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LOS ANGELES: City Officials Raise Number of Armenian Genocide March for Justice Participants to 160,000

May 8, 2015 By administrator

City officials upped the number of March For Justice participants to 160,000 (Graphic by Steve Artinian)

City officials upped the number of March For Justice participants to 160,000 (Graphic by Steve Artinian)

LOS ANGELES—The city police and fire officials, as well as department of transportation representatives confirmed Wednesday that the actual number of participants in the April 24 March For Justice to commemorate the Armenian Genocide Centennial eclipsed the initial 130,000 reported by the Los Angeles Times. The agencies place the official total at more than 160,000.

Following the march, which was one of the largest in Los Angeles history, the Los Angeles police, fire and transportation departments reviewed the footage captured by the city helicopters and based on a commonly-used equation, which is used to tabulate crowd numbers, concluded that the actual number of participants exceeded 160,000.

Aram Sahakian, Senior Transportation Engineer In Charge of Special Traffic Operations and Emergency Response at the Los Angeles Department of Transportation, confirmed the new tally to officials of the Armenian Genocide Centennial Committee of Western US, which organized the March For Justice as the sole commemorative event in Los Angeles on April 24.

The police, fire and transportation agencies also commended and praised the March For Justice organizing committee for their diligence in securing volunteer monitors, who were for the most part members of the Armenian Youth Federation, and who, along the route of the march, worked with law enforcement and transportation officials to ensure the smooth progression of the event.

Captain Dave Storaker of the Los Angeles Police Department, who was in charge of the overall march on April 27 tweeted to the AYF saying: “My compliments to the Monitors. You all did a wonderful job on what the news reports the largest event of its kind.”

The March For Justice started at the intersection of Western Avenue and Sunset Boulevard, where an opening program featuring remarks by LA Mayor Eric Garcetti, California Senate President Pro Tempore Kevin de Leon and Los Angeles City Councilman Mitch O’Farrell kicked off the march.

Marchers headed west on Sunset Boulevard, then south on La Brea Avenue and then west on Wilshire Boulevard, where the crowd gathered in front of the Turkish Consulate building for a rally that included remarks by Representative Adam Schiff and Los Angeles City Councilmembers Paul Krekorian and Paul Koretz, whose passionate speeches elevated the event’s importance and highlighted the need for justice for the Armenian Genocide.

“This further shows the strength of our community,” said Garo Ghazarian, co-chair of the AGCC Western US. “It also highlights the resolve of the Armenian-American community to fight for our national aspirations and demands in the name of justice for the Armenian Genocide.”

“We would like to express our heartfelt gratitude to all the city and county officials and agencies who came together on that day and were part of the March for Justice,” said Talin Yacoubian, the co-chair of the AGCC Western US. “We especially thank the Los Angeles Police, Fire and Transportation departments for their support and utmost professionalism, which made the march a tremendous success.”

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, for, Genocide, Justice, Los Angeles, march

Armenia Official Criticizes Turkey for Genocide Denial

May 8, 2015 By administrator

By RICK GLADSTONE MAY 7, 2015  The New York Time

Armenia’s foreign minister criticized Turkey on Thursday over its angry responses to what he called the growing and “irreversible” trend of global acknowledgments that the killings of ethnic Armenians by Ottoman Turks 100 years ago was a genocide.

The minister, Edward Nalbandian, also expressed hope that President Obama, who had described those killings as a genocide before he was elected president, would use that terminology while still in office, which he has not yet done. “Of course if the president uses the G-word it would be a strong and important message,” Mr. Nalbandian said.

He spoke by telephone from Washington, where an official delegation led by Armenia’s president, Serzh Sargsyan, has been visiting to participate in centennial commemorations to remember victims of the genocide and honor groups and individuals who helped Armenians escape death.

  • Remembering the Armenian GenocideAPRIL 24, 2015

An estimated 1.5 million Armenians were killed and their property destroyed or confiscated during the period of 1915 to 1923 when the Ottoman Empire collapsed, and many survivors and their descendants scattered into a diaspora that has placed Armenian enclaves in more than 100 countries. Some of the biggest Armenian communities are in the United States.

