenian Genocide recognition

Kardashian sisters will continue fighting for Armenian Genocide recognition

YEREVAN. – The Prime Minister of Armenia, Hovik Abrahamyan, on Thursday received members of the famous American Armenian Kardashian family (photo).

The PM underscored the Kardashian’s contribution to the international recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide, and their visit to Armenia ahead of the Genocide Centennial. Abrahamyan stressed the fact that the Kardashian family, just like the other Armenians worldwide, do not forget their roots, and they make Armenia more recognizable by visiting their historical homeland.

The Kardashians, for their part, noted that they are impressed by Armenia and its people’s warmth. The guests informed that they plan to tour Armenia’s historical sites, to get familiarized with the Armenian historical and cultural heritage and get to know their ancestral homeland. In the Kardashian sisters’ words, they have long dreamed of visiting their historical homeland, and they are happy to be in the country of their dreams. They added that they are working on learning Armenian. The Kardashians also stressed that they will continue to actively fight for the international recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide, and underscored the consolidation of all Armenians in this matter.

At the end of the talk, Hovik Abrahamyan presented forget-me-nots—which symbolize the Armenian Genocide Centennial—to the members of the Kardashian family.

As reported earlier, famous American Armenian TV personality Kim Kardashian has arrived in Armenia on Wednesday evening, and together with her husband, American hip hop recording artist Kanye West, little daughter North, and sister Khloé Kardashian.

The Kardashian are staying at Armenia Marriott Hotel, where they have booked two entire floors for the family and Kim Kardashian’s huge staff.

The famous American Armenian TV personality is visiting Armenia within the framework of the Armenian Genocide Centennial, and to get to know her roots.

During their trip to Armenia, the Kardashian also plan to shoot a few series for their family reality show.

 

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, fight, for, Kardashian-sisters

California: ANCA Orange County #ArmenianGenocide Billboards

April 8, 2015 By administrator

BENEFITING: ARMENIAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE WESTERN REGION

Orange County

Orange County

THE STORY:

ANCA OC chapter is urgently raising money for our Armenian Genocide billboard campaign. Our billboard was installed on Wednesday, April 8, on the Newport Fwy (55 South) at Mesa Drive in Orange County.  The billboard will run for 6 weeks in duration and will reach over 6 million travelers including everyone who attends the Anatolian Festival at the OC Fairgrounds on whose property this billboard is located!
https://www.crowdrise.com
Please DONATE and help us cover the costs.  No amount is too small.

ANCA is a grassroots public affairs organization serving to inform, educate, and act on a wide range of issues concerning Armenian Americans throughout Orange County.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, billboards, Orange County

Kim Kardashian to remember victims of #ArmenianGenocide on trip to Yerevan

April 8, 2015 By administrator

Kim Kardashian, Kanye West and their daughter North en route to Armenia. Photograph: Broadimage/Rex

Kim Kardashian, Kanye West and their daughter North en route to Armenia. Photograph: Broadimage/Rex

Reality star, her husband Kanye West and family members travel to Armenia to mark 100th anniversary of the slaughter
Kim Kardashian will pay tribute to the victims of the Armenian genocide on a trip to the country beginning on Wednesday.

The Armenian-American reality TV star will be joined by her husband Kanye West and her sister Khloé as she makes the journey to mark the 100th anniversary of the slaughter of ethnic Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.

They will be followed by camera crews from the broadcaster E! to film several episodes of the reality series Keeping Up With The Kardashians, but no official meetings or press conferences are planned.

Today lets all stand together & remember the 1.5 million people who were massacred in the Armenian Genocide. April 24th, 1915. #NEVERFORGET

— Kim Kardashian West (@KimKardashian) April 24, 2012


Kardashian, West, their daughter North and several other members of her family arrived at Los Angeles airport to begin the pilgrimage to Armenia, where she will visit the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial in the capital, Yerevan.

Her late father Robert was a third-generation Armenian American, and on several occasions she has publicly supported international recognition of the Armenians’ systematic extermination at the hands of the Ottoman government.
The US government, apparently wary of spoiling relations with Turkey, is yet to join the 22 countries that have formally recognised the event as genocide, although 43 American states have accepted its status as such.

