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Three great massacres and the heritage that could not be shared: Armenian orphans

December 4, 2014 By administrator

Nazan_Maksudyan_Mihran_Web_2_1318The third guest of The History Foundation’s Tuesday Talks series titled ‘Deportation-Massacre-Genocide 1915-2015’ was Nazan Maksudyan Assistant Professor, Head of the Department of Social Sciences at Istanbul University Kemerburgaz. Maksudyan held a speech titled ‘Three Generations, Three Massacres: Armenian Children and Orphans from 1895 to 1915 and we had the chance to talk to her about the perception of children during the Ottoman period, and the conditions and political roles of Armenian orphans.

EMRE CAN DAĞLIOĞLU the
I misakmanusyan@gmail.co

In your speech, you focused on three generations of Armenian orphans that draughty from three massacres, those of 1894-6, 1909 and 1915. Did you manage to access statistical data on thes the orphans?

It is very difficult to provice in statistics Regarding this matter. 50 thousand orphans are Mentioned for the 1894-96 Massacres. We know that the number of the dead stands at 200-300 thousand. The Therefore, the figure of 50 thousand is too high According to some, and too low for others. We know that 20-30 thousand people were Murdered during the 1909 Adana Massacre, and the number of children in Orphanages was at 3,500. However, there were of course that children never made it to Orphanages. In 1915, the matter Becomes even more complicated. It is said that 500-600 thousand children maanged to survive. Even if I were to define children as those aged 17 and lower, in the context of the massacres, the children in Orphanages during that period are often those under the age of 13. Because male children over the age of 13 were Perceived as a threat Murdered and often as well. Girls over the age of 13 were abducted, captured, or forced into marriage.

How does the perpetrator’s perception of children change in the massacres? What circumstances are children under Perceived as a threat? Under What circumstances are they protected?

This is another issue that can not be understood when approached from a nationalist perspective. The more hard-line racist approach that takes into account the ‘potential of the child to return’ and thinks that children must be Murdered as well. There are examples of this kind in history. However, children were deemed beautiful Immediately taken in by hh, or those Adopted were deemed intelligent. The Therefore, there is a perception that the children thes could be used for other means. The missionaries, on the other hand, come up with this viewpoint: “The Muslims took the intelligent Armenians because they were not bright themselves.” That, of course, is the product of another racist approach … Yet there is also the fact that , while slightly from the children who could use weapons were Perceived as a threat, whereas younger children were not. Confidence Gurkan Öztan also pointed this out at my speech at The History Foundation, the situation changed in the 1920s. In 1927, there was a debate where the view was Expressed, “Street urchins can not be of our kind; they must be of Armenian stock “. A new differentiation has emerged; National identity is imposed on children. During the time of the Empire, there was the view that children could be transformed into anything if they were beautiful and intelligent, that is why everyone wanted to claim the orphans as their own. The Americans, the Patriarchate and the State wanted to “save” these children.

What, in your opinion, was the reason for that?

This particular point is a complete mystery for me. I said it during my speech as well. Most of thes the children were ill and exhausted. And those who wanted to save them were also impoverished and tired. Today, in Istanbul, no one trieste to clam the Thousands of Syrian children are under similar conditions with a similar in motivation. I really can not make out why. Although I find absurd Americans based on the thesis of the Armenians being beautiful and intelligent, I do think that such a perception may have existed during that period.

Harput, 1910. Note on the back of the photograph, write the most probably by the missionary Maria Jacobsen: “I brought 8 children from poor Arapgir. Little is missing fingers and toes Vartuh is, three of them are blind, disabled the others. ‘ © KMA Archives, Denmark

As the 1894-96 Massacres and the 1909 Adana Massacre took place, a modernization campaign was A continuing throughout the Ottoman Empire. What was the role for thes appropriati deemed to children within this modernization campaign?

