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Armenians call for German apology on genocide issue

April 4, 2015 By administrator

0,,18293827_303,00Germany’s politicians have debated the question of whether the Armenian Genocide should be referred to as such. Shortly before the 100th anniversary of the massacre, the discussion has entered a new round.

On April 24, the world will mark the 100th anniversary of the start of the Armenian Genocide. But instead of a proper commemoration in the Bundestag, there is controversy.

On the day of the anniversary later this month, the German parliament will devote an hour to the debate over the crimes committed against Armenian Christians in the former Ottoman Empire. In place of cross-party unity, dissent is expected to prevail. Report DW

The Greens and the Left Party are in favor of recognizing the massacre, which took place from 1915 to 1916, as genocide. But that’s just what the governing coalition of Christian Democrats (CDU) and Social Democrats (SPD) want to prevent – likely over the fear that such a decision would lead to a deep freeze in diplomatic relations with Turkey. Ankara has steadfastly rejected any acknowledgment of the past events as genocide.

“I, personally, am disappointed that there seems to be a critical lack of courage when it comes to saying what really happened,” said SPD politician Dietmar Nietan, in a recent interview with the Berlin-based Tagesspiegel newspaper.

‘An apology would be enough’

Descendants of massacre survivors have now called on the government to do just that. “An apology would be enough,” Ergün Ayik, head of the Surp Giragos Church Foundation in southern Turkish city of Diyarbakir, told the news agency dpa. The Surp Giragos Church is the largest Armenian church in the Middle East.

Armenian historian Ashot Hayruni, a professor at the Yerevan State University, also thinks Germany has a duty. “It’s important for the German Parliament to recognize the genocide as such, and condemn it,” he said, adding that the government should also actively influence Turkey to relent and make the same decision.

Many representatives of German civil society have condemned the government’s continued reluctance to recognize the genocide by name. “Even ignorance can be meaningful,” said Shermin Langhoff, the director of the Maxim Gorki Theater in Berlin, speaking to the Tagesspiegel. Langhoff, who has dedicated a special series of programs at the theater to the memory of the genocide, believes the Bundestag’s behavior is fatal and will leave open “a major gap in Europe’s cultural memory.”

Markus Meckel has called for clarity from the German government

Markus Meckel has called for clarity from the German government

Markus Meckel, a civil rights activist from the former East Germany and a former SPD member of parliament, feels as if the current debate has been pushed back a decade. The Bundestag first dealt with the genocide question in 2005, and even back then the Turkey factor prevented the government from adopting a resolution.

After much back and forth, it was decided that Germans should apologize for the “inglorious actions of the German Empire” – more was not possible at that time. Even today, according to Meckel, the Bundestag is threatening to stop short. “Anyone who denies the term [genocide] essentially minimizes the disaster and the suffering,” he said.

The Germans knew everything

The involvement of the German Empire in the deportation of Armenians has long been considered a fact by historians. What has remained controversial, however, was the extent to which Germans were involved. Were they witnesses – or complicit?

According to estimates, anywhere from 300,000 to 1.5 million Armenians died in the genocide. In Armenia, the catastrophe is known as “aghet” – and is definitively categorized as genocide. In Turkey, however, the successor state of the Ottoman Empire, the suffering of those days is still officially considered “war-induced displacement and safety measures.” Casualty figures are also disputed by Turkey, which has prevented reconciliation between the two countries.

But Christin Pschichholz, a historian at the University of Potsdam, doesn’t mince words. “The German government was fully aware of the policy of extermination of the Armenian population in the Ottoman Empire,” she said, after reviewing documents from Germany’s Foreign Office. Death marches, executions and forced labor – German diplomats meticulously recorded everything that was going on around them at the time.

“The conclusion that between the years 1915 and 1918 a genocide took place on the territory of the Ottoman Empire has been known by the German government for the last 100 years,” said Rolf Hosfeld of the House of Lepsius Organization, which runs a genocide studies program together with the university.

Germany doesn’t want to jeopardize reconciliation

Bu that knowledge is not reflected in action. Government representatives have always avoided the use of the word genocide in connection with Armenia, instead using the terms “massacre” and “expulsion.”

During an inquiry by the Left Party in the Bundestag in February, the government once again fell back on this language. The stated reason: Germany does not want to jeopardize reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey. The conceptual framing of the massacre, according to the official line, should be left to the academics.

Armenia, along with more than 20 other countries, has recognized the events as genocide under the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide of 1948. About a year ago, then prime minister and current Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan broke his country’s decades-long silence and apologized to the victims and their descendants, speaking of “inhuman consequences” that led to the expulsion of the Armenians. He did not, however, speak of genocide.

In deference to Turkey

Meanwhile, all eyes will be on the official commemoration on April 24 in the Armenian capital, Yerevan. And also on the German delegation that will travel to Armenia to mark the anniversary.

Here, too, it seems Germany has deferred to Turkish sensibilities and will send only a small delegation. DW has found out that the government’s human rights commissioner, Christoph Strässer, and Deputy Foreign Minister Michael Roth will travel to Yerevan.

Neither Chancellor Angela Merkel nor Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier are planning to take part in an event which will see many other prominent world leaders – including French President Francois Hollande.

Cem Özdemir, co-chairman of Germany’s Green party, who traveled through Armenia last month, sharply criticized Germany’s behavior in the Tagesspiegel. “With false regard to Mr. Erdogan, the government is downplaying the Armenian Genocide,” he said. “Hardly a dignified response toward the victims and their descendants.”