Turkey’s government has expressed condolences to Armenians but has denied that the killings constituted a genocide, arguing that many Ottoman Turks also were killed in that era of war and upheaval. It has responded angrily in recent weeks to declarations by Pope Francis, the European Parliament and others that Turkey should acknowledge the killings as a genocide. The word was invented in the 1940s by a Polish-Jewish jurist, Raphael Lemkin, who said he created it in part because of the Armenian killings.

The latest target of Turkey’s anger was Luxembourg, which on Wednesday adopted a resolution recognizing and condemning the Armenian genocide, becoming at least the 22nd country to do so. Turkey recalled its ambassador to Luxembourg in response, denouncing the resolution as a distortion of history.

Mr. Nalbandian, who has been deeply involved in the centennial events in Armenia and abroad, suggested that it was unlikely that a normalization of relations with Turkey would happen soon, partly because of the unresolved genocide legacy issue. The Turkish-Armenian border is closed, and there is virtually no trade between the countries.

“We are where we are,” he said. “Turkey is just continuing its policy of denial. They are criticizing, but the process of recognizing genocide is irreversible.”

Mr. Nalbandian said he was encouraged that an increasing number of Turks appeared to be questioning their government’s official policy of genocide denial. He also said a Turkey-Armenia reconciliation was necessary.

“We have no other alternative,” he said. “We have to live together, not with a policy of denials, but with joint efforts to turn the dark pages.”

Noubar Afeyan, a prominent American venture capitalist of Armenian descent who is chairman of the national committee that organized the centennial events in Washington, said many members of the post-genocide generation had moved beyond grief, embracing the tenacity of the Armenian diaspora, which now totals 10 million.

“As an Armenian who was born in Lebanon, grew up in Canada and lived in the United States for 35 years, I believe it’s the natural result that Armenians are maturing in relation to this tragedy,” Mr. Afeyan said in a telephone interview. “It’s extending to be not only about crimes and victims, but survivors and their saviors.”

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenain, Genocide, Turkey

Sırrı Süreyya Önder Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide

May 8, 2015 By administrator

By: Hambersom Aghbashian

sirm-sureyya-onderSırrı Süreyya Önder (born 7 July 1962- in the Southeastern Anatolian city of Adıyaman), is a Turkish film director, actor, screenwriter, columnist and politician. In 1980, he enrolled in Ankara  university to study political science. There, he joined a political student movement to protest the military junta, which had overturned the government on September 12, 1980. He was arrested and sentenced to twelve years in prison. In 2010, Önder began a columnist career at the newspaper BirGün, he then continued to write at the daily Radikal. Currently, he writes for Özgür Gündem . Önder was elected into the parliament in 2011as an independent but backed by the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP), he later joined the BDP. He was involved in the 2013 Taksim Gezi Park protests and was reportedly hospitalized. He competed in 2014 Istanbul mayoral race, as the candidate of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), the sister party of the BDP. Currently he acts as a MP of HDP from Istanbul. Önder’s 2006 film “The International” was awarded the Best Picture Prize at the 2007 International Adana Golden Boll Film Festival, and was entered into the 29th Moscow International Film Festival . He has many other films.(1)

Taraf Newspaper of 20th April 2010 wrote “ …. the anniversary of the 1915s events, this year will be remembered in Turkey, too. The commemoration organized by the “Say Stop!” Group, will start and held at Taksim tram stop. A group of intellectuals, which will be joined also by intellectuals as Ali Bayramoğlu, Ferhat Kentel, Neşe Düzel, Perihan Mağden and Sırrı Süreyya Önder, for the first time in Turkey will commemorate this year on 24 April as the anniversary of the events of 1915.” “This pain is OUR pain. This mourning is for ALL of US.” was part of the groups campaign.(2)

According to ” www.bianet.org “,” At the 97th anniversary of  1915 Armenian Genocide -April 2012- a commemoration event organized at Taksim Square. 500 people came together in front of the tram stop at Taksim Square; Rakel Dink, Orhan Dink, Arat Dink, artist Metin Kahraman, Prof. Dr. Gencay Gürsoy, BDP parliamentarians Sabahat Tuncel and Sırrı Süreyya Önder, journalist author Oral Çalışlar, Prof. Dr. Baskın Oran, artist Ferhat Tunç and the family of Sevag Balıkçı were among them. Participation in this year’s commemoration event was much more crowded than the previous two years.(3)

