Out of tragedy, hope: Play traces Armenian journey to Worcester

TELEGRAM & GAZETTE (Massachusetts)
May 1, 2009 Friday
ALL EDITIONS

Out of tragedy, hope;
Play traces Armenian journey to Worcester after genocide

by Lisa D. Welsh, Telegram & Gazette Staff
WORCESTER

Seven-year-old Erica Pearson is learning about the Statue of Liberty
in school, but she received a priceless education about that national
landmark while listening to her grandmother this week.

"My mother came to America alone, but she became part of the Armenian
community here and that became her family," Varsenig "Dusty"
(Dostourian) Cotter said. "If you are Armenian, it doesn’t matter
where you are from. There’s an immediate connection. You are family."

Mrs. Cotter and her best friend, Janis (Pululian) Arvanigian, shared
their families’ stories about immigrating to America while preparing
for Sunday’s production of "Hello Ellis Island," which is being
sponsored by their church, Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church.

The event is part of the church’s recognition of the Armenian
genocide, which began April 24, 1915, when Ottoman authorities
arrested about 250 Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in
Constantinople. Among them was Mrs. Cotter’s grandfather, an official
in the Turkish government.

Mrs. Cotter spoke of her grandfather and uncles, who were shot after
being tied together in a long line with a rope. Her mother, Haiganoosh
(Baghdassarian) Dostourian, was one of the few who survived the death
march into the Syrian desert.

The 30-member cast of "Hello Ellis Island" is made up of sons,
daughters and grandchildren of Armenian genocide survivors who share
their stories about immigrants who climb aboard a ship bound for
America after the Ottoman Turkish Empire killed 1,500,000 Armenians
between 1915 and 1923.

"None of us spoke about why we didn’t have any grandparents," said
Mrs. Cotter. "As children, at holidays, we had no grandparents or big
families to share it with. After the Memorial Day parade, we never
congregated around graves because there weren’t any."

An unlikely subject for a musical, the production is a story of hope
interspersed with music and folk songs of the Armenian
culture. Sunday’s production focuses on what happened to the survivors
who came to America, crammed in among the steerage class on the lowest
deck of a steamship, and started their lives over.

"The stories and memories are all the same. It relates to how they
came here, the land of great opportunity, with pictures in hand of
husbands-to-be that they’d never met before," Mrs. Arvanigian said.

Although the production doesn’t include their families’ experiences
specifically, the ladies said those are universal in the Armenian
community.

Mrs. Arvanigian’s grandmother was 17 when she boarded the King
Alexander in Constantinople and got off at Ellis Island. Her future
husband’s cousin had traveled to an orphanage in Constantinople and,
after choosing a wife for himself, showed her a photo of a tall thin,
man.

"The photo was old and it turned out my grandfather was short and
stocky but she said, `Oh, well,’" Mrs. Arvanigian said. "She was told
that she did not have to leave the orphanage, but she chose to because
she said she had nothing to keep her there."

Nevart and Asadoor Pululian married, and with the help of other
Armenians in Worcester, made a new life.

"Marriages lasted forever because there was a deep form of respect,"
Mrs. Cotter said. "With the other members of the Armenian community,
they had a secure life."

The ladies recalled that if you didn’t have any money for food, you
would write what you needed in the grocer’s book, and when you had
money, you’d pay it.

"We were never hungry because my mother could make something out of
nothing. We didn’t have much, but I never went without," Mrs. Cotter
said.

Once in America, and focusing on rebuilding their new life, few spoke
about the Death March.

"My grandparents didn’t talk about it," Mrs. Arvanigian said. "But
when I was about 9 years old, my grandfather once tried to tell me
about it, but my grandmother stopped him, saying, `She’s a child. She
doesn’t need to know.’"

"Hello Ellis Island" has been touring Armenian churches in New England
for more than a decade. With Mrs. Arvanigian’s daughter, Nicole
Apelian, and Mrs. Cotter’s granddaughter, Erica, listening nearby, the
artists’ goal of sharing the values and principals of Armenian
families and culture with younger generations already has been
accomplished.

"Hello Ellis Island," sponsored by the Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic
Church, will be presented at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Hebert Auditorium at
Quinsigamond Community College, 670 West Boylston St.,
Worcester. Tickets are $30 for adults and $15 for students. For more
information, call Janis Arvanigian at (508) 754-1039, Dusty Cotter at
(508) 852-3328 or Donna Markarian-Mooradian at (508) 596-2848.