Armenian genocide – German guilt?

Witness or accomplice? At a congress in Berlin, historians have been debating Germany’s role in the genocide of Armenians 100 years ago. New findings show that Germany’s complicity is greater than previously assumed. (06.03.2015)

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: apology, Armenians, call, Genocide, german

USA Vermont lawmakers acknowledge Armenian genocide

April 1, 2015 By administrator

By Paris Achen, Free Press Staff Writer,

B9316763399Z.1_20150331201232_000_GVOACJH8Q.1-0MONTPELIER – On the same day the Vermont Legislature for first time officially recognized the 1915 Armenian genocide, the Council of Turkic American Associations held a cultural event in the Statehouse.  Report burlingtonfreepress.com

Organizers of the Turkish cultural event and the Statehouse sergeant of arms said the scheduling snafu was unintentional.

“The booking was not made with any other intention than serving the public and the Vermont Legislature, as we already do,” said Janet Miller, Statehouse sergeant-of-arms.

The House and Senate unanimously passed resolutions Tuesday morning recognizing the systematic killing of about 1.5 million Armenians in the former Ottoman Empire and commemorating the 100th anniversary this year. The Turkish government continues to deny the genocide.

Agata Ayrapetian, (left) of Richmond and daughter Rafi, 5, listen to a presentation Tuesday at the Statethouse on the genocide in Armenia. (Photo: GLENN RUSSELL/FREE PRESS)
Vermont band Lokum played Armenian instrumental devotional songs in the House chamber Tuesday and received a standing ovation.
Author Chris Bohjalian of Lincoln speaks Tuesday

Author Chris Bohjalian of Lincoln speaks Tuesday

Author Chris Bohjalian of Lincoln speaks Tuesday in the Statehouse during a presentation on the genocide in Armenia during World War I. On the screen behind him is a wedding photo of his Armenian father and Swedish mother.

Two Vermonters, Chris Bohjalian and Jessica Oski, who are descendants of Armenian genocide survivors, suggested the resolution to Rep. Joan Lenes, D-Shelburne, to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the genocide. The official Armenian Remembrance Day is April 24.

Bohjalian is an author and columnist for the Burlington Free Press; Oski is a lobbyist.

Lenes descends from Assyrian immigrants from Persia, who also were persecuted by the Ottoman Empire.

“I want us to remember so we don’t repeat, and we are still repeating,” Lenes said. “Being an Assyrian I feel a camaraderie with Armenians.”

After passage of the resolution, Bohjalian and Armenian-American Dana Walrath, a medical anthropologist at the University of Vermont, gave a talk in Room 10 of the Statehouse about their personal journeys discovering their family history against the haunting backdrop of the genocide. Both of the speakers have written historical novels about the genocide.

Nicole Kennedy of Hinesburg attended a presentation on the genocide in Armenia at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday. April marks the centennial of the start of the Armenian genocide. (Photo:

Nicole Kennedy of Hinesburg attended a presentation on the genocide in Armenia at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday. April marks the centennial of the start of the Armenian genocide. (Photo:

GLENN RUSSELL/FREE PRESS)

Bohjalian recalled visiting Turkey’s Dudan Crevasse, where 10,000 Armenians were marched to a ravine, shot or bayoneted to death and thrown into the crevasse at the bottom of a ravine.

In the 1914 Armenian census, there were 124,000 Armenians living in the Diyarbakir Province, where the crevasse is located. By 1922, only 3,000 remained, Bohjalian said.

Walrath said there are eight stages of genocide, and the eighth stage is denial.

“This genocide is still ongoing because there is still denial,” Walrath said.

Anna Kelliher of New Zealand and her distant cousin, Nicole Kennedy of Hinesburg, attended Tuesday’s talk. They said they could relate to the authors’ personal journeys trying to piece together their past.

Kelliher and Kennedy are descendants of Holocaust survivors. They met through a Holocaust survivor resource center, which helps connect families that were split apart by the Holocaust, and found out their grandfathers were first cousins. Kelliher and Kennedy have been communicating online since 2011 but just met in person for the first time this month.

“Genocide is kind of ongoing even after the killing ends,” Kelliher said. “Look at us. We are still dealing with. Our families were pulled apart, and we have been trying to put them back together.”

Three hours after the talk, the Turkish Cultural Center Vermont — part of the Council of Turkic American Associations — welcomed lawmakers to its cultural event in the Statehouse’s Cedar Creek Room.

Yusuf Demir, vice president of the Turkish Cultural Center Vermont, said the cultural association is unaffiliated with the Turkish government and takes no stance on the Armenian genocide. He said Armenians were welcome at the event.

“We are Turkic people living in Vermont,” Demir said. “These centers are funded by Turkish-Americans. We don’t have a political agenda.”

Lenette Peterson, executive assistant at the Turkish Cultural Center Vermont, said she booked the Cedar Creek Room for the event four months ago. Tuesday was the association’s fourth annual cultural event at the Statehouse.

“Reservations are made through this office based on availability in as equitable a way as possible,” said Miller, Statehouse sergeant-of-arms. “We don’t keep track of what was booked first and don’t look to see if there is a conflict of interest.”

Asmik Bagramian, an Armenian-American from Essex, said she was oblivious of the scheduling issue.

“I primarily was there for the Armenian cause regardless of what else was going on,” Bagramian said. “I’m very happy I was part of the resolution commemorating the centennial of the Armenian genocide.”