The word genocide was coined and defined by the Polish lawyer Raphael Lemkin in 1943 to describe the extermination of ethnic Armenians by Ottoman authorities in Turkey.

As many as 1.5 million people are thought to have been killed in the slaughter, which Armenians say began on 24 April 1915, when Ottoman security forces rounded up and arrested 250 Armenian intellectuals in Constantinople, and continued throughout the first world war. Turkey still denies that genocide is an appropriate term for the killings.

In 2011, Kardashian broke from her usual frivolous image to write a blog post calling on Americans to recognise Armenian genocide. “Until this crime is resolved truthfully and fairly, the Armenian people will live with the pain of what happened to their families and the fear of what might happen again to their homeland,” she wrote.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Kim Kardashian, remembering, victims, visit, Yerevan

NPR morning edition: April Marks The Centennial Of #ArmenianGenocide

April 8, 2015 By administrator

Listen to the Story Audio

Some countries, including the U.S., have yet to fully and formally recognize the event. Steve Inskeep revisits history with Eugene Rogan, author of The Fall of the Ottomans.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, centenial, NPR

Jerusalem Post: Lessons not learned: The #ArmenianGenocide

April 8, 2015 By administrator

Hindenburg and Hitler during the national day of mourning, Feb. 25, 1934. (photo credit:WIKIMEDIA COMMONS/GERMAN FEDERAL ARCHIVE)

Hindenburg and Hitler during the national day of mourning, Feb. 25, 1934. (photo credit:WIKIMEDIA COMMONS/GERMAN FEDERAL ARCHIVE)

As human beings, we want to believe that we’ve evolved beyond evil.

Adolf Hitler is believed to have stated in 1939, “Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?” Likely unknowingly, Hitler demonstrated an important lesson that remains as relevant today as it was at the time: a failure to confront evil, enables evil. Report Jerusalem Post

Understandably, we don’t like to recognize evil, and never have. It is an uncomfortable, almost “religious” concept that cannot be explained by the rational.

As human beings, we want to believe that we’ve evolved beyond it, that “evil” is simply a cultural misunderstanding, or a concept which exclusively belongs to a distant past. Yet evil is a part of reality – and a part of human nature that we have seen so clearly time and time again. By not recognizing it, and not standing against it, we allow it to flourish.

This month marks 100 years since the official commencement of the Armenian Genocide – a dark chapter of human history which sadly we have yet to come to grips with. Despite overwhelming evidence, there are still those who deny that the Armenian Genocide occurred at all. 100 years later, no one has held the Ottomans – and their direct successor, Turkey – accountable for the unconscionable barbaric acts they committed. Shockingly, even countries such as Israel and the United States have yet to recognize this horrific event in human history that nearly eliminated the entire Armenian population.

Where is the “Never Again” for the Armenian people? We cry out against the horrors of the Holocaust – and we rightly demand reparations. We demand justice for the genocide in Rwanda. We still take steps to repair the appalling treatment of blacks in the United States until far too recently. We protest the mass murders in Darfur – and we prosecute those responsible. We do our best to expose and to stop the sickening acts of Islamic terror committed by Islamic State and similar groups against Muslims, Christians, Jews and other minorities. We’ve established international institutions like the United Nations (partially for the precise purpose of preventing acts genocide from ever occurring again).

We look back in history and say, “how could we not have known?” And yet, atrocities continue to occur all over the world, and these international bodies remain silent before the tyranny and human oppression in places like North Korea, Saudi Arabia, China, or Iran.

Why? Because we do not want to accept that evil exists – and even more so, that many human beings have an affinity for it. Evil is an unpleasant problem to address, as evidenced by the failure, for one hundred years, to recognize the evil of the Armenian Genocide.

April 24, 1915 is known as the beginning of the Armenian Genocide – yet just as in the case of the Holocaust, the persecution began before that. No one paid attention when the systematic persecution of Armenians began decades before. Nobody cared about the land seizures, the forced conversions, and the general abuse which was rampant in the Ottoman Empire in the mid 1800s.