In fact, the role ascribed to children within such a perception, also Explains why orphans were politically importante. Groups such as women, children or the sick, in which the State did not take seriously before centralization, had to be taken under control after modernization. The modern state is Administered with concerns over population. This process, during which the State Consolidated its power, accelerated during the reign of Abdul Hamid II, and Continued at a similar pace. The Therefore, the State beg the children to take into consideration as its subjects. This is also why an institution like Hospice was founded in 1897, and Gathered abandoned children off the streets. Communities, in turn, this Perceived as an intervention into the domain of influence them. On the other hand, karakteristikleri that more strongly refer to identity, which we could describe as nationalism, beg that to constitute problems. In this sense, the activities of the State Concerning orphaned children were not ascribed a positive meaning. This meaning varies According to how one perceives the movement of Ottomanism, that came to the fore during the time of the Young Turks. In other words, is Ottomanism about everyone is putting away their differences and speaking English, or is it about everyone is retaining their differences? According to Jamal Pasha, everyone had to learn English, and some English was made mandatory at the orphanage. On the other hand, this leads to the loss of the community identity. This, to a certaine of the Extent, is the departure point of the dispute over the struggle to claim orphans.

What are the similarities between the thes of three generations of orphans?

As I Mentioned before, the fact that all the actors involved struggled to claim them as their own became a common fate of thes of the three generations. In 1894-96, the Abdul Hamid II regime clutched unto them on the on side one, while the missionaries tried to clinch them on the other. In 1909, this time it was the Young Turks Regime that tried to claim the children. Cemal Pasha, Governor of Adana at the time, tried to assume the care of the children, whereas Zabel Yesayan, on behalf of the Patriarchate, had to fight him for my them. Whereas in 1915, almost all state officials each Adopted a child; and in 1919, the Patriarchate tried to reclaim the children thes. Another similarity exists in the Efforts to sever their ties with them are the roots. In a world where identity was Determined via language and religion, they faced the threat of losing both. Almost 85% of orphans in the Abdul Hamid II period were taken into the care of American missionaries, and around 80% of them became a Protestant. None of the children who were taken into Orphanages after the Adana Massacre learned Armenian, and it is doubtful Whether they received religious education. After 1915, a great number of children to which it is impossible to put a figure to, were Adopted and Islamicized. And also, from what we know from the memoirs of orphans of thes the massacres, they Displayed Will we would not expect from a child with our contemporary perception. Adopted even when they were, they escaped the moment they saw an opportunity. Today we see that children can not take the ferry alone, but in those days, we read of children who went from Adana to Sivas alone to find their families are.

Did the Orphanages implement a mission to re-establish the ties with the children of thes to their roots, to combat the policy of severing their ties with them are the roots?

In the debate over state Policies, it is said that, especially in the 20 th century, that Orphanages were entirely the wrong method. The method used in Orphanages is described as very unhealthy, and adoption is Perceived as the correct method. Nevertheless, institutional solutions are Perceived as more progressive. The impact of Orphanages on identity is also a matter of debate. American Orphanages, within a policy of strict indoctrination, successfully carry out their duty of raising the children as Protestants. That is why complaints poured in to the Patriarchate throughout the 1890s; stating that missionaries were not bringing the children to Church, he made fun of children that crossed themselves. The same Turan Orphanage, founded in the aftermath of 1915 by Jamal Pasha and Halide Edip, although it did not have the same RESOURCES AS the Americans, tried to do a similer thing and Turkify the children.

In the context of ethnic engineering, leaving orphans was seen as an active method to be Implemented?

In the context of the idea of ​​the nation-state and the Fourteen Points of Wilson, we are talking about a period when forming a majority was importante, and population represented a real source of wealth. The potential to transform children acquires significance in this context. The Therefore, to reduce the number of Armenians and the increased the number of Muslims, is an idea that may seem reasonable. Note killing the children does not mean letting them remain Armenians. However, we do not know how much of this was the CALCULATE; because the orders issued do not include any provision to not kill the children. The orders include directives such as, place them in Orphanages, or distribute them to hh, but there is no clear order that states that they are not to be killed.

