La Mairie de Valence (Dreme) devoile des bandeaux sur le 100eme anni

LA MAIRIE DE VALENCE (DREME) DEVOILE DES BANDEAUX SUR LE 100EME ANNIVERSAIRE DU GENOCIDE DES ARMENIENS – PHOTOS

VALENCE-GENOCIDE DES ARMENIENS-100 ANS

Jeudi 23 avril a 19h30 une foule de plus de 200 personnes etait reunie
devant la Mairie de Valence (Drôme) pour assister au devoilement de
deux larges bandeaux dedies au 100ème anniversaire du genocide des
Armeniens. Nicolas Daragon, le Maire de Valence a rappele le devoir
de memoire et a appele la Turquie a reconnaitre le genocide. Il
a egalement souligne l’engagement de la Ville de Valence pour les
nombreuses manifestations du genocide des Armeniens a l’occasion
du centenaire. Près de Nicolas Daragon, Marlène Mourier, Maire de
Bourg-Lès-Valence, Annie Koulaksezian-Romy conseillère communautaire,
l’Adjoint Franck Daumas-Diratzonian, les conseillers municipaux Georges
Rastklan, Myriam Kenan et Nathalie Iliozer. Après l’allocution Nicolas
Daragon aide d’Annie Koulaksezian-Romy, de Marlène Mourier et de
Frank Daumas-Diratzonian deroula les banderoles sur lesquels etaient
inscrits

Chicago Tribute: And 1.5 Million Armenians Were Killed

CHICAGO TRIBUTE: AND 1.5 MILLION ARMENIANS WERE KILLED

14:33 – 24 / 04 / 2015

Armenian Genocide victims are commemorated in Istanbul President
Sargsyan delivers toast at state dinner at the Presidential Palace
President of Cyprus: Both Armenia and Cyprus are victims of impunity
Paris-based Turkish NGOs to commemorate Armenian Genocide

At the origins of commemoration: April 24 as a day of mourning and
commemoration of the Armenian Genocide

Chicago Tribune published an article by columnist John Kass about the
story of an Armenian-American judge Samuel Der-Yeghiayan and the fact
that people allow their memories to be washed. The article reads:

Pope Francis set off a diplomatic furor recently when he said what
historians and most diplomats have been saying for almost a century
now:

That Turkey participated in the first genocide of the 20th century
by slaughtering 1.5 million Armenians in 1915.

Friday, April 24, marks the 100th anniversary of the genocide that is
still not officially recognized here in the United States as genocide.

And so I sat down at breakfast with U.S. District Judge Samuel
Der-Yeghiayan, America’s first immigrant of Armenian descent to be
named federal judge.

“The pope acknowledged, as have historians since the beginning of this,
that it was a genocide,” Der-Yeghiayan said. “It was unspeakable. But
still, we speak of it, to remember.”

The Turkish government denies genocide and says the deaths were the
result of civil war. It withdrew its ambassador from the Vatican.

President Barack Obama wrung his hands.

“That’s politics,” said the judge. “But whatever they call it, it
was genocide. It wasn’t an accident.”

The U.S. ambassador of the time, Henry Morgenthau described the
Turkish policy as one of systematic, “wholesale slaughter.”

I’d call it a Muslim cleansing of Christians, with fire and sword.

Armenians weren’t the only ones. Thousands of Greeks and Assyrian
Orthodox were also killed by the Turkish army and its surrogates.

And 1.5 million Armenians were killed.

Think of it as low-tech killing. The Armenians were slaughtered in
their villages. They were chopped to pieces and thrown into rivers.

They were raped and shot and sabered by cavalry as they ran with
their children on their backs.

The fine actor, Russell Crowe, has directed a controversial movie
coming out Friday called “The Water Diviner,” about Turkey of that
troubled era.

I can’t wait to see it. I’ve read that in his film, Turks are
sympathetic figures. It is the Christians — notably the Greeks —
who are the savages.

But just Google “Armenian Genocide” and check “images.” And you will
see how brutality becomes viral.

One photo I just can’t shake depicts Armenian girls who’ve been
crucified by Turks.

The girls are naked. Their long, black hair covers their faces. The
crosses are set on the side of a dusty road. It demands vengeance.