In the 1890s there were brutal pogroms against Armenians. It is estimated that under Sultan Abdul Hamid, 100,000- 300,000 Armenians were murdered.

Still the world was silent. When 250 Armenian intellectuals were rounded up and killed on April 24, it was the beginning of one of the most horrific atrocities the world had ever seen.

Following the implementation of Tehcir Law, Armenians were deported en masse – sent on death marches into the Syrian desert, and denied food and water. Their land and all belongings were confiscated, and if they survived the death march they were sent to concentration camps, or otherwise “disposed of.” Witnesses recorded that nearly 50,000 men, women and children were tossed into the Black Sea and left to drown.

An estimated 1-1.5 million Armenians were brutally robbed, raped, starved and murdered by the Ottoman Empire between 1914 and 1918 for no other reason other than that they were Armenian.

Is it too much to ask, 100 years later, for recognition from the world’s major powers? Is it too much to demand that Turkey, which actually outlaws referring to the Armenian Genocide as a genocide, be held accountable for these unconscionable crimes against humanity? This refusal to own up to our mistakes only enables evil to flourish.

It enabled it in Kristallnacht, and it enables evil to thrive today. One cannot help but wonder: if we had recognized evil when the persecution of Armenians began in the 1800s, would things have been different in 1914 for the Armenians? Would things have been different when we witnessed Kristallnacht? Would things have been different when American Jews were screaming at the top of their lungs at the mass-murder of Europe’s Jewry in the 1940s? Would things have been different when more than 20 million were killed under Stalin, or when an estimated 45 million were killed by Mao Zedong’s “great leap forward” in China? When 800,000 were murdered in Rwanda, or when tens of thousands were killed in Darfur? When millions are still being murdered and tortured and starved to death in North Korea? We cannot stamp out evil for good.

But we can stand up for what is morally right; whether it concern the past or the future. Though we may not want to believe in this day and age that any person or government is capable of such egregious crimes, we must always remember that evil is a very real threat – more than we can imagine.

After all, who would have thought that enlightened German society, and pinnacle of liberal European culture, would end up murdering nearly 11 million people? As Judea Pearl – the UCLA Professor and father of the late Daniel Pearl – has emphatically stated, “We Westerners fail to understand that half of mankind today is aroused by cruelty.”

In order to stop this cruelty, in order to make it right, we must first recognize it for what it is: evil. We must recognize the Armenian Genocide and hold the perpetrators accountable for their crimes against humanity.

Never Again, for Armenians too.

The author is a freelance writer and the social media director for an Israeli non-profit organization.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Lessons-not-learned

BBC Radio On Easter Sunday, Roy Jenkins hears an #ArmenianGenocide story

April 6, 2015 By administrator

The Armenian Genocide

BBC Radio Wales All Things Considered
Listen in pop-out player

BBC Radio WalesOn Easter Sunday, Roy Jenkins hears an Armenian story of hope and resurrection. Award-winning religious affairs programme.

One hundred years after the start of the Armenian Genocide, Roy Jenkins reflects on the impact of those events with the Rev. Canon Dr Patrick Thomas, Vicar of Christ Church, Carmarthen – an expert on Armenia and author of Remembering The Armenian Genocide 1915-2015 out later this month.

Visiting the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Cardiff’s Cathays Park, the only public memorial to the Genocide on British soil, he also meets members of the Welsh Armenian community to learn how this event, a hundred years ago, still resonates for them today. The programme also includes extracts from eyewitness accounts and sacred Armenian music.