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: acknowledge, Armenian, Genocide, Vermont

Armenian diaspora calls on Turkey to open border and archives

March 31, 2015 By administrator

208240_newsdetailDelegates of the 4th Congress of Western Armenians released a list of demands from the Turkish Republic in Paris on Sunday, including the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border and providing unlimited access to historical archives.

The descendants of Armenians who were living and persecuted during the Ottoman Empire have made the following demands of the Turkish government: “Open the Turkish border with the Republic of Armenia immediately and without preconditions and initiate a number of steps for the establishment of interstate confidence and friendly relations with the authorities and population of the Armenian state, among whom live hundreds of thousands of descendants of Western Armenians.”

The delegation also called for unlimited access to historical archives from the Ottoman Empire, stating this is “necessary for the re-establishment of the rights of Western Armenians. This should include all cadastre and civil state archives, in addition to all information related to our moral and material losses (damages incurred whether pecuniary or non-pecuniary) and relevant rights.”

On March 19, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan slammed the Armenian diaspora, saying: “Oh, Armenian diaspora, oh, Armenian administration, our archives are here. We have hundreds of thousands of documents, over a million documents. How many documents do you have? Bring your documents, and we will task the historians, our historians, political scientists, even archeologists and lawyers [with studying them]… let’s seek the truth here,” he said, adding that “anti-Turkey campaigns carried out by paying money and forming lobbies will not earn you anything.”

The memorandum published by the Armenian congress also called for the recognition of the National Congress of Western Armenians as a legal entity in Turkey, and that it is the indisputable right for the Armenian ethnic entity to return to their homeland and rehabilitate all community properties such as schools and churches.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: archives, Armenian, border, Genocide, open, Turkey

Genocide Recognition Campaign ‘Pointless Without Demands’

March 31, 2015 By administrator

Ara Papyan

Ara Papyan

YEREVAN—The main purpose of the Armenian Genocide was to seize the property and lands belonging to Armenians, said director of the Yerevan-based Modus Vivendi center Ara Papyan on Monday, adding that Armenia cannot achieve its potential without restoring what was lost.

“We are more focused on the question’s external aspect, thinking of who will come to Armenia to lay flowers [on the Genocide memorial], but instead, the authorities should have three important questions to answer: what do we want? Secondly, on what bases do we lay claims? And thirdly, why do we want that? Can the realities today be taken for granted to allow us to continue [the campaign] the same way?” Ara Papyan, said during a press conference.

The expert noted that two thirds of Armenia’s population is concentrated in the Ararat valley, which he said is quite close to the Turkish border.

“The [Genocide] centennial, in my understanding, offered a good chance to respond to those questions. With the world’s attention focused on the centennial, we must by all means profit by that occasion to raise the questions we want,” Papyan said.

He added that Armenia fails to use its potential, continuing the Soviet-style tradition of just observing the ceremony.

“Continuing the recognition campaign without adding to it the demand for fair cause is absolutely pointless. On April 24, we must put on the table a package outlining the mechanisms of resolution. And for that, we need a commission of lawyers,” said the expert.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: demands, Genocide, Recognition

Argentina 1915-2015 Symphony concert in Buenos Aires

March 30, 2015 By administrator

Concierto_3-480x245-480x245-1Sunday symphony concert was organized in Buenos Aires by the Committee of the centenary of the Armenian Genocide in front of a large audience. The title of the show “Por ti Armenia” is a direct reference to the song by Charles Aznavour and Georges Garvarentz “For you Armenia”, created especially following the earthquake of December 7, 1988.

The program works by Aram Khachaturian, Alan Hovhaness and Arno Babajanian. Also the songs of Luis Alberto Spinetta and compositions of Astor Piazzolla. #ArmenianGenocide

Several ceremonies are planned in April. Including the Book Fair of Buenos Aires and the Luna Park Stadium. Note that the traditional gathering of 24 to 28 April was postponed due to elections that prohibit political action.

Monday, March 30, 2015,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com

Filed Under: Events, Genocide, News Tagged With: 1915-2015, Argentina, Armenian, concert, Genocide, symphony

Rep. John Boehner, Genocide denier is looking for future job as Turkish lobby

March 30, 2015 By administrator

img_9120-480x252-480x252Even though April 24, 2007, the Governor of the State of Ohio, Ted Strickland, has officially recognized the Armenian genocide, also called a crime against humanity.

While 39 members of Congress propose to vote a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide (HR 154), Republican John Boehner, successor to Nancy Pelosi (Democrat), chairman of the House ocicek-480x428-480x428f Representatives, said he was opposed to such recognition.

It must be said that the Representative of the 8th Ohio District since 1991, requested Friday by the President of the Turkish Parliament Cemil Çiçek and his staff could make it his full cooperation to obstruct the said resolution.

 

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: denier, Genocide, Rep. John Boehner

Detroit area Armenians mark 100 years since genocide

March 29, 2015 By administrator

Charles E. Ramirez, The Detroit News

This photo was taken shortly afterward. (Photo: Library of Congress, Library of Congress)

This photo was taken shortly afterward. (Photo: Library of Congress, Library of Congress)

Richard Norsigian (co-chair of the Armenian Genocide Centennial Committee of Greater Detroit), stands next to a memorial that contains the remains of a genocide victim at St. John Armenian Church in Southfield. Norsigian’s grandparents were killed in the genocide 100 years ago. (Photo: David Guralnick, The Detroit News)

Southfield — In the small town where Richard Norsigian’s father was born more than a century ago, there were 84 people with the same surname.