Under the title “Armenian Genocide-recognizing MP becomes Istanbul mayoral candidate”, “news.am” wrote on April 12, 2013, ” Ertugrul Kurkcu, Vice-Chairman of the newly founded Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) of Turkey, announced that MP Sirri Sureyya Onder is their nominee for the office of the Mayor of Istanbul. To note, Sirri Sureyya Onder had announced in the Turkish parliament, on April 24, 2012, that a great massacre of the Armenians had taken place in 1915 and that this massacre is called “genocide” in all languages.(4)

According to ” The Armenian Weekly”, April 25, 2012, “In a more meaningful gesture, and according to reports, Parliamentarian Sırrı Süreyya Önder is working on bringing a motion declaring April 24 a ‘Day of Mourning and Sharing the Pain of the Armenian victims of 1915’.”(5)

During the Turkish parliament’s hearings on the proposal for fight against the financing of terrorism, the “Peace and Democracy Party” (BDP) MP Sirri Sureyya Onder reflected on the court ruling on the case of Hrant Dink, the founder and former chief editor of Istanbul’s Agos Armenian weekly, who was killed in 2007. “The person [Erhan Tuncel] who was punished in the trial was punished for placing a bomb in a hamburger-selling company [McDonald’s]. In Turkey, the life of an Armenian citizen is not as important as an American company that sells hamburgers. You cannot touch a hamburger seller, but you can kill an Armenian,” Sirri Sureyya Onder said, Turkish Haberx news agency informs.(6)

——————————————————————————————————————————————

1- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S%C4%B1rr%C4%B1_S%C3%BCreyya_%C3%96nder

2- http://setasarmenian.blogspot.com/2010/04/good-thoughtful-and-ugly-from-turks-on.html

3- http://www.bianet.org/english/minorities/137858-97th-anniversary-of-genocide-and-the-tradition-of-unsolved-murders

4- http://news.am/eng/print/news/183868.html

5- http://armenianweekly.com/2012/04/25/ak-party-founding-member-apologizes/

6- http://recordarmenews.blogspot.com/2012_02_01_archive.html

 

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenin, Genocide, Intellectuals, recognize, Sırrı-Süreyya-Önder, Turkish

Luxembourg adopts resolution condemning the Armenian Genocide

May 6, 2015 By administrator

LuxembourgOn May 6, the Parliament of Luxembourg unanimously adopted a resolution condemning the Armenian Genocide.

This is what Member of the Parliament of Luxembourg Laurent Mosar said in an interview with “Armenpress” and promised to provide details later.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: arminian, Genocide, Luxembourg, recognize

President of Turkey Shocked to Learn Most Americans Already Know About Genocide Against Native Americans

May 6, 2015 By administrator

by Scott N. Towel

347412_Recep-Tayyip-ErdoganAt a press conference called to condemn Pope Francis for saying that Turkey did ‘you know what to you know who,’ Turkish President Recep Erdogan was surprised to learn that most Americans know of their nation’s genocide against millions of Native American. Report The Israeli Daily

A reporter questioned Erdogan about the Turks continual refusal to accept their intentional killing of 1.5 million Armenians during WWI, through mass deportation, starvation, and outright murder. An angry Erdogan responded, “You are ignorant to make such a claim. How would America feel if I went to the UN and shamed them by demanded that they acknowledge their responsibility in the death of all those Indians – I mean the feather ones, not the dot ones?”

RELATED: After Erdogan’s Revelation, Muslim Leaders Say Islam is Not to Blame for America’s Problems

When the reporter explained that President Obama had in fact apologized to the Native Americans back in 2009, the Turkish president grew visibly perplexed. “Really? And nobody rioted? Didn’t people take this as a sign that Obama isn’t a real American?”

The conversation went on for some time, as reporters tried to explain the long, complex, and brutal history of the United States’ relationship with Native Americans. One reporter suggested that there were many potential paths forward Turkey might take. He gave the example of Native American Tribes building wealth by being given concessions to own casinos. Erdogan considered this. “Interesting. So I would let Armenians open casinos? One question: do I have to let them win?”