`Hello Ellis Island’

WHEN: 2 p.m. Sunday

WHERE: Hebert Auditorium at Quinsigamond Community College, 670 West
Boylston St., Worcester

HOW MUCH: $30 for adults and $15 for students

INFORMATION: Call Janis Arvanigian at (508) 754-1039, Dusty Cotter at
(508) 852-3328 or Donna Markarian- Mooradian at (508) 596-2848.

Economist: Mountain chess: Turkey and Armenia

The Economist
May 2, 2009
U.S. Edition

Mountain chess: Turkey and Armenia

Can Turkey and Armenia ever make up?

Recent moves towards a peace deal may come unstuck

A HIGH-STAKES chess game is being played out in the south Caucasus. It
involves America, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Russia and Turkey. Unlike
chess-players, though, all the participants can win in this game, it
is hoped, if they agree on a common aim: peace between Turkey and
Armenia, which would help to thaw the frozen conflict between Armenia
and Azerbaijan over the (mainly Armenian) territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

It almost seemed possible on April 23rd, when Turkey and Armenia
declared that they had agreed on a "road map" to establish formal ties
and reopen the border. This was sealed by Turkey in 1993 to show
solidarity with Azerbaijan, which had just lost 20% of its territory,
including Nagorno-Karabakh. If the border were open, Armenians could
then climb their sacred Mount Ararat. Friendship with Armenia might
give Turkey the muscle to push through a deal on Karabakh, as well as
securing it a bigger role in the south Caucasus. And that would give
Turkey’s friends a fresh reason to promote Turkish membership of the
European Union.

The most immediate benefit, though, was meant to be dissuading Barack
Obama from keeping his campaign promise to call the mass slaughter of
Ottoman Armenians in 1915 "genocide". In the statement he issued on
April 24th, the day when the world’s Armenians commemorate the
tragedy, the American president tried to please everybody. He plumped
for "medz yeghern", Armenian for "great catastrophe". (Cynics noted
that the Turkish- Armenian deal, though initialled a month ago, had
been announced only a day earlier.) And he praised Turkey’s and
Armenia’s peacemaking efforts. Hardliners in Armenia and the diaspora
were furious, accusing Mr Obama of reneging on his promise. Yet in
Turkey the opposition complained that he had simply swapped Armenian
for English to say the same thing.

A bigger obstacle to a deal may be Azerbaijan. It is threatening to
turn towards Russia and to increase the price of the natural gas it
sells to Turkey. This may explain why the Turkish prime minister,
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has reverted to the traditional line that,
unless Armenia makes peace with Azerbaijan, Turkey will not make peace
with Armenia’even though the text they initialled reportedly does not
mention Nagorno-Karabakh at all.

Some say he is posturing, to force Armenia to withdraw from some of
the seven regions of Azerbaijan that it occupies outside
Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliev, and his
Armenian counterpart, Serzh Sargsyan, are due to meet in Prague next
week, before an EU eastern-partnership summit. But Mr Sargsyan, whose
image was marred by a disputed presidential election in April 2008, is
unlikely to bend further. One admittedly puny coalition partner has
already walked out over the deal with Turkey. The financial crisis is
starting to bite, too. Armenian migrant labourers are returning from
Russia in droves. Oil and gas prices have shot up. The Armenian dram
has lost over a third of its value against the dollar.

The real spoiler may turn out to be Russia. Armenia is the only
country bordering Turkey, a NATO member, in which the Russians have
troops and a base. Peace with Turkey could lead to their withdrawal,
as Armenia leans westward. The trade-off, say some, could be for
Russian peacekeepers to defend the corridor linking Armenia proper to
Nagorno-Karabakh. But Russia is also said to be bullying Azerbaijan
for more gas. If it gets it, that may kill the planned Nabucco
pipeline to carry Central Asian and Azerbaijani gas to Europe via
Turkey, leaving Europe more dependent on Russia for its energy.

Clinton to meet with Nalbandian and Mammadyarov in Washington

PanARMENIAN.Net

Clinton to meet with Nalbandian and Mammadyarov in Washington
02.05.2009 12:24 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian has
departed for Washington on invitation of U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton.

