Las Vegas: Committed to remember

April 22, 2005
Committed to remember
Armenian descendants plan events to spotlight genocide anniversary
By Ed Koch
<[email protected]>
LAS VEGAS SUN
WEEKEND EDITION
April 23 – 24, 2005

Commemoration activities scheduled

These are events planned for The 90th Annual Armenian Genocide
Commemoration Ceremony on Sunday, sponsored by the Armenian-American
Cultural Society of Las Vegas:

Church services: 9 a.m. at the Elks Lodge, 4100 W. Charleston Blvd.

Protest march: 11:30 a.m. from the Elks Lodge to the West Charleston
Library, 6301 W. Charleston Blvd.

Commemoration ceremony: 1:30 p.m. Sunday at the West Charleston
Library. The event will feature a keynote address by Ara Bedrosian, a
board member of the Armenian National Committee of America. Also, Las
Vegas soprano Suzanna Yozgadlian is scheduled to perform a rendition
of the 23rd Psalm composed for the occasion by Michael Canales, music
director of Opera Las Vegas.

Throughout Sunday and on Monday, the UNLV Armenian Student Association
will have at the Moyer Student Union Building a display of documents
and flags commemorating the milestone anniversary of the Armenian
genocide.

Kegham Tashjian, pastor of the Armenian Evangelical Fellowship of Las
Vegas, will be among 150 people marching Sunday to mourn the killing
of 1.5 million Armenians during the first genocide of the 20th century
and honor their fortitude.

“We will declare to Las Vegas and to the world that they will not be
forgotten and signify that there was a victory for the Armenian people
— a victory that we did not lose our identity, our independence or
our Christian faith.”

Local Armenian-Americans and others are expected at the two-mile
protest march at 11:30 a.m. Sunday starting at the Elks Lodge on West
Charleston Boulevard to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the start
of the eight-year genocide suffered at the hands of the Ottoman
Empire.

On April 24, 1915, the genocide began when about 200 Armenian
intellectual and political leaders were arrested in what is now
Istanbul and publicly executed.

An estimated 20,000 people of Armenian descent today live in Southern
Nevada. Generally, people whose last name ends in “ian,” “jian” or
“yan” are of Armenian descent.

Tashjian, 62, lost the entire side of his mother’s family, including
his grandfather, in the slayings at Tarsus, Turkey, birthplace of the
Apostle Paul. His parents and other family members escaped to Latakia,
which now is Syria.

“Professor James Russell of Boston University said his research found
that there were so many bodies of Armenians thrown into the Euphrates
River that it changed the river’s course,” Tashjian said of the extent
of the genocide.

The genocide was so widespread in Turkey it is rare to find an
Armenian-American today who did not lose an ancestor in the slayings,
many during deportation death marches in which they starved or died of
thirst.

Las Vegas attorney Ara Shirinian, 48, says he will march Sunday to
remember the deaths of his ancestors who were killed in Van in Eastern
Turkey.

“A census showed that about 100,000 Armenians lived in Van in 1914,
but after World War I there were virtually none,” said Shirinian, the
grandson of a priest who escaped to Bulgaria after several other
family members were killed.

John Dadaian, coordinator of the Las Vegas march and afternoon
remembrance ceremony at the West Charleston Library and local
spokesman for the Armenian National Committee of America, knows a
witness to the genocide — his mother-in-law Malvine Handjian.

Handjian watched the horror unfold as a 10-year-old refugee on the
streets of Izmir, Turkey, in 1922. That included witnessing Turks
drive nails through the soles of the feet of an Armenian priest and
watching Turkish soldiers burn Armenian homes and carry off teenage
girls to rape and kill them.

Handjian was the subject of the 2002 Armenian genocide documentary
film “The Handjian Story: A Road Less Traveled,” which won best
feature documentary at the 2003 Moondance International Film Festival
in Denver. She is 92 and lives in Las Vegas, where she also was the
subject of an April 2004 story in the Sun.

Dadaian, noting that Handjian survived a death march, says marching is
symbolic and appropriate for this milestone commemoration.

“We are marching here and in other cities to get the U.S. government
to put pressure on the Turkish government to finally get it to
recognize and take responsibility for its actions so we can all move
on,” said Dadaian, who also is a member of the Armenian-American
Cultural Society of Las Vegas.

Sunday’s remembrance march will be led by three local Armenian
religious leaders — Tashjian, Pastor Asbed Balian of the Armenian
Apostolic Church of Las Vegas and the Rev. Vrouyr Demirjian, the
Armenian Apostolic Church of America’s assistant to the prelate.