Halide Edip headmistress and the teaching staff are in the center, surrounded by boy and girl orphans (1918) © AGBU same Turan Orphanage

“It was not that easy to adopt a child and the clam the property of the child’s family”

There is also a narrative of heroism based on saving orphans during the Genocide. However, seizing the inheritance of the family by adopting the orphans thes was a method used especially in 1915. To what extent is this narrative of heroism related to the practice of adopting children for economic reasons?

In fact, the adoption was quite a Widespread practice during that period, because thes of children served a purpose in labor oriented work. Adopting children for economic reasons is of course that the thread of thought in explaining the process. However, we are talking about properties often Seized by the State itself. The Therefore, it was not that easy to adopt the child and seize the properties thes. I saw such an example in Mardin. The neighbor Adopted the child, and Seized the house that belonged to the child’s family. However, I do not know how such an explanation would be valid in the more general sense. There are many examples in which people Adopted orphaned children for purely humane reasons.

Source: Agos

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Massacare, orphans

Armenian Orphan Rug, 15 years of untold story and Unsung American Heroes, missing from History pages (19-Photos)

December 1, 2014 By administrator

By Maurice Missak Kelechian,

Image-3-3

My journey with the “Armenian Orphan Rug” started on May, 2005 in Beirut, Lebanon when a friend of mine, Sassoun, brought me an Armenian book and said, “I got this book at the flea market for 25 cents. Here, take it.  I know you are into this stuff.”  By then, I was deeply involved in my research of the American orphanages established between 1915 and 1930 and their treatment of the orphans.

The book was printed in 1946 celebrating Jacob Kunzler, a Swiss missionary, and his 40 years of dedicated service to humanity saving Armenians all the way from Urfa in Turkey to Syria and Lebanon.  Hence, his well-deserved, honorific title “Papa,” the father of the orphans.

As I quickly scanned the pages of the book a headline caught my eyes: “The Rug Factory.”  I was mesmerized by the historical details and the human stories involved – stories of destruction, crimes against humanity, philanthropy, survival, and sacrifices made by the Americans that saved a whole generation of Armenian survivors, that is, the majority of the parents and grandparents of the Armenian-Americans.

Little did I know that a 25 cent book from the flea market will take me on a journey to discover a jewel, a love story between a nation on the verge of annihilation and a hero who became an ardent fighter for true democracy.

The story of the “Armenian Orphan Rug” started way before the 25 cent book came to exist. 

In September 3, 1915, witnessing firsthand the atrocities against minorities in Anatolia (now Turkey), Henry Morgenthau, the U.S. Ambassador to Turkey at that time, sends the following telegram to the U.S. State Department: “Destruction of the Armenian race in Turkey is progressing rapidly. Will you suggest to Cleveland Dodge, Charles Crane, John Mott, [Rabbi] Stephen Wise and others to form a committee to raise funds and provide means to save some of the Armenians.” – Cleveland Hadley Dodge, President of Phelps Dodge; Charles R. Crane, Businessman/Industrialist; John R Mott, Secretary of the International Committee of the Y.M.C.A., Rabbi Stephen Wise, co-founder of NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) and President of the American Jewish Congress. 

Within two weeks, under the leadership of Cleveland H. Dodge and James L Barton, the “American Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief” was founded. The members of the committee were composed mainly of multi-religious, prominent Americans as well as the “American Board of Commissioners of Foreign Missions” that was already operating in Anatolia.

Funds in aggregate of $60,000 were immediately raised and sent to Ambassador Morgenthau in Turkey to be used as emergency relief to help Armenian survivors of mass deportation, disease and hunger.  This was the dawning of the miracle of Near East Relief (NER) and its unique philanthropic operations worldwide strongly supported by all the branches of the U.S. government, its three bold presidents; Wilson, Harding and Coolidge, and the American people.