But not long afterward, only a handful of those Norsigians remained as the Turkish government began exterminating Armenians or exiling them to other parts of the Ottoman Empire during World War I, he said.

“After the genocide, there were only eight,” Norsigian said. “Fortunately, my father was sent to the United States when he was 16. But his entire family in Armenia was either killed or taken.”

Norsigian is one of the thousands of Metro Detroiters with ties to Armenia who are preparing to mark the 100th anniversary of the start of the Armenian genocide in Turkey on April 24.

Experts estimate 1.5 million people died in the genocide, which began April 24, 1915, and continued for eight years.

Armenian community leaders and groups in Metro Detroit have organized events — including discussions with Armenian filmmakers, Armenian classical music concerts and a special church service — to honor those who lost their lives in the holocaust.

“Armenians have been holding memorials for many, many years,” said Ara Sanjian, an associate professor of history and director of the Armenian Research Center at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. “But because it’s the 100th anniversary, they are on a much grander scale all over the world, including Metro Detroit.”

The only Armenian research center attached to an American university, the center was established to document the Armenian genocide and current Armenian issues.

It’s estimated more than 447,000 people in the United States are of Armenian descent, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. More than 17,000 make their home in Michigan and nearly 11,000 live in Metro Detroit, according to the census bureau.

Metro Detroit’s Armenian community is the fourth-largest Armenian population in the U.S., behind those in Los Angeles, New York and Boston. Most of Metro Detroit’s Armenian community is concentrated in Oakland County.

Armenia is a mountainous Eurasian country that shares borders with Turkey, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Iran.

From the 1500s to 1800s, the Ottoman and Persian empires took turns conquering and ruling Armenia. By the middle of the 19th century, Russia took Armenia’s eastern half and left the other under Ottoman, or Turkish, rule.

The Turkish campaign against the Armenians started with the arrest and execution of 250 Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in what is now Istanbul.

Able-bodied men were massacred or died in labor camps. Women, children, the elderly and the infirm were sent on death marches through the Syrian desert.

However, the Turkish government has not publicly admitted the genocide occurred.

And despite the passing of a century, the mass killing still resonates with descendants of the victims.

“The fact that 100 years later you still have to explain and prove that what happened to your ancestors was a premeditated crime on a massive scale really incurs a lot of pain for all Armenians,” Sanjian said. “It’s also painful for Armenians that those who used violence have gotten away with it.”

Armenians are optimistic Turkey will take responsibility for the genocide someday, Sanjian said. The attitudes of many individual Turks about it have changed over the past 20 years, he said.

However, a bigger concern is whether or not Armenians will be able to hold on to their identity.

“Our group identity, our unique culture is under threat because of assimilation under the conditions of exile,” he said. “Ultimately, Armenians — outside the Republic of Armenia — consist of small groups that are scattered all around the world.”

In Metro Detroit, a number of Armenian community groups and churches have planned special events to honor the genocide’s victims.

The culmination is a special church service on April 24 at St. Mary’s Antiochian Orthodox Basilica in Livonia.

Clergy from various faiths will participate, including Archbishop Allen Vigneron, head of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit.

“It’s a commemoration to the memory of the victims,” said Norsigian, who is co-chair of the Armenian Genocide Centennial Committee of Greater Detroit. “It’s also to raise awareness about the genocide.”

Robert Kachadourian, a member of the committee, agreed.

“It’s an awareness that should be promulgated so the Armenian genocide is never forgotten,” he said.

Like Norsigian, Kachadourian’s father survived the genocide, but most of his family was killed. His father wrote about his experience, Kachadourian said.

“He was 12 years old when it happened and he lost 55 members of his family,” said Kachadourian, a media consultant and local TV show host. “After that, he was in servitude — I call it slavery — for nine years before finally escaping and making his way to Dearborn.”

The Armenian genocide also had a profound impact on Hayg Oshagan and his family.

“My grandfather was one of Armenia’s leading writers and he was supposed to be rounded up,” said Oshagan, a Wayne State University professor and a leader in Metro Detroit’s Armenian community. “He escaped because someone, we don’t know who, warned him the day before.”

“All of us have these stories about how our families made their way out of death,” he said. “The events for the anniversary are an affirmation of our survival. Even though we’re spread across the world, we are here and we’ll continue to be here.”

cramirez@detroitnews.com

(313) 222-2058

Memorial events in Metro Detroit

■10:45 a.m.-12:45 p.m. April 13 — “Beautiful Ravage: Aurora Mardiganian’s Odyssey from the Armenian Genocide to Hollywood” at Wayne State University’s Alumni House, 441 Gilmour Hall. The event features a discussion with Armenian-American film director, screenwriter and photojournalist Eric Nazarian, and an Armenian classical music concert by violinist Nuné Melikian. For information, call (248) 761-9215 or email lnercessian@hotmail.com.

■7 p.m. April 18 — “We Remember — We Demand” at Edsel Ford High School, 20601 Rotunda Drive, Dearborn. Speakers at the event are award-winning journalist and writer Robert Fisk and Armenia-American actor, playwright, monologuist and novelist Eric Bogosian.

■7:30 p.m. April 24 — An ecumenical service at St. Mary’s Antiochian Orthodox Basilica, 18100 Merriman, Livonia. Clergy from various faiths will attend and Archbishop Allen Vigneron will be the principal homilist. The event will also feature Armenian church choirs.