In related news, it has not been confirmed that the Turkish President was reciting the Pledge of Allegiance to the United States in the image above.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: American, Erdogan, Genocide, indian, shocked

GERMANY The Bundestag will today discuss the resolutions on the Armenian Genocide

May 6, 2015 By administrator

arton111434-480x359Today Wednesday, 6 May, the Bundestag Foreign Affairs Committee will consider resolutions on the Armenian Genocide submitted by the three parliamentary groups.
Expert genocide researcher and German activist Tessa Hoffman said it was still unclear whether the Foreign Affairs Committee will decide whether to propose a resolution after discussing the three resolutions submitted by both parties in power and members

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenain, Bundestag, discuss, Genocide, Germany

According to the Egyptian newspaper “Al-Misri al-Yom” after the Armenian Genocide Turkey’s continued crimes

May 6, 2015 By administrator

arton111387-399x300The Egyptian newspaper with wide circulation, “Al-Misri al-Yom” published an article by MP Emad Gad also vice president of the Center for Analysis “Al-Ahram” on the Armenian genocide.

Emad Gad affirms that Egypt might follow the example of many other countries and recognize the Armenian genocide carried out by Turkey and to write that “there is no justification to postpone the date of this recognition of the genocide of Armenians. “Under the headline” 100 years after the Armenian Genocide realized by Turkey “, the author presents the data of the genocide and violence of its realization against the Armenian civilian population.” The Turks crimes will not end with the extermination of the Armenians “, he wrote and continue” where the Turks have set foot there were massacres, blood flowed (…) this is what happened in Greece country democracy and philosophy. “

Emad Gad, who recently participated in the Global Forum Yerevan wrote that Turkey is implementing significant means to be born of violence in Europe, Asia and Africa. The Egyptian MP notes however that the important role of Armenian communities, Greek and others to curb the entry of Turkey into the European Union and returns to the Pope’s statement François recognizing the Armenian Genocide and the US Congress efforts to Genocide recognition by Washington. Emad Gad also argues that denial of Turkey received a serious setback for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the European Parliament “international recognition of the Armenian Genocide can not be stopped by Ankara,” he wrote. Finally, the author openly critical of Turkey for its support to the “Muslim Brotherhood” as well as terrorist Islamist groups.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Egyption, Genocide, newspaper, Turkey

U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum issues statement on Genocide

May 5, 2015 By administrator

191665The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) issued a noteworthy statement on the centenary of the Armenian Genocide, according to Massis Post.

Headlined “Museum Statement on the 100th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,” it starts: “On the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum remembers the suffering of the Armenian people.”

“The Ottoman government, controlled by the Committee of Union and Progress…, systematically eliminated the Armenian ethnic presence in the Anatolia region of its empire,” the statement reads in part.

The USHMM statement also references Raphael Lemkin, who coined the word ‘genocide,’ by explaining that: “The origins of the term ‘genocide’ rest, in part, in the evens of 1915-16 in Anatolia, then part of the Ottoman Turkish empire.”

In addition to the historic statement, the museum now features a ‘Special Focus’ section in its online exhibitions dedicated to the Armenian Genocide, which provides background information, imagery, and select eyewitness testimonies from the USC Shoah Foundation’s Visual History Archive. The ‘Special Focus’ also provides links to additional information including a more in-depth description of the Armenian Genocide in the museum’s online Holocaust Encyclopedia.

Viewers are also encouraged to read USHMM historian Dr. Edna Friedberg’s April 17th article about Franz Werfel’s “Forty Days of Musa Dagh” in the Jewish Daily Forward article headlined “How Novel About Armenian Genocide Became Bestseller in Warsaw Ghetto.”

Dedicated in 1993, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is America’s national institution for the documentation, study, and interpretation of Holocaust history, and serves as this country’s memorial to the millions of people murdered during the Holocaust.

“On behalf of the Armenian Assembly of America, the Armenian National Institute, and the newly launched online Armenian Genocide Museum of America, we thank the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum for joining other institutions and organization from around the world in commemorating the Armenian Genocide. The continued attention by USHMM to the Armenian Genocide since its founding through lectures, exhibits, and publications is tremendously appreciated,” stated Assembly co-chairs Anthony Barsamian and Van Z. Krikorian.