The U.S. State Department’s call for immediate action to assist the survivors shook the core democratic values of the Americans.  Under the leadership of three presidents and the U.S. Congress, helping save the Armenian nation from perishing became a matter of moral duty, constitutional principle, and national integrity.

Presidential Decrees:

On August 31, 1916, President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed “Saturday, October 21st and Sunday October 22nd, as joint days for people of United States to make contributions to rescue Armenian survivors.”

In January of 1923, President Harding appealed to the American people to make contributions “towards the maintenance for these children in commemoration of the Armenian anniversary of Christ’s birth.”

On October 26, 1923, President Coolidge announced “International Golden Rule Sunday Dinner”– which falls between Thanksgiving and Christmas – as the observance day where Americans nationwide eat orphanage-size food instead of their lavish Sunday dinner and donate the difference to raise funds for Near East Relief to assist the Armenian survivors.

The Military Community

On January 19, 1920, U.S. Major-General James G. Harbord, who had just returned from Turkey said, “There are many thousands of children, many of whom have lost both parents and do not even know their own names. The Near East Relief is working with splendid courage and in spite of inadequate funds to save these little children. Their work is worthy of and demands the support of all Americans. Mutilation, violation, torture, and death have left their haunting memories in a hundred beautiful Armenian valleys, and the traveler in that region is seldom free from evidence of this most colossal crime of all the ages…”

The Business Community

On December 27, 1921, Charles M Schwab, president of U.S. Steel Corporation and later of Bethlehem Steel declared, “Schwab for Near East Fund Indorses Plan of Adoption of 5000 Waifs (Armenian orphans).”

Members of the Lions Club of Rochester New York observed Bundle Day for the Near East Relief by donating their clothing to Armenian refugees then marching through main streets of the city in barrels!

The American Community

The American people’s response to a NER campaign to raise 30 million dollars to aid the Armenian victims ended up with raising 117 million dollars ($2.8 billion in today’s US dollars).  The compassion and the commitment to make a difference on the part of the American people was overwhelming:

All three first ladies (Wilson, Harding and Coolidge) adopted Armenian children as part of the NER program in support of the movement.

Hollywood celebrities like Jackie Coogan, Aileen Pringle, Charles Ray, Betty Blythe, Dorothy Mackaill, Eve Southern, Hobart Bosworth, John Bowers and many others, got heavily involved to raise funds and promote awareness through ads and “Children’s Crusade” drives.

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Kids sold lemonade, popcorn and cookies to “Earn in America & give in Armenia.” Children with disabilities lined up with their piggy banks to donate for NER.  Elderly women made dolls for the Armenian orphans.  Collection of tons of clothing was organized by cities and municipalities and sent to the survivors aboard ships, trains, and camels.

“American help began to arrive through the Near East and European Relief Administration under the direction of Herbert Hoover. This committee sent to Armenia 28,660,000 pounds of flour and spent more than 100 million dollars.”  Hoover later became the U.S. President between1929 and 1933.

The whole nation was acting in one dynamic rhythm: the rhythm of intolerance for crimes against humanity.

In 1922, NER Headquarters in Constantinople, following Mustafa Kemal’s (a military officer during World War I who became the first President of the Turkish Republic) declaration: “All Christians had been ordered out of Turkey by the end of November,” and his order to start the deportation of all the Christians, the NER organization decided to move over 20,000 Christian orphans to the neighboring countries.

I returned to the little book.  The story was about a girls’ orphanage in Ghazir, Lebanon, a few miles from where I lived, that was run by the NER.  I was devouring the pages.  I couldn’t wait.  I was eager to find a picture, an address, a sign that will give me a hint as to its current location. 

My odyssey to a world of singular generosity, courage, and commitment began.  In November 2005, after days of combing the Ghazir village and searching the streets for a historic building that was, most probably, turned into a residence, commercial office or simply flattened to become a children’s playground, I suddenly caught a glimpse of a building with majestic arches, remnants of the Roman architecture in the local culture.  I held my breath and silently kept on walking into a courtyard.  There it was, the full sight of the arches and the beautiful water fountain.  I knew I had found the NER orphanage.