Extracts include ‘Der Zor’ translated by Verjiné Svazlian in The Armenian Genocide, and Peter Balakian’s translation of Gregoris Balakian’s work Armenian Golgotha.

http://armeniangenocide100.org/

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, BBC, radio, Roy-Jenkins

Syrian President finally recognizes the Armenian Genocide

April 6, 2015 By administrator

17:20, 29 Jan 2014
Siranush Ghazanchyan

Pres. Bashar al-Assad

Pres. Bashar al-Assad

In a lengthy interview last week with Agence France Presse (AFP) on the tragic situation in Syria, Pres. Bashar al-Assad made an unexpected reference to the massacres of 1.5 million Armenians. This is the first time that any Syrian head of state has acknowledged the Armenian mass murders and identified the perpetrator as Ottoman Turkey. Report armradio.am

During the interview, Pres. Assad compared the Armenian Genocide of 1915 to the brutal killings of civilians by foreign fighters nowadays in Syria: “The degree of savagery and inhumanity that the terrorists have reached reminds us of what happened in the Middle Ages in Europe over 500 years ago. In more recent modern times, it reminds us of the massacres perpetrated by the Ottomans against the Armenians when they killed a million and a half Armenians and half a million Orthodox Syriacs in Syria and in Turkish territory.”

Not surprisingly, two days later, Bashar Jaafari, Syria’s Ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, made a similar remark: “How about the Armenian Genocide where 1.5 million people were killed?”

The only other high ranking Syrian official who has acknowledged the Armenian Genocide was Abd al-Qader Qaddura, Speaker of the Syrian Parliament, when he inscribed a poignant statement in the Book of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide Monument and Museum in Yerevan on July 16, 2001: “As we visit the Memorial and Museum of the Genocide that the Armenian nation suffered in 1915, we stand in full admiration and respect in front of those heroes that faced death with courage and heroism. Their children and grandchildren continued after them to immortalize their courage and struggle…. With great respect we bow our heads in memory of the martyrs of the Armenian nation — our friends — and hail their ability for resoluteness and triumph. We will work together to liberate every human being from aggression and oppression.”

While the Parliament Speaker’s 2001 statement was a candid and heartfelt message with no political overtones, the same cannot be said about Pres. Assad’s words on the Armenian Genocide as he clearly intended to lash back at the Turkish government’s hostile actions against the Syrian regime. It is well known that Turkey has played a major role in the concerted international effort to topple Pres. Assad, by dispatching heavy weapons and arranging the infiltration of foreign radical Islamist fighters into Syria.

Relations between Syria and Turkey were not always hostile. Before the start of the Syrian crisis in 2011, the two countries were such close political and economic allies that the Assad regime banned the sale of books on the Armenian Genocide, and did not permit foreign film crews to visit Der Zor, the killing fields of thousands of Armenians during the Genocide. Mindful of possible Turkish backlash, Pres. Assad’s staff cancelled my courtesy meeting with the President in 2009 after they discovered on the internet my countless critical articles on Turkey. Moreover, during the honeymoon period between the Syrian and Turkish governments, Pres. Assad advised the visiting Catholicos Aram I that Armenians should maintain good relations with Turkey and not dwell on the past!

In his recent interview with AFP, Pres. Assad also complained about the failure of Western leaders to comprehend developments in the Middle East: “They are always very late in realizing things, sometimes even after the situation has been overtaken by a new reality that is completely different.” Frankly, one could make the same criticism about Pres. Assad for realizing at his own detriment only too late the dishonesty and duplicity of Turkey’s leadership.

Regrettably, the Syrian President is not the only head of state who has failed to decipher the scheming mindset of Turkey’s rulers. Countless Middle Eastern, European, and American leaders have made the same mistake, trusting Turkey’s feigned friendship, only to be let down when the time came for Turkey to keep its end of the bargain.

In recent months, with the increasing dissatisfaction of the international community with Prime Minister Erdogan’s autocratic policies and belligerent statements, it has become crystal clear that no one knows the true face of Turkey better than Armenians, Assyrians, Greeks and Kurds, who have suffered countless brutalities, massacres and even genocide under despotic Turkish rule.

Despite Pres. Assad’s political motivations, Armenians should welcome his belated statement on the Armenian Genocide. After refraining from acknowledging the Genocide for all the wrong reasons for so long, at least now the Syrian President is on record telling the truth about past and present Turkish atrocities!