They are scheduled to be joined at the front of the procession by the
Armenian Scouts of Las Vegas carrying the flags of Nevada, the United
States and Armenia and the banners of the Boy and Girl Scouts of
America.

Armenian-born U.S. citizen Rafael Oganesyan, a junior at UNLV and
president of the Armenian Student Association, says he will march
Sunday in hopes that the world finally will get the message of “never
again.”

“It is important that with the survivors of the Armenian Genocide now
almost gone that we students demonstrate that we will not let them or
those who were killed be forgotten,” Oganesyan, 20, said, estimating
that 30 students from the organization will march Sunday.

“It’s a shame that the world has not gotten the message of never again
and that the Holocaust, Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Sudan genocides
have followed the Armenian Genocide.”

Dadaian said one reason the United States has not been enthusiastic
about holding Turkey’s feet to the fire on the genocide issue is
because Americans benefit from oil produced in Turkey.

Tashjian echoed that sentiment.

“Turkey is an ally of the United States and so the United States has
not made this (accountability) an issue with them,” he said. “Why
admit to something if you are not being held accountable for it?

“Turkey long was a strategic point from which the United States kept
an eye on the Soviet Union. But, since the fall of the Soviet Union
and Turkey’s position becoming less strategically important, it
baffles me why the United States has not taken a more reasoned
position on this issue.”

Shirinian says from a legal standpoint, the Turks fear having to pay
millions of dollars in reparations to survivors and descendants,
especially for the loss of ancestral lands in Turkey. But, he said,
there is much more to it than that.

“For 90 years, Turkish students have been taught something very
different in their schools,” he said. “For their government to take
responsibility will be akin to saying ‘we’ve been lying to you all of
these years.’ ”

While the U.S. government has skirted the issue of the Armenian
genocide, many of its leaders from the federal government to state
officials to city mayors have recognized as fact what the Turks
continually deny.

Nevada Gov. Kenny Guinn, in his proclamation for Sunday’s ceremony,
calls the 1915-23 incidents a “crime against humanity. … (a)
systematic and deliberate massacre of the Armenian people.”

The Turkish government maintains that both the Armenians and Turks
suffered great loss of life during the war, but not because of a
genocide.

Supporters of Turkey’s position say claims of a genocide are part of
efforts to drive a wedge between the Turks, who are Muslims, and
Armenians, who have had Christianity as their state religion since
301.

The Turkish government Web site, turkishembassy.org, says the numbers
of Armenians killed have been inflated because fewer than 1.5 million
Armenians were living in Turkey in 1915. The Web site says more than
2.5 million Muslims died during the same period, which encompasses
World War I.

But Armenian-Americans say there are volumes of proof that a genocide
occurred, including not only eyewitness accounts but also transcripts
from Ottoman court-martial proceedings held at the time to find
scapegoats for the killings — documents that in effect admit
atrocities were committed by soldiers.

———————————
Photo: John Dadaian, Ara Shirinian and Dr. Kegham Tashjian speak
Las Vegas SUN main page

Turks disseminate leaflets censuring Armenian Genocide in Yerevan

Pan Armenian News

TURKS DISSEMINATE LEAFLETS CENSURING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN YEREVAN

24.04.2005 04:02

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Representatives of a range of Turkish non-governmental
organizations disseminate leaflets demanding that Turkey acknowledge the
Armenian Genocide next to the Memorial to Victims of the Armenian Genocide
in Yerevan. As reported by leader of the Confederation of Workers from
Turkey in Europe Osgul Cem, a range of other Turkish organizations
participate in the action besides the one headed by him. The leaflets being
handed to Armenian citizens and foreign guests, who visit Tsitsernakaberd
today, contain censure of the Genocide and they demand that Turkey
unconditionally acknowledge and denounce the Genocide. `We consider Turkey a
fascist state, as it conceals historical facts. We promote acknowledgement
and censure of the Armenian Genocide,’ Osgul Cem stated, reported that
members of the organizations taking part in today’s action are announced
persona non grata in Turkey for numerous statements demanding to recognize
the Armenian Genocide. `The Turkish people attitude to the issue of
acknowledgement of the Genocide is normal,’ he stated. It should be noted
that Ezids also take part in today’s action.

Tehran: Iran’s House of Labour to hold rally on May day

Iran’s House of Labour to hold rally on May day

Fars News Agency web site
23 Apr 05

TEHRAN

Fars News Agency: The secretary of Article 10 of the parties committee
has said that the committee has agreed to a rally to be held on Labour
Day, 11 Ordibehesht [1 May].