A few weeks later, I visited the Ghazir orphanage with a small team of CNN cameramen and recorded the story of a magnificent rug, woven by seven young orphan girls, to be sent to President Coolidge as an expression of their gratitude for the unconditional love and support given to them by the U.S. government and its generous people at a time when they felt that gods and humanity had abandoned them.

Sixteen miles from Beirut, perched on a hill, the Msar (Mizar) palace in Ghazir was built during the 19th century by a Lebanese prince, Emir Chehab II, as a birth gift to his nephew, Abdallah Chehab.  In 1975, the Palace was classified as a Lebanese Historical Monument specifically for its classical fountain, stunning arches, and the beauty of its patio overlooking the blue Mediterranean.

Early in 1923, the NER rented the Msar palace and turned it into a girls’ orphanage, the largest in the area.  Under the American flag, the orphanage became a safe haven for 1400 Armenian girls who had witnessed the destruction of their world: their country, their families and their entire childhood. 

The NER consistently provided a critical lifeline to over 132,000 Armenian orphans inside and outside Turkey.  Engraved in NER’s mission was the dedication of its American and foreign workers who not only provided physical and emotional security but also empowered the orphans by providing them with a variety of vocational skills and tools to secure their return to the outside world as productive members of society.   

By a rule mandated by the NER, Ghazir orphans had to leave the orphanage as soon as they turned 16.  “Papa” Jacob Kunzler, by now the director of the orphanage, and his wife Elizabeth worried about the orphan girls for not having the skills to become self-sufficient or, in the absence of any other employable skills, ending up as house maids once they left the orphanage, collaborated with Ohannes Tachdjian (a rug merchant from Urfa, Turkey) to establish a rug weaving factory at the Msar palace where the girls could develop the art and science of weaving rugs and be able to self-finance their livelihood both inside and outside the orphanage.

Jacob Kunzler needed to finance the rug weaving operation.  He asked the General Secretary of NER for 1,000 dollars as seed money and got approval for only 400 dollars for a pilot project fearing that the rug weaving operation might not prove to be a profitable one for the orphanage.

Three years after the Ghazir orphanage was founded and within a period of ten months seven Armenian orphan girls, on behalf of tens of thousands of Armenian orphans around the world, wove their masterpiece: a magnificent 11.7 by 18.5 feet rug, a beautiful artifact that hidden in the delicacy of its warps and threads and the sophistication of its bright colors had the treasure of a four thousand year old culture, the solemn expression of pain and sorrow for everything lost: homeland, loved ones, trust in humanity, tears of joy and gratitude for a newly captured hope, and an unexpected love found in a nation that stood by them until they could exhale again.

On Friday, December 4, 1925, that very rug was officially received by President Calvin Coolidge and Dr. John H. Finley, Vice Chairman of NER and Associate Editor of the New York Times.  A label on the back of the carpet reads, in all capital letters: “IN GOLDEN RULE GRATITUDE TO PRESIDENT COOLIDGE.” 

While standing on the rug together with President Coolidge, Dr. Finley addressed the President, “What a task it was to be known from the fact that they tied 4,404,260 knots in its making.  But it was a labor of love. They have tied into it the gratitude of tens of thousands of children to you and to America. And what they have tied into it will never be untied.  It is sent to adorn the dearest of our temples, the White House of our President.”  The event, which was publicized by the American newspapers nationwide, raised an additional four million dollars in contributions.

From 1923 to 1930, the orphanage produced 3254 rugs and around 1000 orphan girls certified in the art of rug weaving.  These girls made history by introducing the art of rug weaving into the Lebanese culture. 