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, president, Recognizes, Syrian

The Christian tragedy in the Middle East did not begin with Isis

April 5, 2015 By administrator

A hundred years on from the Armenian genocide, and a Christian minority is again suffering

By Robert Fisk  Sunday 5 April 2015

iraq-1One summer’s day in 1990, I walked into a beautiful Crusader chapel in Keserwan, a gentle mountainside north of Beirut, where an old Catholic Maronite priest pointed to a Byzantine mosaic of – I think – Saint John. What he wanted to show me was the holy man’s eyes. They had been stabbed out of the mosaic by a sword or lance at some point in antiquity. ‘The Muslims did this,’ the priest said.

His words had added clarity because at that time the Lebanese Christian army General Michel Aoun – who thought he was the president and still, today, dreams of this unlikely investiture – was fighting a hopeless war against Hafez Assad’s Syrian army. Daily, I was visiting the homes of dead Christians, killed by Syrian shellfire. The Syrians, in the priest’s narrative, were the same ‘Muslims’ who had stabbed out the eyes in the ancient picture.

I remember at the time – and often since – I would say to myself that this was nonsense, that you cannot graft ancient history onto the present. (The Maronites, by the way, had supported the earlier Crusaders. The Orthodox of the time stood with the Muslims.) Christian-Muslim enmity on this scale was a tale to frighten schoolchildren.

The Pope condemns the world’s silence over persecution of Christians

And yet only last year, as shells burst above the Syrian town of Yabroud, I walked into the country’s oldest church and found paintings of the saints. All had had their eyes gouged out and been torn into strips. I took one of those strips home to Beirut, the painted eyes of the saints staring at me even as I write this article. This was not the sacrilege of antiquity. It was done by ghoulish men, probably from Iraq, only months ago.

Like 9/11 – long after Hollywood had regularly demonised Muslims as barbarian killers who wish to destroy America – it seems that our worst fears turn into reality. The priest in 1990 cannot have lived long enough to know how the new barbarians would strike at the saints in Yabroud.

How one Yazidi girl fled the clutches of Isis
Isis warns of the ‘end of Christian presence’ in Middle East
Coptic Christians in Egypt beheaded by militants

Note how I have not mentioned the enslavement of Christian women in Iraq, the Islamic State’s massacre of Christians and Yazidis, the burning of Mosul’s ancient churches or the destruction of the great Armenian church of Deir el-Zour that commemorated the genocide of its people in 1915. Nor the kidnapping of Nigerian schoolgirls. Not even the very latest massacre in Kenya where the numbers of Christian dead and the cruelty of their sectarian killers is, indeed, of epic, Hollywood proportions. Nor have I mentioned the ferocious Sunni-Shia wars that now dwarf the tragedy of the Christians.

Turkish Soldiers standing over skulls of victims from the Armenian village

Turkish Soldiers standing over skulls of victims from the Armenian village

Soldiers standing over skulls of victims from the Armenian village of Sheyxalan in 1915, believed to be victims of the Armenian Holocaust

But the Christian tragedy in the Middle East today needs to be re-thought – as it will be, of course, when Armenians around the world commemorate the 100th anniversary of the genocide of their people by Ottoman Turkey. Perhaps it is time that we acknowledge not only this act of genocide but come to regard it not as just the murder of a minority within the Ottoman Empire, but specifically a Christian minority, killed because they were Armenian but also because they were Christian (many of whom, unfortunately, rather liked the Orthodox, anti-Ottoman Tsar).

And their fate bears some uncommon parallels with the Islamic State murderers of today. The Armenian men were massacred.  The women were gang-raped or forced to convert or left to die of hunger. Babies were burned alive – after being stacked in piles. Islamic State cruelty is not new, even if the cult’s technology defeats anything its opponents can achieve.

In Kuwait last week, a good and thoughtful Muslim, an American university graduate – within the al-Sabah family and prominent in the government – shook his head with disbelief when he spoke of Islamic State.  ‘I watched the video of them burning the Jordanian pilot alive,’ he told me. ‘I watched it several times. I had to, because I had to understand their technology. Do you know they used seven camera angles to film this atrocity?  We could not compete with this media technology. We have to learn.’