Talks will focus on normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations and
Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov will also be in the
U.S. capital on May 4 and 5. According to the Azeri MF press office,
Minister Mammadyarov will meet with Secretary of State,
representatives of Pentagon and National Security Council.

Armenian Government Earmarks $1.2 Million For Student Scholarships I

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT EARMARKS $1.2 MILLION FOR STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS IN 2009

ARKA
Apr 30, 2009

YEREVAN, April 30. /ARKA/. The Armenian government plans to earmark
$1.2mln for student scholarship programs this year.

The funds will enable the most diligent Armenian students to study
aboard, as part of the Luys Foundation, RA Prime Minister Tigran
Sargsyan said Wednesday at the RA National Assembly.

The foundation’s program of actions ready, the executive director of
Luys will soon move from Boston to Armenia as a permanent resident
to be able to keep a constant watch over the program implementation.

The government will grant a $20,000 scholarship to each student,
the premier said. "The private sector is the only sponsor of the
program and we are making efforts to attract funds amid the crisis,"
Sargsyan said.

The government plans to expand the program to be able to grant more
scholarships for Armenian students to study abroad, the premier
concluded.

Established in April 2008, the president-backed Luys Foundation
helps Armenian students study at the best universities abroad. RA
President Serzh Sargsyan is the Chairman of the foundation’s Board
of Trustees.

Letters & Messages: Displeasure With Obama’s April 24 Statement

DISPLEASURE WITH OBAMA’S APRIL 24 STATEMENT

AZG Armenian Daily
01/05/2009

Armenian Genocide

Azg daily received numerous letters and messages responding to the
US President Barack Obama’s April 24 statement. Below we publish some
of them.

***

Mr. President Barack Obama

As a citizen of United States of America along with 6 million of fellow
Armenians and millions of oppressed people in the world we have lost
trust (and love) with you. We thought that you were an honest and
"a Man of your word" ? And we were wrong.I personally supported you
morally and your campaign financially. You have no any justification
for your negligent. Should you choose to continue omitting the word
"Genocide" from history of Armenian People Sadly, solemnly and firmly
we request refunding our campaign contribution of $ 650+

Mr. President to regain our trust and future support you still have
time to correct your administration stand by recognizing Armenian
Genocide….Just several months ago you promised to recognize Armenian
Genocide? and just yesterday you talked about Jewish Holocaust What
is differences between Genocides?? How soon and easy you forgot about
"discriminations" With regret and disappointment…

Dr.Ishkhan Babajanian MD/PedDr. Masis Babajanian
MD/CardiologistMrs.Anahit Babajanian / Teacher (active in Obama’s
campaign) Armen Babajanian Director of Big Brothers and Big Sisters
in Texas —Active Graduate Student of political science….USA,
CaliforniaApril 24, 2009

***

President Obama,

On this Day of Remembrance for the 1.5 million Armenians massacred
between 1915 and 1923, Armenians all over the world are sharply
disappointed with your failure to honor your solemn pledge to recognize
the atrocities as genocide.

During your presidential campaign you consistently stated that you
"shared the view that the U.S. must recognize the events of 1915-1923,
carried out by the Ottoman Empire, as genocide."

It is now clear your campaign promise was said in political jest
and made those promises solely for the purpose of gaining the
American-Armenian vote. As we mourn the loss of our families and
celebrate their spirits, our sadness is compounded by your decision to
retreat from your pledge. Moreover, we as American-Armenians will not
forget your decision made today and will certainly remember it in 2012.

Armen Babajanian, Kerrville, Texas, April 24,2009

***

Hello guys, My name is Armen Hareyan from just
thought we need to bring to the world attention that president
Barack Obama used the phrase Meds Eghern two times in his speech
today. While the world media is writing Obama refraind from using
the world genocide then what is Meds Eghern? Obama is sending a
powerful message satisfying both the Armenian needs and telling
Turkey "this year I used Meds Eghern but next year I will translate
it into English, so move fast and make the reconciliation movement
right."I thought it’s out job to tell the world that Obama indeed
used the Armenian version of Genocide, which is more powerful and
respectful and he used it twice. I wrote a story about it quickly
menian-equivalent-genocide-twice-speech
you are welcome to use it as long as you link back to the original
story and give credit to www.huliq.comMany thanks I hope this helps
friends.Armen Hareyan

Dear Mr. Hareyan

The Armenian word for genocide is Tsekhaspanutiun and not Mets Yeghern.