Filed Under: Events, Genocide, News Tagged With: 100 Years, Armenians, Detroit, Genocide, mark

GENOCIDE MONUMENT AT FRESNO STATE TO BE UNVEILED ON APRIL 23

March 28, 2015 By administrator

Armenian Genocide monument under construction

Armenian Genocide monument under construction

Fresno—Thursday April 23 will mark a historic occasion for Central San Joaquin Valley Armenians when a monument dedicated to the victims and survivors of the Armenian Genocide will be unveiled at Fresno State.  The program begins at 7:30pm in the Maple Mall, located just south of the university’s Satellite Student Union.

The monument has been made possible by the generosity of numerous patrons as well as the cooperation of Fresno State President Dr. Joseph Castro, whose public initiative and commitment to diversity paved the way for constructing the memorial on the university campus.  The unveiling ceremony is organized by the Armenian Genocide Centennial—Fresno Committee, an association of local organizations that is undertaking and promoting a series of events and activities in the Central Valley.

“We are fortunate as a generation to witness the centennial of the Armenian Genocide.  It is our responsibility to pass the torch to the future generation to never forget man’s inhumanity to man.” said Berj K. Apkarian, Chairman of the Monument Committee of AGC—Fresno and Fresno’s Honorary Consul of the Republic of Armenia

Designed by Fresno architect Paul Halajian, the monument will embody symbols of cultural meaning to the Armenian people. Its principal components, a series of pillars, will be arranged in a circular pattern and angled inwards, reminiscent of the Armenian Martyrs Monument (Tzitzernagapert) in Armenia. Built from béton brut and Tufa stones, the nine pillars represent the six provinces of historic Western Armenia—Van, Bitlis, Dikranagerd, Kharpert, Sepastia, and Erzerum—Cilicia, the Diaspora, and the Republic of Armenia. They will gradually descend in height around the circle, with the first measuring 19 feet high and the last 15 feet to underscore the significance of the year 1915. An incomplete halo will be set above on top of the pillars, symbolizing both the fracture left by the Genocide and the unity of the Armenian people.

“The monument will serve not only as a symbol of the terrible tragedy of the Armenian Genocide, but also as a tool to educate future generations of Fresno and California residents, regardless of ethnic background,” said Dr. Sergio La Porta, President of the AGC—Fresno and Professor of Armenian Studies at Fresno State.  “The lessons of the Armenian Genocide strike at the heart of who we are as a species; they alert us to the perils of modernity which we often ignore, confident in our scientific and technological progress; and they remind us of the importance of being human, first and foremost.”

Along with the monument, the AGC—Fresno has organized and promoted numerous centennial events, including 1915-2015: Tradition/Legacy/Culture, a commemorative art exhibit at the Fresno Art Museum and a Town Hall Meeting at Saroyan Theater discussing topics related to the Armenian Genocide as well as numerous educational lectures and programs. 

Free parking will be available for the unveiling ceremony in Lots P5 and P6 near the Peters Business Building. Handicapped parking is available as well in the same lots. Free overflow parking will also be available in the Save Mart Center parking lot.

The AGC—Fresno comprises representatives from various social, educational, and political organizations of the Central Valley that are working together to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. For more information about centennial events, visit the AGC—Fresno website at www.agcfresno.org and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/agcfresno.

The Armenian Genocide Centennial-Fresno Committee

cordially invites you to attend the

Dedication and Opening of the Armenian Genocide Monument at Fresno State

Thursday, April 23, 2015 • 7:30PM

Maple Mall, Fresno State (near the East End of the Rose Garden)

The Public is welcome. Free admission.

Free parking in Lots P5 and P6

(near the Peter Business Building).

Free overflow parking is available in the

Save Mart Center parking lot.

100th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

1915-2015

agcfresno.org or facebook.com/agcfresno

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Fresno, Genocide, monument

LA city council bill urges Obama to recognize Armenian Genocide

March 28, 2015 By administrator

la-concilLos Angeles City Councilmembers introduced a measure urging US President Obama to recognize the Armenian Genocide and voicing LA’s support for H-Res 154, the Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice resolution introduced in Congress last week, reported Asbarez.

“Los Angeles is home to one of the largest Armenian populations in the world, including a tremendous number of Genocide survivors and their descendants,” said Councilmember Paul Krekorian.

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Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: council, Genocide, LA, Obama, recognize, Urges