In 1930, when NER operations ended, Ohannes Tachdjian moved the Ghazir factory to Beirut and hired the orphan girls to work for him.  Under his leadership, the girls were compensated fairly and were taken good care of until, one by one, they were married and left their nests to become healthy, productive individuals in their communities.

The Ghazir orphanage was a success story because of the commitment of the U.S. government, the NER missionaries, and the American people, to justice for crimes against humanity. Last year, the White House declined a request by the Armenian community to loan that same rug for display at an event held at the Smithsonian stating that a book signing by Dr. Hagop Martin Deranian to accompany the event: “was not considered an appropriate venue.”  An Armenian orphan rug, woven by orphan refugees of the Armenian genocide, given to President Calvin Coolidge and received by him as a symbol of great leadership, courage, and struggle for human rights was now too hot politically to be taken out of the White House storage and be displayed.

Not a single Armenian-American to date believes that the book signing, where the subject book is about the story of the rug being displayed itself, was inappropriate and a reason for refusal.  This was an insult to the intelligence of the Armenian-American community at large.  The community is still wondering whose dust we were “sweeping under the rug” this time. 

The highly funded, manipulative tactics of the Turkish lobby in the American Congress is not news to the American public.  However, it is unconscionable to live with the reality that some of the members of our own Congress are able to sell the very democratic, constitutional principles for which they stand for empty promises.

While President Obama and the White House are shying away from displaying the orphan rug, U.S. Congressman Adam Schiff has been adamantly persisting in displaying it proudly to the U.S. public at the Capitol: “The rug is not only a symbol of the resilience of the Armenian people through their darkest days, it also serves as a tangible expression of the inherent truth that not only were 1.5 million people killed in the first genocide of the 20th Century but that the American government was a central player in efforts to call attention to the plight of the Armenian people and provide relief to the survivors.”

We should proudly display the rug at the Capitol.  After all, this graceful beauty was funded by the parents and the grandparents of all Americans.  They were the ones who made tremendous sacrifices committing themselves to protecting the rights of one of the oldest cultures in the history of mankind, on the verge of being wiped out, announcing to the world that tyranny, suppression, and ethnic cleansing are UNACCEPTABLE. 

The refusal of the display of the rug is not an Armenian issue, it is an American issue.  The refusal of the display of the rug is the betrayal of President Coolidge’s wish who upon receiving the carpet wrote, “The rug has a place of honor in the White House where it will be a daily symbol of goodwill on earth.”

The refusal to display the rug is the denial of one of the most beautiful chapters of the American history: 15 years of testament of our forefathers’ commitment to who we, as a nation, truly are and what real democracy and philanthropy are all about – courage to change the world to make it a better place for all humanity. 

The Americans were the unsung heroes for 132,000 Armenian orphans until they found a common language, a medium to express their eternal gratitude for what was given to them.  They carefully wove the lyrics of their poetry in the impeccable craftsmanship and intricate design of a jewel promised by President Coolidge to be placed in the White House.

Throughout the 20th century, our reputation as Americans around the world has been one of dignity, integrity, and justice for peace and self-determination.  After World War II, the United States emerged from the armistice as a global spokesperson opposing crimes against humanity.  We take pride in our country as a model for democracy and a brave defender of human rights.  America is an exceptional nation, generous and compassionate through its government and non-profit organization support. The American people changed the destiny of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide.  The American people changed the destiny of the Europeans by supporting the allied forces.  Americans helped South Korea become a strong, emerging economy. The American people helped minimize the human and economic losses during the Indian Ocean tsunami and currently, Americans are helping Pakistan to improve its education, economic growth, stabilization, and gender equity.

Rhetoric promises are painful and heavy on the hearts of all of us who worked hard and voted for “change” and who today have been pushed aside to make place for a so-called “strategic partner.” A “strategic partner” who blackmails our government to drive its own agenda in the region, is deeply rooted in corruption, and who controls the very basic freedom of its own citizens: Freedom of speech and press. 