Related links:

Massis Post. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Highlights Centenary of the Armenian Genocide

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Genocide, Holocaust, Memorial, statement

Armenian Genocide: Let Truth Triumph

May 5, 2015 By administrator

By Jagdish N. Singh

March-for-Armenian-Genocide-e1430831309831I admire Pope Francis.  He is not just spiritual or religious. He is   courageous too and does not believe in refraining from calling a spade a spade . The Pope has now referred to the 20th century mass killings of Armenians as the first genocide of the 20th century. During a mass in Saint Peter’s Basilica the other day to commemorate the 100th anniversary of those heinous killings, the Pope said, “In the past century our human family has lived through three massive and unprecedented tragedies.  The first…struck your own Armenian people.”  Report Jewish press

Branding  the tragedy as a “senseless slaughter,” the Pope preached , “It is necessary, and indeed a duty, to honor their memory, for whenever memory fades, it means that evil allows wounds to fester.  Concealing or denying evil is like allowing a wound to keep bleeding without bandaging it.”  Pope Francis also recalled  other mass killings of the 20th century – in Cambodia, Rwanda, Burundi and Bosnia. 

Significantly, in his message to mark Holocaust Memorial Day (January 27) in 2011 then Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams  too had  spoken of the need to remember the atrocities committed against the Jewish people in the Holocaust and even in Britain’s own history. He had stressed the need to remember also the other victims of genocide .  Williams was quoted as saying that the works of poets such as Holocaust survivor Paul Celan and Etty Hillesum served to remind the world of the “loss of humanity that remains in our midst to this day…Although other  poets have spoken for those killed in Armenia, Cambodia and Darfur, many stories from these and other genocidal events remain untold. Testimony, poetry and autobiography allow us to attend to the distinct stories of individuals rather than trying to comprehend the statistics of different genocides of recent history.”  

Pertinently, Archbishop Williams noted that events in medieval Britain, such as the blood libel case against Jews following the mysterious death of William of Norwich in the 12th century or King Edward’s expulsion of all Jews from England were “almost completely lost to public awareness”. He warned , “If the stories are not told over and again, we lose the memory of those who suffered and we risk losing something that protects our humanity.” 

It is heartening to learn that more than 20 nations, including Russia , France and Germany,  have now come recognize the Armenian genocide. At a ceremony in Armenia, Russian President Vladmin Putin reportedly referred to “mass” killings and   used the word “genocide.” Putin said, “ There cannot be any justification for mass murder of people. Today we mourn together with the Armenian people.” French President Francois Hollande said, “ We will never forget the tragedies your people have endured. Important words have already been said in Turkey, but others are still expected so that shared grief can become shared destiny.” German President Joachim Gauck condemned the 1915 killings as genocide and acknowledged that Germany bore partial blame for the bloodletting.   

I wonder why American President Barack Obama and some other leaders in the democratic world  still shy away from branding the Armenian killings as genocide.  In 2006 then Senator  Obama had said,  “The Armenian genocide is not an allegation, a personal opinion, or a point of view, but rather a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of historical evidence.” It is time the American President retained his courage of conviction, spoke the truth in the case and  acted in the great American spirit that stands against all kinds of injustice the world over. 

Moreover, there is no confusion as to the nature of the Armenian killings.  The 1948 UN Geneva Convention clearly defines genocide as “systematic destruction, in whole or part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.” President Obama could invoke this definition very well . Over 1.5 million Armenians were estimated to have perished under the  Ottoman Empire during World War I. (http://www.nytimes.com/ref/timestopics/topics_armeniangenocide.html  ) .  This crime cannot be overlooked . 

About the Author: Jagdish N. Singh is an Indian journalist based in New Delhi.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Let, triumph, truth

Newington Man Connects With Family’s Role In Armenian Genocide

May 5, 2015 By administrator

By CHRISTOPHER HOFFMAN 
hc-newington-armenian-genocide-zartarian-famil-001

(Photo courtesy Zartarian family)

Roy Zartarian’s father, Charles Zartarian, is seen at center left in a family photograph taken sometime before the genocide in 1915. Charles’ father, Zakar Zartarian, is seen behind him. The two other children in the photograph are Charles’ sisters, both of whom were said to have died of starvation. Their names have been lost. The woman next to Zakar is his wife, Takoohi, who died after the family fled to Russia. The man seated to the left of Zakar is Roy’s great grandfather, Mushegh. Next to Mushegh is his wife, Roy’s great grandmother. Her name is lost. They are also assumed to have died in the genocide. The identity of the woman at far right is unknown.(Photo courtesy Zartarian family)

NEWINGTON — Roy Zartarian always knew his father and grandfather were survivors of the Armenian genocide during World War I, the 100th anniversary of which was marked last month.