Announcing the news, Morteza Arab-Ameri told Fars News Agency: At this
morning’s session of the committee held at the Interior Ministry, the
committee approved a request put forward by Iran’s House of Labour to
hold a rally.

He said: This committee has also approved a request by the Armenian
community to stage a rally to mark the anniversary of the massacre of
their ancestors by the Turkish government of the time.

He added: At today’s session of Article 10 of the parties committee,
the proposal for forming the Iranians’ Party was discussed and the
announcement of the results of the discussions was postponed to the
next session of the committee.

Tehran: Iran allows ethnic Armenians to mark alleged genocide

IRNA< Iran
April 23 2005

Iran allows ethnic Armenians to mark alleged genocide Tehran, April
23, IRNA
Armenians-Rally-Iran

Iran Saturday gave green light to its Armenian community to mark the
90th anniversary of the alleged massacre of their ancestors by the
Ottoman Turks during World War I.

The authorization, issued by a commission which has representative
from the government as well as the Judiciary and the legislature,
will allow Iran’s Armenians, reportedly numbering around 250,000, to
commemorate the occasion along with the rest of their kins across the
world on Sunday.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen perished in
orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire,
the predecessor of modern Turkey, was falling apart.

Ankara counters that 300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks were
killed in ‘civil strife’ during World War I when the Armenians rose
against their Ottoman rulers and sided with invading Russian troops.

Efforts by the Armenian community, which is represented by two MPs in
the Iranian parliament, have led nowhere so far while they have
pressed the government here to recognize the killings as genocide.

Tehran, however, enjoys close relations with Yerevan, with the two
neighbors having signed a deal for the transfer of the Iranian gas to
Armenia through a pipeline.

This has irked Shia-dominated Azerbaijan, the same dominant Muslim
faith in Iran, which has long-simmering tensions with Armenia over
the disputed enclave of Karabakh in the volatile Caucasus.

Armenia has controlled Karabakh and seven surrounding regions which
make up 14 percent of Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized
territory since the two former Soviet republics ended large-scale
hostilities with a ceasefire in 1994.

Armenian MP in favour of freezing Karabakh talks for 20 years

Armenian MP in favour of freezing Karabakh talks for 20 years

Arminfo
19 Apr 05

Yerevan, 19 April: In the light of Azerbaijan’s militaristic
statements, Armenia should freeze the process of settling the Nagornyy
Karabakh conflict for some 20 years, the leader of the National
Democratic Union, MP Vazgen Manukyan, told journalists today.

He said that any conflict is settled by give and take, but it is not
clear how a defence minister could be talking about concessions in the
light of the militaristic statements constantly aired in Baku. Given
such conditions, Armenia should freeze the process of settling
the conflict for some 20 years and deal, in the meantime, with the
processes of integration and the problems of refugees, Manukyan said.

He described Armenian Defence Minister Serzh Sarkisyan’s address to
the recent parliamentary hearings as “an election speech dictated by
his desire to gain the West’s favour.”

Rossie: World still looks away from genocide

Press & Sun-Bulletin, NY
April 20 2005

Rossie: World still looks away from genocide

“Murder will out.”

DAVID ROSSIE Commentary

— Don Quixote,
Miguel de Cervantes

Cervantes apparently never met an official of the Turkish government.

We are coming up on the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide in
which an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were slaughtered by the
Ottoman Turks.

The official position of Turkish governments ever since has been:
Genocide? What genocide? The Turks were and are like the Bush
administration. If you never admit to a mistake or a wrong-doing,
there’s no need to apologize for it.

For the record, the blood-letting began on April 24, 1915, and
continued through 1923, five years after the end of World War I, in
which the Turks came out losers. By then the Armenians were a
scattered remnant in their native land. Some of the survivors made
their way to America, which is why Binghamton today has a small but
vibrant Armenian community.

And come Saturday, members of that community will hold a
commemorative service recalling the start of the genocide. In years
past, I learned from Dr. Gary Fattal, Armenian community members have
planted trees at the south end of the Washington Street bridge — a
symbolic remembrance of the start of a new life in America.

This year, the group has planned something different, the
installation of a monument at that location. The ceremony will begin
at 11 a.m. on the 23rd, and local dignitaries have been invited to
join members of the Armenian community for the event.

Following the installation, a reception will be held at St. Gregory’s
Armenian Church hall, 12 Corbett Ave., Binghamton.