It took the Turkish people, in the leadership of Rajip Zarakolu, Orhan Pamuk, Hasan Cemal, Hrant Dink, and the Human Right Association of Turkey, over 95 years and tremendous courage to find out about the missing pages from their history books – the period between 1915 and 1930. Displaying the Armenian Orphan Rug is a unique opportunity to honor the memory of those Americans who sacrificed everything to save a nation.  Displaying the Armenian Orphan Rug will serve as a catalyst to return 15 golden pages missing from America’s history books to their bold, undaunted owners and enrich the Americans’ sense of unique place in world history.

(See supporting Photos provided)

Endnotes

1 ‘Zuits’eratsi hayaser Hagop K’iwnts’ler ir hayanpast gortsuneut’ean 40 amyiagin Art’iw’ Beirut-Aleppo “Rotos” publishing 1946
2 US Foreign Relations, 1915, supplement File No.867.4014/117
3 SIXTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. SESS. I. CH. 32. 1919 August 6, 1919 [S. 180.] [Public No. 25] District of Columbia, Near East Relief
incorporated.
4 http://www.genocide-museum.am/eng/17.04.2010.php
5 The New Near East, Jan 1923, p.5.
6 The New Near East, Dec 1923, p.20.
7 Hand Book Near East Relief October 1920, p.10.
8 Military Mission to Armenia By Maj-General Harbord Hand Book Near East Relief October 1920, p.9.
9 New York Tribune Dec 27, 1921, p.9.
10 “The Golden Rule Crusade,” The New Near East, Near East Relief, September 1924, New York, p. 12.
11 The New Near East, June 1921, p.10.
12 The New Near East, June 1922, p.15.
13 A History of Armenia By Vahan M. Kurkjian p.392.
14 The New York Times Nov 17, 1922
15 The New Near East, Jan 1923, p.8.
16 www.youtube.com/watch?v=YyDoZl7bYN8
17 New York Times Dec 5, 1925, p.2.
18 US House of Representatives http://schiff.house.gov/common/popup/popup.cfm?action=item.print&itemID=1437
19 New York Times Dec 5, 1925, p.2.

By Maurice Missak Kelechian copyright © August 20, 2014, all photos are courtesy of Mr. Kelecchian

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, orphans, rug, untold story

Historic rug woven by Armenian orphans goes on display at White House

November 18, 2014 By administrator

lat-la-na-armenian-rug-white-houseaf-la0012361139-20131112 President Coolidge is pictured standing on a rug woven by orphans of the Armenian genocide with Near East Relief Vice-Chairman Dr. John Finley. The rug goes on display today at the White House. (Missak Kelechian Collection) LA TIME
By Matt Hansen
Lawmakers and members of the Armenian American community gathered in Washington on Tuesday to mark the weeklong display of a historic rug linked to the Armenian genocide, calling it significant for a nation that helped support Armenians during some of their darkest chapters.

The Ghazir rug, also known as the Armenian Orphan Rug, went on display at the White House Visitor Center after years of campaigning from Armenian American groups and senators representing Armenian communities throughout the United States, including Southern California and the state’s Central Valley.

“From coast to coast, the community spoke with one voice in asking that the Ghazir rug be displayed,” Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank) said at an event celebrating the exhibit. “Without you, we would not be here.”

The rug, which has been stored in the White House collection for decades with few public appearances, was woven by orphans of the Armenian genocide and given to President Coolidge in 1925 as a token of gratitude for American relief efforts. It’s scheduled to appear for one week at the White House Visitor Center alongside other gifts given by countries thanking the United States for disaster assistance.

The White House canceled a planned exhibition of the rug at a book launch at the Smithsonian Institution in 2013. Senior administration officials later told the Los Angeles Times that the delay in displaying the rug was due to protocol governing historic objects, rather than concerns over political ramifications.

Historians believe an estimated 1.2 million Armenians died at the hands of Ottoman Turks during the throes of World War I. Turkey contests that interpretation of the events, saying that Armenians died instead of starvation and disease.