“My great-grandfather was an Orthodox priest,” Der-Yeghiayan said.

“The Turks rounded up the family, his sons and daughters, his wife.

They gathered them. Then they dishonored him.

“First they cut off his beard. They laughed. They told him to deny
Christ. He refused. And when he refused, they chopped off his hands.

They chopped off his feet. They threw him in the river.”

I saw an old family photo. There was a tiny, 5-foot-tall woman,
a great-aunt in the back row. She was the only survivor.

The Turks had killed her infant daughter. She jumped in the river
to die.

“She told me from her own mouth,” Der-Yeghiayan said. “The river was
called the River of Blood. She became lost in all the bodies.

Downstream she was fished out, saved by a kind Turkish family. And
there were kind Turkish people too.”

I liked visiting Turkey. I liked the culture and the people very much.

That’s what makes writing this column so difficult. But the dead
compel me.

Americans forget too easily. We allow our memories to be washed,
from generation to generation, in the interests of commerce. Yet the
dead can’t be coerced by capitalism.

Der-Yeghiayan’s grandfather, who had been living in the U.S. working
in a steel plant, went back in 1919 to find those who were left.

“He never smiled,” said the judge. “As a boy, late at night, I would
hear him from the other room, on his knees, praying for all their
souls. But I never saw him smile once. My grandmother never smiled.

All the Armenian people of the time, they lived, they survived,
they raised families.

“But they never smiled. Ever.”

http://times.am/?p=123346&l=en
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-armenian-genocide-centennial-20150424-story.html

Genocide Armenien : L’Histoire, Les Faits, Les Versions ( AFP – REPE

GENOCIDE ARMENIEN : L’HISTOIRE, LES FAITS, LES VERSIONS ( AFP – REPERES) – PHOTOS

Turquie-Armenie-genocide-anniversaire

Erevan (AFP) – Les Armeniens a travers le monde commemorent vendredi
le centenaire des massacres de leurs ancetres, perpetres par les Turcs
ottomans lors de la Première guerre mondiale, une tragedie qualifiee de
genocide par l’Armenie alors que la Turquie rejette fermement ce terme.

Voici les faits principaux sur ces massacres et deportations,
commis entre 1915 et 1917 et qui enveniment toujours les relations
turco-armeniennes :

– Historique du conflit –

Après des siècles de domination persane et byzantine, le territoire
de l’Armenie historique est partage au milieu du XIXe siècle entre
les empires russe et ottoman. Entre 1,7 et 2,3 millions d’Armeniens
vivent dans l’Empire ottoman vers 1915, selon les estimations des
historiens occidentaux.

Les autorites ottomanes soupconnent les sujets armeniens de manquer
de loyaute a l’egard de l’Empire depuis la naissance, a la fin du
XIXe siècle, d’un mouvement nationaliste reclamant l’autonomie des
Armeniens.

Entre 100.000 et 300.000 Armeniens auraient ainsi ete massacres en
1895-1896, sous le règne du sultan Abdul Hamid II.

En octobre 1914, l’Empire ottoman entre dans la Première guerre
mondiale, aux côtes de l’Allemagne et de l’Autriche-Hongrie. Lorsque
l’Empire essuie de lourdes pertes dans les combats affectant les
provinces armeniennes, les autorites en rejettent la responsabilite
sur les Armeniens et lancent une campagne de propagande les qualifiant
d'”ennemi interieur”.

Le 24 avril 1915, des milliers d’Armeniens, soupconnes de sentiments
nationaux hostiles au gouvernement central sont arretes. La plupart
d’entre eux sont ensuite executes ou deportes et le 24 avril devient
dès lors, pour tous les Armeniens du monde, la Journee commemorative
du genocide armenien.

– Chaîne des evenements –

Le 26 mai 1915, une loi speciale autorise la deportation des Armeniens
“pour des raisons de securite interieure”, suivie le 13 septembre
d’une loi ordonnant la confiscation de leurs biens.

La population armenienne d’Anatolie et de Cilicie est alors contrainte
a l’exode vers les deserts de Mesopotamie. Un grand nombre d’Armeniens
sont tues en chemin ou dans des camps.