AYAN FROM 1918 PARLIAMENT OF THIS DOCUMENT AND THE GENOCIDE DAY ONGOING DISCUSSIONS

March 27, 2015 By administrator

By Zeynep Tozduman

ZEYNEP TOZDUMAN

ZEYNEP TOZDUMAN

April 24 of the centenary of genocide run to stay in the genocide debate in Turkey, established to prosecute the perpetrators of the genocide in 1918 Month of the council and the Ottoman Chamber of Deputies and the court-martial courts experienced discussion of these days even the government is very much back in the state. Europe and the world in many parliaments and international organizations and institutions in an accelerated process with Turkey to recognize the genocide, genocide denial of the method is still persistently pursuing cover. To face the dark and dirty aspects of our history is our indispensable to take a further Turkey.
Why are we so afraid to face our history we asked dirty; There are so many reasons. Once the Holocaust, if legally retrial, due to the murder will be revealed ‘to blame’, and accordingly, ” sentenced to fear ‘. If began to be spoken in the country on the Armenian genocide, the nation state of our leaders is the founder and the state’s top-level important tasks do have public or private parties from participating in a large part of the Armenian massacre of Armenians and plundering of the results of the goods will occur fact that enrichment. As well as the national hero because in essence they foist years we will be revealed as the killer and thief.
itc. dirty legacy of the young Republic of giant fields, until today because of reckoning equivalent to almost every day with the 1915 Genocide was able to maintain its existence through falling massacre. Founded in 1918, the European edition of the Month of the council, the Ottoman Parliament-i-deputies and court-martial proceedings, and with the steady-if we had a real chance of a fair trial if we would not be having this shame these days.
Aya’s parliament first session, war period of the deputies recognized Unionist leader of Foreign Affairs and Halil hinge, which was found in the Ministry of Justice task, Haji Adil (Arta) was replaced by the Assembly-i chose as Mebuss the head. Renowned journalist Hüseyin Cahit Unionist (Yalcin) was elected as deputy chief. Sultan, the moon and the Assembly in his opening speech at the joint meetings, being aware of the dark atmosphere inside, ” Almighty’s right … Müşküle shift our success bestowed dictate the wish … (I) ‘, diyordu.48
Fuad Bey, November 4th, although adopted in accordance with the proposal given by the establishment of the Divan-ı Ali could not obtain any result. According to Article 31 of the Ottoman parliament, parliament will decide on the establishment of such a court, which was closed on December 21, 1918 by a sovereign will. Kanun-i on the basis of Article 7 of the sultan was giving such authority. 71
According to Article 60 of the Ottoman Kanun-i Esasisi, Ayan Council members, the National Assembly, not exceeding one third of the number of members were elected by the sultan. Although this election cycle Month 265 deputies of the Assembly of the number of members was 48, and 45 of them had been serving as active. Former Unionist leader of Ahmet Riza, after being elected to the Assembly chairmanship Ayan’- Month keynote speech I read. Ahmed Riza, October-December 1915 period in Parliament, Talat Pasha, the Armenian government against the wartime politics, bravely challenged with four different occasions. The first of October 4, 1915 (September 21 1331) history. Ahmad Reza In this session, where they will face the upcoming winter driven violence, misery and desperation of hundreds of thousands of women, children and elderly people have requested for mercy; Exile, or had asked to be allowed to be placed where they wish, or to return to their homes. Also, by a law proposal, identified as illegal and immoral, and ‘Emval-i Metruke”Olarak issued in connection with the known how to use the property left behind by the Armenians wanted to postpone the implementation of the temporary law.
Is the issue of genocide in our country when our archive Let’s leave it all on the agenda continuously open topic historian said the government does not know these reports? I wonder. Holocaust deniers; Month’s parliamentary reports, the Court of Haripur to court records, secret passwords, Talat Pasha’s special circular and the researchers browse the archives / historians to publicly share their books, pictures, they look at oral testimony and documents, as if they are doing their best to refute the genocide thesis.
Moreover, even if there are no documents of the ancient peoples of this country; once someone is comprised of non-Muslim peoples of every four people, although it is known from population statistics these days, how is it that the share of the total population is around 70 thousand, I questioned them enough. Talat Pasha during the 1915 genocide and the questions they want to secure the population of the Christian people in attendance even cause -5% leads us how the genocide perpetuated. Our existence is the reason of their absence.
4 November with Talat pressure according to the report dated 1915 (when the Assembly pro-Armenian propaganda continues, threats to take more drastic measures against the Armenians and the government on against the government if they give up to the parliamentary question, the attitude towards the government Armenian gave softening mentioned) because Ahmad Reza and friends agreed to this proposal. ” 77
1918 on started to work, one of the subjects that remind Ahmad Reza in his speech on the occasion of the opening of the Month of the Assembly, ” wild until beatify the murdered Armenian spirit etmekti.78 two days later retired military Osman Pasha, Ahmed Riza, Turks and Kurds victims in disregard of due critices, went a step further and blame the consent of the Armenians’ state hands’ implemented ‘resmi”b policy result they were destroyed açıkladı.79
Another Ayan azam in the same session, Damad Ferid, saying that if the Armenians migrated elsewhere evoke a false impression that they are placed ettirilip ‘relocation’ protested the use of the word. Better describing the place to be forced instead .Tehc tedip (reporting the limit) argued that it would be more appropriate to use the word. In the same speech he, in this disaster that resulted in the destruction of the 800,000 Armenians in eklemiştir.80
Although there is much power in the hands of legal and continued to engage in similar initiatives on issues Ayan Assembly. President Ahmad Reza reads a new proposal in the session on November 21, 1918. To judicial investigation by the Council of State will take a lot of time channel says that it should be preferred instead of a series of public law can be made of the proceedings. Otherwise, all the evidence will be doomed. The issue is not an issue limited only by the failure of political authority, and also ‘massacre, public şekavet, such as immunity-i şahsiyye and emval and rape on the mesa’ crimes are committed. The investigation of this crime in the scope of direct public law. Because ‘Subscribing been irtikab even many efal and murder about the Ottomans and especially Arab, Armenian, Greek citizen to ever history-i Osmani the precedent unprecedented atrocities enforcement has become.’ ‘Crimes committed,’ ‘murder-i personal to’ be investigated and public prosecutors to investigate the killings are needed in the field of criminal law and the ‘claw-i justice,’ ‘the delivery of şarttır.86
Speaking Ayan Osman Ahmed Riza Pasha members on this conversation, why are charged only Unionist managers argued that all should be kept out of the Turks of events. Another Ayan Council members also raised a question on why the victims in why they considered the question of whether the perpetrator of the Turks. Ahmed Riza said, ” I recognize the killings as an element of unity and Progress veyahut other offenders in the country. Single force-i diagnosis icraiyye … After the war, murder in the government-i icraiyy the chores, ” he says. Even if you or others responsible for the murder of a gang is still blame the government, which has permitted it to be. Turkey in response to the question why the count of victims: ‘Government … because Maatteessüf the Turkish government did not reveal the sufferings of the Turks. Yes, they are oppressed. He was hurt in the Turkish government. ”
The most revealing offensive during the debate on events and in this sense the most incriminating statement made by a senior statesman Akif Rashid Pasha. Akif Pasha created in the first post-war cabinet Shura-yi he served in his capacity as head of State, and this time not say that faced with two types of documents. One of them is given by Ministry of Internal Affairs and the deportation order, which was delivered to the province. The other is taken by the Union and Progress Party and the center-i ordered the destruction of which was sent to all common areas. Rashid Akif Bey’s statement ‘this sucks-i performance of the gang is followed by an official act-i meluneyy for to Sitapur by the center-i General every aspect of EVAMAR-i menhus the encyclical has become.’ ‘On the orders’ gangs challenge was taken and mukatele-i showed cruel face. ” Rashid Akif Pasha Committee of Union and Progress, referring to, ” not only for four years, ten years realm-i İslamiyyet, the universe-I insaniyyet the tarumar that there is a traitor mass (d) .89