Also the term, Mets Yeghern was previously used by President Bush in
2005 and I don’t think that had much effect.

Like his predecessors, President Obama simply avoided the term genocide
because it displeases Turkey.

Unlike Armenia, Turkey spends a lot of money in Washington and this
is why Turkey’s view is important for Washington.

Sorry for the cross-post.

Emil Sanamyan

Washington Editor

ogspot.com

***

U.S.-Armenia Public Affairs Committee (USAPAC)

1518 K Street, NW, Suite M

Washington, DC 20005

Contact: Ross Vartian

Telephone: 202-783-0530

President Obama’s April 24 statement is his second lost opportunity
to affirm the Armenian Genocide.

On the first occasion, his visit to the Republic of Turkey, the
President stated that his view on the Armenian Genocide was well
known and remained unchanged, yet he chose not to utter the word
"genocide". The President then urged the Turkish government and people
to face this history, just as America had done with African-Americans
and Native Americans.

On the second occasion, the solemn remembrance day of April 24,
President Obama failed to affirm his record as Senator and his repeated
pledges as candidate for the presidency to characterize this crime
against humanity by its proper name, the Armenian Genocide.

Instead, the President committed his administration to fully support
the normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey "without
preconditions and within a reasonable timeframe". While a laudable
objective, normal relations between these nations and an open
Armenian-Turkish border are not substitutes for the United States
affirming its own voluminous history on the Armenian Genocide and
its directly linked global responsibility to help end the scourge
of genocide.

President Obama knows very well and has eloquently acknowledged that as
long as genocide denial is tolerated that the act of genocide itself
continues, as it does for Armenians on this day of commemoration and
remembrance, April 24, 2009.

Ross Vartian, Executive Director

US-Armenia Public Affairs Committee (USAPAC)

http://www.huliq.com/1/80149/obama-uses-ar
http://www.reporter.am
http://yandunts.bl
www.huliq.comI

Noise Makers

NOISE MAKERS

The Boston Globe
April 26, 2009 Sunday

1618 Avedis I, an Armenian alchemist living in Constantinople,
discovers a new way of making alloy for cymbals. He is given the name
Zildjian, or "son of cymbal maker" in Armenian.

1623 The first Zildjian cymbal foundry opens in Samatya, near
Constantinople.

1651 Avedis bequeaths his secret process of making alloys to his
oldest son, Ahkam, who takes over the business. The enterprise would
be run by male family members for generations to come.

1865 Avedis II dies, and his younger brother Kerope succeeds him. The
company exports about 1,300 pairs of cymbals throughout Europe each
year, winning honors at exhibitions in Paris (1867), Vienna (1873),
Boston (1883), Chicago (1893), and Bologna (1888, 1907).

1909 A second Zildjian factory opens in Bucharest.

1929 Avedis III incorporates Zildjian as a business in Quincy, with
its first foundry at 39 Fayette St.

1940s The US government rations metals during World War II, allocating
enough for Zildjian to fill orders for the US and British military.

1950 Zildjian’s workforce grows to 15 people, and production increases
to 70,000 cymbals per year.

1964 After the Beatles appear on "The Ed Sullivan Show," Zildjian
ends the year with more than 90,000 cymbals on back order.

1973 Zildjian opens its plant in Norwell.

1976 Avedis III breaks tradition and invites his granddaughter Craigie
to join the business.

1979 After Avedis III dies, his sons Armand and Robert take
over. Disagreements between the brothers end up in court, and the
younger Robert leaves.

1980 Craigie’s sister Debbie joins the company.

1981 Robert launches Sabian company in Canada and begins making
cymbals to rival Zildjian’s.

1988 Zildjian ships 300,000 cymbals from Norwell. The company opens
a drumstick factory in Moundville, Ala.

1995 The orchestral room opens at the Norwell facility, and is used
by musicians from the Boston Symphony and London Symphony orchestras
to select and match cymbals.

1998 To celebrate its 375th anniversary, Zildjian launches the
American Drummers Achievement Awards at an event at the Berklee
College of Music.

1999 Craigie becomes CEO, the first woman to hold the title. Debbie
is appointed vice president for human resources and assumes custody
of the family’s secret recipe for alloys.