His father Charles Zartarian bore the scars of his flight from the Turks: he had just one finger on one hand and two on the other — the result of amputations from frostbite, Zartarian was told. Report courant.com

But the story of their escape remained shrouded in mystery. Neither Zartarian’s father nor his grandfather ever spoke of it.

“I would ask my mother, and she would say he wouldn’t talk about what he experienced,” Zartarian, 68, said.

With his father’s early death of a heart attack in 1955, the tale seemed lost forever.

Fast forward to the mid-2000s. Zartarian’s interest in the Armenian genocide was growing. A database of of Hartford Courant stories had just been put online. On a whim, Zartarian searched his family name.

To his amazement, a Courant story from 1922 came up recounting in agonizing detail his father and grandfather’s horrific ordeal. Headlined “Armenian Boy, Minus Fingers, After Turkish Atrocity, Living Here,” it included a photograph of his father, then about 11.

“I couldn’t believe it,” Zartarian said, struggling to control his emotions. “I was in tears. It answered a lot of questions. I now know how my father and grandfather made it to this country.”

Zartarian’s grandfather was a successful blacksmith in Harput, today Elazig, in central Turkey, part of the Ottoman Empire, according to the article. Then came World War I.

The Ottoman Empire sided with Germany and found itself at war with Russia on its eastern border.

Fearing Armenians, who were Christians rather than Muslims, would side with the Russians, the Turks ordered their deportation and eventual slaughter. An estimated 1.5 million died.

For the Zartarian family, the nightmare began one day in 1915 when a crier went through their town ordering all Armenians to prepare to leave, the article says, an incident Zaratrian said he has corroborated.

The Turks forced-marched the Zartarians and their fellow Armenians to a village where Roy’s grandfather found a Kurd who agreed to hide the family for $500, the Zartarians told the Courant. Over that winter, Zartarian’s father’s two sisters died of starvation, they said.

The article goes on to describe the family’s escape to a Russian-occupied town and later capture by the Turks. Seeing his father’s frozen fingers, a Turkish soldier chopped them off, the article says.

Zartarian said he’s been unable to confirm the story independently.

“I don’t know whether that was embroidered or not for the sake of the news coverage back then,” he said.

The family escaped to Russia where Zartarian’s grandmother died. His father and grandfather, the family’s only survivors, then made their way to Istanbul. There, they learned of a relative in Hartford who sent money for passage to America.

Roy Zartarian’s father Charles and grandfather Zakar.

(Photo courtesy Zartarian family)

Asked by the Courant reporter in 1922 what he wanted to do for a living, Zartarian’s father replied that he wanted to be a lawyer. He fulfilled his ambition, attending Harvard Law School and becoming an immigration lawyer.

In spite of his disability, Charles Zartarian was able to button buttons, tie his tie, play golf and write. His penmanship was superb, Roy Zartarian said. His father’s old fountain pen is among his most prized possessions.

“His handwriting with two fingers was better than mine with five,” Zartarian said.

Turkey has yet to accept responsibility for the massacre of the Armenians during World War I. Its government continues to deny the genocide.

Turkey still could and should be held responsible its crimes against the Armenians, Zartarian said.

Zartarian has joined other Armenians in Connecticut and worldwide in commemorating the 100th anniversary of the genocide this year. He attended a recent event at the state Capitol and wears a purple wristband emblazoned with a Forget-Me-Not flower and the words, “We Will Never Forget.”

Zartarian talked of the importance of remembrance and human resilience.

“For the longest time, I kept this quiet,” Zartarian said. “With the 100th anniversary, I think it’s time to bring this story out and show how people can overcome and survive and make a new life for themselves.”

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Connects, Family's, Genocide, man, Newington

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