In session 2 December Damad Ferid Pasha, Union and Progress Party majority or the deputy member or claim to be his ardent supporters. By Ferid Pasha, Divan-i Ali, the Union and was a tactic to gain time they applied the Terakkici and these ” Time has passed, the ability of these gafilân ‘are worth remembering. Therefore, the attempts made in the Council of State has proposed to postpone until after new elections. According to him, investigations should be transferred to the Crimes Tribunal-i.
Ferid Pasha has expressed this idea in motion all. Ferid Pasha’s proposal to answer the purposes of political crimes committed by the Çürüksul Mahmut Pasha wartime government gave a speech that consists of entering a single war, ” War and of the country’s by-i-administration ‘says it is processed in many other crimes. These murders the following terms: ” Both Armenians, Greeks, such as non-Muslim and should Muslim elements on extortion when the persecution and murder of a majority at that time location-i’s cabinet in power for some of the lesser-yi I depressions by the active (designed) and issued and aledderecat (respectively) A team was conducted by alata with gangs called the Special Organization. ” Çürüksulu Mahmud Pasha’s argument, there are adjectives that government members during the war of these crimes and, therefore, the Court of Alice trial they are needed. Because it is an administrative misconduct in question. Mahmud Pasha shows such as drowning in the sea of ​​Armenians in Trabzon province borders on the agenda olarak’ example of this thesis. Pasha by Trabzon province is the main responsible for the killings carried out in Trabzon governor. The leading Muslim army accident has taken initiatives to be left in place before the governor of the Armenians in the accident. But because it nullifies the governor attempts to threaten themselves openly and ‘you and I tenkil priest,’ ‘he says. All homicides in the county governor and the secretary-i really responsible division of Union and Progress (Yenibahceli Nail) is processed by. Mahmud Pasha wants to underline the point, the murder of ‘centers of evamir a few governors pursuant vesait-i alata and executed by the officer of the gangs with icraiyye’ is that which is.
Discussions, members of Ayan, under the frustration caused by the statement made by the minister, all these initiatives ends with voicing their concerns about the possible consequences. Ferid Pasha, three weeks in the murders that he ought to prove a strong European whether the nation to do otherwise, ” about us will be very strict provisions will be sold and the last contrite will not benefit. ” According to him, all ‘these atrocities and murder liability is ait” a few bum. Hosni Hussein Pasha from Ayan, during the investigation of the events that occurred in Damascus in the 19th century Kececizade Mehmed Fuad Pasha, that he ought to be examples of behavior. 1860s regarding processed similar crimes against Christians in Lebanon, Fuad Pasha, had to deal at length with the principles of law ‘, the region increasingly there is a’ court-i alia ‘were formed as by criminals. As is known, Fuad Pasha, alleged to be associated with the events executed 167 people etmiştir.92
In one of the revelations made in the debate in Ayan Ayan council members also belong to the Armenian Azariah. November 21 dated session Rashid Akif Pasha, after giving the information about the secret orders sent to the area for the killing of Armenian convoys, Azariah, the Istanbul Chief of Police has transferred a conversation they did during the First World War and Osman Bedri. A member of another moon in his speech Zareh Dilber also attended the Chief of Police has said to Azariah: ” You’re supposed to blame Armenians blameless than we separate. We all wash water. ” 94
Created by Ayan Council council-i ended their work and describes the results of Mahsusa November 9th session Ayan as a report dated November 14. Çürüksul Commission has decided to publish the material in the hands of Mahmud Pasha. Members of Honour Rashid Nazir month old aquifer and well-known historian Abdurrahman have become persistent in making such a publication. But do not get any results from these initiatives in the Ottoman Deputies shut down on December 21, 1918 along with Ayan and frustrate all efforts. The Chamber of Deputies, should Article 31 of the Fundamental Law, has decided to make legal inquiries about members of the government with the charges of abuse of office. This is the first leg of the Assembly’s 5th Branch of the investigation was to employ this process.
Investigation and National Assembly in order to continue their research, only 2 branches and 7 of the Month, which is contrary to the Assembly committee, there were 5 branches and 21 council. Deputies decision taken under Meclis- war ii era members of the government investigation has been assigned to one of these branches. 5 of 45 members serving in the branch of the ‘whole was chosen from among those nominated by the Committee of Union and Progress in 1915.’ ’95
Indeed, in 1914, consisting of the last Chamber of Deputies deputies are not elected, as alleged, Abdullah Cevdet Kasım’n up to 95% in 1918 as saying in an article came mostly through an assignment. 96
The majority of the members of the Union and Progress among members of the 5.Şub, all questions were asked regarding the Armenian deportations and killings by Arab members altogether. In particular, Justice Minister Ibrahim Bey’s query, some remain hidden aspect of the Armenian genocide has helped to clarify. Naz Ibrahim Bey, although the government has been implicated in the murder deny that meat, some information was passed inadvertently proving this massacre. Arab deputy Ragıp Neşaşib of Talat’s 13/26 May, 1915 the temporary relocation of the law, the government National Assembly’s approval path is not never presented Ibrahim Bey squeezed, the overlooked chose the path of resorting to tricks and each chamber is also approved this decision said. September 21 / October 4, 1915 the date of the grand vizier authority memorandum relating to the deportation of the Armenians (temporary law) grounds the (leading motives) that includes a proposal (motion-i sami) have been submitted to the parliament speaker.
Also Nasser Ibrahim Bey, during interrogation, the mistreatment and murder of Armenians is the very latest news söyledi.said Halim, nor Talat nor Enver they listening to him, Enver, ask that every question, ” really responsible mine ‘, saying that transition, Talat’s’ wish that was yaptığını”söyle.
Kemalist republic’s founder, Mustafa Kemal, the second day of the opening of parliament, in a speech on 24 April 1920 Armenian genocide ‘shameful act’ ‘was mentioned. Two days later, in a message sent to the Army Commander Kazim Karabekir, ” a new Armenian genocide ‘, while expressing concern at the prospect, clearly’ used to katliam”keli. Mustafa Kemal’s acceptance of this massacre, massacre victims with a special meaning this attitude clearly say that 800,000 of the total number of Armenians kazandı.197
However, the same Mustafa Kemal, while the annual report to Parliament on 1 March 1921 to explain the former deputy and 12 coming from the Istanbul Council of 68 from the 350 MPs that the former Malta exiles and about the Armenian genocide ‘Turkey’ The trial of Turkish nationals on their territory by a foreign court for crimes committed ‘idea would definitely appeal. Instead, Turkey recourse to remedies against war crimes öneriyordu.201
CUP’s heritage giant Mustafa Kemal the Armenian Genocide for the first opened the era of parliament even if the name look cute in Europe ” massacre ” said later step back to pronounce the massacre word taken, to take part in the report, what is not genocide?
In the past, kept alive in this land, blood was founded until today, the Cumhuriyet genocide were constantly denied and that the massacre somehow İTC and extension of the Republic, the Armenian people saw it until day always as an internal enemy / vision are well maintained. As a reflection of these internal enemies policy, the 1915 genocide is still continuing. Peacemakers in the murder of Hrant Dink, Sevag fisherman Maritsa Small etc. Such as murder is still in the perspective of the state of the Armenian people have a fair trial. Recently Hayko Baghdad in person Ankara Metropolitan Mayor Melih such as the state officials when Armenianship sees small, humiliated, who can not tolerate even the existence, racist, alienating, and explanations within the scope of hate crime, we are constantly witness. These documents not What do you think?
Passed over a hundred years of the 1915 Genocide … a century of work …. Century is still non-age people living in hope, who can not even guarantee the right to life of Armenian citizens still living in Turkey with care, avoiding the so-called advanced than sorry.