For lawmakers representing Armenian American communities, the display of the Ghazir rug is a step toward eventual official recognition of the genocide by the United States. Past attempts by lawmakers to pass a resolution recognizing the genocide have stalled.
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“For the last 10 years, the Armenian American community has fought to get this rug released and displayed to the public,” said Rep. Judy Chu (D-Pasadena). “This is only a first step. This story reinforces why Congress must pass a resolution to recognize the Armenian genocide.”

Members of the Armenian American community said that the rug is a tribute not only to their community’s resilience but also to the generosity of the American government, which funded major relief efforts as the Ottoman Empire dissolved during World War I.

Armenian-American researcher Missak Kelechian visited the site in Ghazir, Lebanon, where orphaned Armenian girls lived in a American-sponsored orphanage, working for 10 months to create the rug as a tribute to the United States.

“The refusal to display the rug is a denial of one of the most beautiful chapters of American history,” he said.

@mtthnsn

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, by, Historic, orphans, rug, woven

“Orphans of the Genocide” nominated for Regional Emmy Award (video)

October 28, 2014 By administrator

184099“Orphans of the Genocide,” a documentary by Bared Maronian, has been nominated for a 2014 Regional Emmy Award by The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, Suncoast Chapter in the documentary – historical category. This is the 38th Annual Suncoast Emmy Awards, which three years ago nominated the 7-minute version of the Orphans of the Genocide for a Regional Emmy Award, according to Asbarez.

“Orphans of the Genocide” weaves historical archives with interviews and memoirs of Armenian orphans to establish irrevocable proof of the Armenian Genocide. An emotional, visual journey through never-before-seen archival footage and memoirs of orphans who lived through the last century’s first, fully documented and least recognized genocide in 1915, “Orphans of the Genocide” features insightful interviews with such prominent figures and scholars as British journalist Robert Fisk, Clark University’s Director of Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Professor Debora Dwork, and late Armenian-American Dr. Jack Kevorkian among others.

Over the past two years, “Orphans of the Genocide” has been broadcast on PBS stations nationwide, reaching over 12 million viewers. Additionally, the documentary has been invited to participate at various events and film festivals throughout the U.S., Canada, Europe, as well as in the Middle East and South America, earning numerous awards.
 

Asbarez. ‘Orphans of the Genocide’ Nominated for Regional Emmy Award

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, award, Emmy, orphans

Armenain Orphans of the Genocide (Video)

October 5, 2014 By administrator

arton103950-480x312Today Sunday, October 5 in Montreal, as part of the centenary commemoration of the Armenian Genocide, the Cinéma du Parc this documentary Bared Maronian “Orphans of the Genocide,” a document that traces the lives of many orphans of the Armenian Genocide through images never before seen. Research has led Maurice Missak Kelechian discover several orphanages created especially to house the survivors of the Armenian genocide was perpetrated children in 1915, which is now recognized and whose records and documentation are in different libraries around the world almost worldwide.

The first documentary tells the story of an Armenian orphanage located today Antoura College, near Beirut, Lebanon, where a thousand orphans lived and forcibly converted and “turkified” during World War II. It also reveals many other orphanages where Armenian orphans were housed. The film is about an orphan who was adopted and later became one of the national icons of Turkey as a daughter of Ataturk, founder of modern Turkey.

The documentary also explores the Herculean that “American Near East Relief Foundation” Foundation has made saving task, feeding and housing more than 150,000 documented orphans of the Armenian genocide between 1919 and 1926 by the establishment of more than 200 permanent and temporary orphanages in historic Armenia, Turkey and the Middle East.

A section of the documentary is devoted specifically to boys and girls in Canada Georgetown. In 1923, the “Armenian Relief Association of Canada ‘Association led a group of orphans of the Armenian genocide in Ontario, Canada, where they lived. We also find in “Orphans of the Genocide” interviews with different personalities such as British journalist Robert Fisk.

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

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