Beaucoup sont brûles vifs, noyes, empoisonnes ou victimes du typhus,
selon des rapports des diplomates etrangers et des agents de
renseignement de l’epoque.

L’ambassadeur americain dans l’Empire ottoman, Henry Morgenteau,
decrit dans un câble diplomatique au Departement d’Etat une “campagne
d’extermination raciale sous couvert de repression de la rebellion”.

Le 30 octobre 1918, l’Empire ottoman se rend aux forces de la Triple
Entente (Grande-Bretagne, Russie et France). Un accord sur l’armistice
permet alors aux Armeniens deportes de revenir dans leurs maisons.

En fevrier 1919, un tribunal militaire a Constantinople reconnait
plusieurs hauts responsables ottomans coupables de crimes de guerre,
y compris contre les Armeniens, et les condamne a mort.

– Versions contradictoires –

Les Armeniens estiment que 1,5 million des leurs ont ete tues de
manière systematique a la fin de l’empire ottoman.

La Turquie evoque pour sa part une guerre civile en Anatolie, doublee
d’une famine, dans laquelle 300 a 500.000 Armeniens et autant de
Turcs ont trouve la mort.

En avril 2014, le president actuel Recep Tayyip Erdogan, alors
Premier ministre, avait fait un pas en avant inedit en presentant des
condoleances pour les victimes armeniennes de 1915, sans pour autant
cesser de contester toute volonte d’extermination.

“Ce gouvernement a fait plus que tous ses predecesseurs pour faire
tomber les tabous de la fondation de la Republique, mais il s’est
malheureusement arrete en cours de route”, estime Cengiz Aktar,
professeur de sciences politiques a l’universite privee Sabanci
d’Istanbul.

En 2000, 126 chercheurs, parmi lesquels le laureat du prix Nobel Elie
Wiesel, l’historien Yehuda Bauer et le sociologue Irving Horowitz,
affirment dans un communique publie par The New York Times que “le
genocide armenien lors de la Première guerre mondiale est un fait
historique incontestable”.

“La deportation armenienne est une vraie tragedie”, reconnaît Ilber
Ortayli, professeur d’histoire a l’universite Galatasaray d’Istanbul,
en appelant les historiens des deux pays a “se saisir de cette
question” et a “etudier point par point” cette periode de l’histoire
turco-armenienne pour “aller au fond de choses”.

A ce jour, une vingtaine de pays reconnaissent le genocide armenien,
parmi lesquels la France et la Russie. Le Parlement europeen a fait
la meme demarche.

En 2008, lors de sa campagne electorale Barack Obama avait promis
de reconnaître le genocide armenien. Cependant, une fois elu, le
president americain n’a jamais employe ce terme.

vendredi 24 avril 2015, Stephane (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=110765

Veillee Des Jeunes A Valence (Drôme) Le 23 Avril : Emotion Et Revend

VEILLEE DES JEUNES A VALENCE (DRÔME) LE 23 AVRIL : EMOTION ET REVENDICATION – PHOTOS

VALENCE (DRÔME)-100ème ANNIVERSAIRE DU GENOCIDE DES ARMENIENS

Ils etaient près de 300, venus a la veillee du 23 avril devant la
stèle du genocide des Armeniens -oeuvre de Toros- square Manoug
Stepanian a Valence (Drôme). Une veillee organisee par les jeunes
du Nor Seround, les badanis, les jeunes de l’Ugab et des eglises
armeniennes de Valence. En presence de nombreux elus -dont Nicolas
Daragon Maire de Valence, Marlène Mourier Maire de Bourg-Lès-Valence-
la veillee debuta par l’hymne national armenien et francais, chante
par les jeunes de l’academie de danses et chants France-Ashtarak
diriges par Levon Chatikyan. Au nom de la jeunesse armenienne Chris
Begot dans un discours precis rappela l’anniversaire du genocide et
les revendications du peuple armenien. En rappelant que de nombreux
pays ayant reconnu le genocide des Armeniens, il a appele la Turquie
a faire egalement le pas de la reconnaissance. Les Badanis et le Nor
Seround effectua egalement des discours. Le stand du Nor Seround et
des eglises rappelaient l’horreur du genocide par la projection de
photographies. Une large partie artistique accompagnait la veillee
avec les peintres Vahagn Stepanyan et Jerome Boyadjian qui executèrent
durant la manifestation des tableaux lies au genocide. Parmi les
jeunes, la partie artistique avec chants et musiques fut assuree
par de nombreuses prestations. Ainsi Azadouhie et Gago RastKlan
de l’Eglise Apostolique armenienne, Sara et Arthur Simonian de
l’Eglise Apostolique, ainsi que Michael Aharonian au saxo, les
badanis du Nor Seround, et Chris Bego au duduk se sont produits sous
des applaudissements du public. En fin de soiree, le Père Antranig
Maldjian, accompagne par Nareg Namoyan (eglise catholique armenienne),
Louder Nassanian (eglise Maranatha) et Elie Jalouf (Eglise evangelique
armenienne) ont procede a la benediction du > realise par
les dames de l’Ugab, qui fut distribue au public.