SOURCES: The Avedis Zildjian Co. website () and
Globe archives

www.zildjian.com

TEHRAN: Iran’s Investment In Armenia Hit $980 Mln

IRAN’S INVESTMENT IN ARMENIA HIT $980 MLN

Moj News Agency
April 27, 2009 Monday
Iran

Iran`s investment in Armenia reached $980 million, head of National
Security Council of Armenia said adding that increasing the Islamic
Republic`s investment in Armenia was one of the main subjects discussed
in the last meeting of the Council. Referring to Armenian President`s
recent visit to Iran, he said during Serzh Sargsian`s visit, 8
memoranda of understanding were signed between the two countries in
various fields including railways transportation, railways links,
hydroelectric power station, free trade, petroleum pipeline, energy
and banking.

BAKU: Azeri Leader Comments On Turkish-Armenian Rapprochement

AZERI LEADER COMMENTS ON TURKISH-ARMENIAN RAPPROCHEMENT

ANS TV
April 28 2009
Azerbaijan

The Azerbaijani people have a right to know what is going on in
relations between Turkey and Armenia, Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev has said.

Aliyev was speaking at a joint news conference with European Commission
President Jose Manuel Barroso after their meeting in Brussels on 28
April, Baku-based ANS TV reported.

It quoted Aliyev as saying that the world, the region and the
Azerbaijani people had a right to know what was happening between
Turkey and Armenia given conflicting reports, which he called "a
game of words", about a recent road map towards the normalization of
their relations.

CNN Turk TV channel footage of Aliyev, which ANS carried, showed
Aliyev noting that Azerbaijan was not in a position to give the
go-ahead or prevent relations between the two countries. He added that
Azerbaijan had a right to shape its policy in line with new realities
in the region and that it would use that right. Aliyev said that
the Azerbaijani people would like to know whether the Karabakh peace
process was separate from Turkish-Armenian rapprochement. "This is a
very simple question and a very simple answer is needed," Aliyev said.

BAKU: Azeri Leader On Karabakh Conflict Resolution In Brussels

AZERI LEADER ON KARABAKH CONFLICT RESOLUTION IN BRUSSELS

ITV
April 28 2009
Azerbaijan

The Azerbaijani president has said that the Karabakh territorial
dispute between Armenia and his country can only be resolved within
the latter’s territorial integrity. Ilham Aliyev was speaking at a
joint news conference with European Commission President Jose Manuel
Barroso after their meeting in Brussels on 28 April, the Baku-based
Public TV channel reported.

It quoted Aliyev as saying that this was Azerbaijan’s unchanged and
categorical position.

Aliyev also said that Armenia and Turkey should make their own decision
regarding their relations and that Azerbaijan was not trying to hinder
development of relations between the two. Aliyev added that the most
important question was whether the resolution of the Karabakh conflict
was a separate issue from Turkey-Armenia rapprochement, Public TV said.

Barroso praised the ongoing peace talks between Azerbaijan and Armenia
and said they were expecting results from the planned 7 May meeting
between the two countries’ presidents, Public TV said. The EU backs
rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia which, however, does not
mean that it does not want the Karabakh conflict to be resolved,
Barroso said, according to the TV channel.

Hopes Dashed As Obama Avoids Calling Mass Killings Of Armenians ‘Gen

HOPES DASHED AS OBAMA AVOIDS CALLING MASS KILLINGS OF ARMENIANS ‘GENOCIDE’
By Rebecca Spence

Forward Magazine

A pril 29 2009

Los Angeles — This year, on Armenian Remembrance Day — when the
mass killing of more than 1 million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire
is commemorated — Armenian-American activists had high hopes that
a president who ran on a message of change would indeed change the
pattern of previous administrations. That is, they hoped President
Obama would use the term "genocide" to describe the human tragedy
that occurred nearly a century ago.

But on April 24, their hopes were dashed. When Obama — who, during
the campaign season and as a senator in the United States, pledged to
describe the events of 1915 as a "genocide" — released his statement
in acknowledgement of the tragedy, the term was nowhere to be found.

Equally ambivalent are many Jewish organizations. While some groups
see this as a human rights issue related to the Holocaust, others
have stayed silent or even actively opposed the "genocide" designation.