Elsewhere around the country, Armenian communities will observe the
anniversary on Saturday and Sunday. One of the largest observances
will be in New York City’s Times Square, where thousands are expected
to attend a noon rally. The rally will be followed by an ecumenical
requiem service at St. Patrick’s Roman Catholic Church, 50th Street
and 5th Avenue, from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Part of the observance of the genocide’s anniversary is a call for
the Turkish government to acknowledge what was done and apologize for
it. Armenians aren’t seeking reparations, at least not that I know
of, but the Turks, for nearly a century, have stuck to their denials
of responsibility. Perhaps they fear that if they owned up, demands
for reparations would follow.

Almost as shocking as the Turks’ arrogance is the rest of the world’s
indifference. The Wilson administration ignored the Armenians’ pleas
for help, and in what was to become a pattern, the United States and
most of the rest of what is laughingly referred to as the “free
world” pretended not to notice what Nazi Germany was doing to the
Jews, gypsies, homosexuals and assorted others until it was to late
to do anything about it.

The slaughter of a half-million Africans in Rwanda a decade ago
became part of that pattern, and the Clinton administration dithered
and did nothing.

Today, the Sudanese Army and its janjaweed cohort are raping and
killing at will in Darfur, and while the Bush administration has
deplored it and sent material aid to the victims, it has made no
attempt to intervene. And how could it even if it wanted to? With the
Iraqi tar baby firmly in its grasp, it can’t reach out to anyone.

The lesson for oppressive governments over the years? If you’re not
sitting on a billion barrels of oil, you can get away with just about
anything.

Turk Laws Don’t Allow Armenian Church to Return ‘Seized Properties’

AZG Armenian Daily #068, 16/04/2005

Turkey

‘TURKISH LAWS DO NOT ALLOW THE ARMENIAN CHURCH TO RETURN ‘ITS SEIZED
PROPERTIES”

Christopher Smith, co-chair of the US Helsinki Committee, announced that the
current legislation of Turkey doesn’t allow the Armenian Church to return
its properties “unjustly seized by the state.”

Mediamax agency informed that Mr. Smith said this during his speech at the
US Helsinki Committee hearing on the religious freedom in Turkey.

“The Armenian Church has lost the great part of its property as a result of
the laws that allow the government to directly manage the property when the
number of the local community doesn’t amount to a definite number. On its
turn, the Istanbul Armenian Patriarchate keeps working on the
acknowledgement of its legal status. Last September, Turkey adopted new
rules for measuring the religious communities that allow the communities
that have legal status purchase new properties. But the loss of the
properties made great harm to the Armenian Church, while the legislation of
the country doesn’t allow to demand back the properties illegally seized by
the state,” Christopher Smith said.

The US Helsinki Committee is an independent agency that carries out the
monitoring of the implementation of the commitments undertaken by 55 OSCE
member countries.

Court sentences accused in plane bombing case

Interfax
April 15 2005

Court sentences accused in plane bombing case

MOSCOW. April 15 (Interfax) – A court has found two people charged in
connection with the terrorist act that downed two Tupolev aircraft in
August last year guilty on all counts and sentenced them to 1.5 years
in prison.

Resident of Krasnoyarsk territory Armenia Arutyunian, who illegally
sold air tickets at Domodedovo airport, and Sibir air company
employee Nikolai Korenkov, who was in charge of passenger control,
have been sentenced to 1.5 years in a penal colony.

ANKARA: Yerevan Rejects Turkish PM Erdogan’s Dialogue Letter

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
April 14 2005

Yerevan Rejects Turkish PM Erdogan’s Dialogue Letter

Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul revealed in Ankara that Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan wrote to Armenian President Robert
Kocharian recently, proposing the creation of a joint
Turkish-Armenian commission

ANKARA (JTW) Turkish Grand National Parliament first time in its
history made a general session to discuss the Armenian issue. Turkish
Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said in the session that Prime Minister
Erdogan sent a letter to Armenian President Robert Kocharian. Turkish
PM Erdogan called Armenian President to establish a joint dialogue
commission. However, Gul said, Yerevan rejected the offer.

Abdullah Gul further added:

“We informed them that if our proposal is accepted, we are ready to
negotiate with Armenia on how the commission will be established and
how it will work and that such an initiative will serve to normalize
relations between the two countries,’ Gul told a special session of
the Turkish parliament… I repeat this appeal once again… Turkey is
ready to face its history, Turkey has no problem with its history.”

Turkish PM Erdogan had declared on Wednesday that Ankara is prepared
for an “open discussion” on the highly sensitive subject as he met
members of his Justice and Development Party (AKP). Erdogan said `we
have nothing to be afraid. We have no problem with our history’.
Erdogan further called the Armenian groups to open their archives to
all researchers.

Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, however rejected all
dialogue calls and accused Turkey of playing a game.

JTW