ZEYNEP TOZDUMAN

48- Necmettin s.sıl that, ” Divan-ı Ali Second Constitutional Monarchy Movement ‘, 2.kısım
71- Friedrich von Kraelitz- Greifenhourst,
77- Ibid., S.269.rıza Armenian Exile also bkz.yusuf Wisdom Bayur to parliamentary questions given in favor of the Turkish Revolution (dn64), s.46-7; Akşin, Istanbul Governments, s.44-5; Tarik Zafer Danube, political parties in Turkey,
78-Month Assembly’s Memorandum Ceridesi, Circuit 3, c.1. I 5,2.ot muster the year, October 19, 1918 p.8
80- Taner Akcam, human rights and the Armenian question, images Bookstore, 1999, s.418
86 Assembly of the Month (dn78), I 11.ot, 21 November 1918 p.117
89- supra, s.122,123
. Vahagn 92- N. Dadrian, History of the Armenian Genocide (DN 25), p.23
94-supra., I 11.ot, 29 November 1918 p.123.

95-smart Sarıhan, ” from 1914 to 1918 are the opinions of the War Cabinet members’ Fringe, number 40 (May 1987): 23,
96- Export Orhan Koloğlu, ijtihad, November 7, 1918.
197- ‘Rauf Orbay memoirs (dn18), p.179
201 Mustafa Kemal, Speech (Istanbul: 1963) (English Text) s.497

– ‘DEPORTATION and tactile’, court-martialled-i customary court records, the trial of Union and Progress, 1919-1922, Edited by; Prf. Dr. Vahagn n.dadrian- Taner Akcam
– Forced Islamization of the Armenians, silence, denial and assimilation, Taner Akcam…


Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Genocide, ZEYNEP TOZDUMAN

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