At issue is how to describe the killing of roughly 1.5 million
Armenians by the Ottoman Turks during World War I. Turkey staunchly
denies that the massacres and deportations that began in 1915
constitute a "genocide," while Armenians have long lobbied to gain
international recognition of the events as exactly that. The debate
has presented a challenge for successive American governments, given
Turkey’s position as a key ally to the United States in the Middle
East, and past American presidents have been reluctant to anger the
predominantly Muslim nation.

Southern California is home to some 500,000 ethnic Armenians and
constitutes the largest Armenian population outside of Armenia. On
April 24, about 10,000 Armenian-Americans protested outside the
Turkish Consulate in Los Angeles, following an annual commemorative
march through the "Little Armenia" section of Hollywood.

During the presidential campaign, Obama made it clear that he would
take up the thorny issue. His Web site stated, "As a senator,
I strongly support passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution
(H.Res.106 and S.Res.106), and as President I will recognize the
Armenian Genocide."

But Obama’s April 24 statement instead used the Armenian term "Meds
Yeghem," which translates roughly to "the great calamity." A spokesman
for Obama did not respond to an e-mail seeking comment.

Every year, in the U.S. Congress, a resolution to use the controversial
term is introduced in the spring and then beaten back. A handful of
powerful Jewish advocacy groups, including the Anti-Defamation League,
the American Jewish Committee, and the Jewish Institute for National
Security Affairs, has declined to support the resolutions in past
years, and some Jewish groups have even worked against them.

Still, a host of other Jewish groups, including American Jewish World
Service; the Progressive Jewish Alliance, a California-based activist
group, and Jewish World Watch, which mobilizes synagogues around human
rights issues, have supported efforts to recognize the mass killings
of Armenians as a genocide.

While some in the Jewish community argue that the memory of the
Holocaust compels Jews to recognize other genocides, others argue
that maintaining the strategic alliance between Israel and Turkey,
as well as the American-Turkish relationship, trumps other concerns.

Turkey was the first Muslim country to recognize Israel’s existence,
and it has long been a key Muslim ally in an otherwise hostile
region. But in the wake of Turkey’s criticism of Israel’s recent
military operation in Gaza, relations between the two countries
have soured. Nonetheless, some American Jewish groups that have
not supported the genocide resolutions in the past are sticking to
their positions. AJC spokesman Kenneth Bandler said that his group’s
position has not changed. "Our position was, and remains, that the
best way to address this issue is between Turkey and Armenia," he said.

In 2007, the ADL became embroiled in a controversy that played out
in the local Boston media after its New England regional director
was fired for breaking ranks with the national office and saying
that the ADL should recognize the events of 1915 as a genocide. The
regional director, Andrew Tarsy, was ultimately rehired, and then
he resigned of his own volition. That same year, the ADL released a
statement clarifying its position and stating that it had, in fact,
referred to the massacres of Armenians as genocide.

Still, the ADL does not support a congressional resolution to that
effect. In an e-mail, an ADL spokesman wrote, "… our position is that
a Congressional resolution on such matters is a counterproductive
diversion and will not foster reconciliation between Turks and
Armenians, who should work out the issue between themselves."

At the same time that Israeli-Turkish relations have been strained,
relations between Turkey and Armenia actually have seen improvement
over the past year. The two countries have been negotiating to
open the Turkish-Armenian border, and just days before the April 24
commemoration they announced a "road map" to restoring relations,
which was negotiated with the help of U.S. officials.

Charles King, a professor of international affairs and government
at Georgetown University, said that Obama’s backtracking on the use
of the term "genocide" could be seen as more of an adjustment to
new political realities on the ground. As Turkey and Armenia make
real strides toward normalizing relations, King said, Obama would be
hard-pressed to isolate the Turks by using the controversial term at
such a delicate moment.

"The Obama administration doesn’t want to push farther on this at
this point, for fear of destroying the very important progress that’s
been made on Armenian-Turkish relations," King said. "Inevitably,
once a politician gets into office, they realize that issues are far
more complicated than they were on the campaign trail, but secondly,
things really have changed."

That’s no consolation for some Armenian-American activists. Allen
Yekikan, a 24-year-old spokesman for the Armenian Youth Federation,
said that he had campaigned for Obama, even canvassing for him in
the Armenian-American community. "When he released his statement,"
Yekikan said, "my heart broke."

http://www.forward.com/articles/105257/