Iraq crisis: Yazidi nightmare on Mount Sinjar

 

And this is true. The West – that amorphous, dangerous expression – has still not understood the use of this technology – especially the use which the cult makes of the internet – nor have the Muslim Arab imams who should be speaking about the fearful acts of Islamic State.

But most are not, any more than they denounced the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, when around a million Muslims killed each other. Because they were on Saddam’s side in that war. And because the Islamic State’s ideology is too obviously of Wahabi inspiration, and thus too close to some of the Gulf Arab states.

The crimes of Islamic State are as brutal as any committed by the German army in the Second World War, but Jews who converted were not spared Hitler’s plan for their extermination. What the Islamic State and the 1915 Ottoman Turks have in common is a cruelty based on ideology – even theology – rather than race hatred, although that is not far away. After the burning of churches and of synagogues, the rubble looks much the same.

The tragedy of the Arab world is now on such a literally Biblical scale that we are all demeaned by it. Yet I also think of Lebanon where the old priest showed me his mosaic with the missing eyes and where the Lebanese Christians and Muslims fought each other – with the help of many foreign nations, including Israel, Syria and America – and killed 150,000 of their own people.

Yet today, Lebanese Muslims and Christians, though still politically deeply divided, are protecting each other amid the gale-force winds around them. Why? Because they are today a much more educated population. It’s because they value education, reading and books and knowledge. And from education comes justice. Which is why, when compared to Lebanon, the Islamic State is a nation of lost souls.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Christian-tragedy, Middle East, Turkey

Glendale: Man to fast for 55 days to commemorate #ArmenianGenocide

April 5, 2015 By administrator

Agasi Vartanyan raised awareness five years ago with a similar sacrifice.

By Kelly Corrigan, kelly.corrigan@latimes.com April 4, 2015 | 12:00 p.m.
Agasi Vartanyan waves from inside a glass enclosure built at the St. Leon Armenian Cathedral Church in Burbank

Agasi Vartanyan waves from inside a glass enclosure built at the St. Leon Armenian Cathedral Church in Burbank

Agasi Vartanyan climbed up a ladder Friday morning into a glass enclosure with wood framing outside St. Leon Cathedral in Burbank, where he will fast for 55 days to commemorate the Armenian Genocide.

The Glendale resident chose to fast for 55 days because he is 55 years old, and a decade ago, he fasted for 50 days to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, so he’s looking to beat his previous record.

By fasting, he hopes to raise awareness about the genocide and the 1.5 million Armenians who were killed, beginning in 1915, at the hands of the Ottoman Turks.

Speaking in Armenian through interpreter Harut Sassounian, Vartanyan said he has been thinking about fasting to commemorate the centennial of the genocide for years.

“I’m ready. I’m very positively inclined to carry this out,” he said.

The enclosure is in clear view of passersby on Glenoaks Boulevard, and they can get a close look at it by walking up to the cathedral.

It was built with help from the organization Crimes Against Humanity Never Again, and Sassounian is its president.

On the nonprofit’s website, www.cahna.org, a live-stream of Vartanyan’s fast is expected to be posted, according to members of the organization.

Just before Vartanyan entered the enclosure, men lifted supplies into it such as clean socks, shirts, underwear, pants, body wipes, towels and disinfectant wipes.

The enclosure also has a television and padded lawn chair, and is dotted with images of purple forget-me-not flowers, a symbol adopted universally this year by members of the Armenian diaspora around the world to commemorate the 100 years since the genocide.

Men also hoisted dozens of gallons of water into the enclosure, and Vartanyan plans to drink one gallon each day. A doctor will monitor his vital signs.

Archbishop Hovnan Derderian of the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church, along with fellow clergy, offered a prayer for Vartanyan before he entered the enclosure.

“Our prayers will be with him,” Derderian said. “And I have no doubt that this will send out a clear message to all nations and to all people around the world that what God has given us, the gift of life, we need to honor, and we need to become peacemakers in the life of the world.”

Friends and supporters applauded as Vartanyan climbed the ladder to enter the enclosure around 11 a.m. on Friday.

“I will see you next time, 55 days from now,” he said.

 

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, fast, Glendale, man

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