Krikor Amirzayan a Valence (Drôme), article et reportage-photo

vendredi 24 avril 2015, Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=110869

The ‘Cultural Genocide’ Of The Armenian People Isn’t Over Yet, Desce

THE ‘CULTURAL GENOCIDE’ OF THE ARMENIAN PEOPLE ISN’T OVER YET, DESCENDANTS ARGUE

Huffington Post
April 24 2015

Religion News Service | By Tania Karas

YUKARI BAKRACLI, Turkey (RNS) This tiny Kurdish village outside the
city of Van in Turkey’s southeast is home to the ruins of a once-famous
11th-century Armenian Christian monastery.

Known to Armenians as Varagavank, it thrived as a place of worship
until Turkish forces looted it and murdered parishioners in the mass
killing sprees of 1915.

Today, the roof is collapsing. Toppled stone columns lie nearby. And
with no signage, there is no acknowledgment it was once a celebrated
church for Armenians.

Varagavank is one of hundreds of disappearing physical reminders
of a community whose history in present-day Turkey goes back more
than 2,000 years. Over the past century, the Turkish government,
in writing its own narrative of what Armenians call genocide, has
destroyed many Armenian churches, homes, schools and cemeteries or
allowed them to fall into ruins. They are sites other countries might
consider valuable antiquities.

“The term we use for this is ‘cultural genocide,'” said Vahram
Ter-Matevosyan, a historian at the American University of Armenia
in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital. “We consider what is happening to
many churches a continuation of the genocide which started at the
beginning of the 20th century. It is painful, utterly painful.”

Historians and visitors have noted holes in the ground of Armenian
historical sites throughout Turkey, evidence of widespread rumors
that Armenians buried their riches before fleeing.

Hermine Sayan, an Armenian who lives in Istanbul, said her heart was
broken when she visited what remained of a destroyed church in Malatya,
a city in eastern Turkey, a few years ago.

“We stood together saying our prayers, and we were crying,” said Sayan,
whose grandparents survived the genocide.

On Friday (April 24), Armenians worldwide will commemorate 100 years
since almost 1.5 million of their ancestors died in the last days
of the Ottoman Empire, in massacres, by starvation or during forced
death marches into the Syrian desert.

The date marks a century of fierce disagreement between Armenia
and Turkey over what happened that spring. Armenians and their
supporters — including many historians, Pope Francis and the European
Parliament — say the murders constitute a systemic elimination of
their population from eastern Anatolia in present-day Turkey.

But Turkey rejects the genocide label, saying hundreds of thousands
of both Turks and Armenians died in battles between Ottoman and
Russian forces in World War I. In a move that disappointed Armenians,
the White House on Tuesday (April 21) announced that President Barack
Obama would not use the word “genocide” to describe the deaths despite
his 2008 presidential campaign promise to do so.

Preservation and respect of Armenian history, culture and monuments
in Turkey is a critical step toward Turkish-Armenian reconciliation,
said George Aghjayan, an Armenian-American from Westminster, Mass.,
who studies Armenian demographics in Turkey and its environs.

“We have a right to our presence on this land,” said Aghjayan, who
plans to visit former Armenian villages and ruined sites in Van this
weekend. “It’s where our people were born, and it shouldn’t be devoid
of any evidence of their presence.”

Van, located on Lake Van’s picturesque shores, was once the capital
of Vaspurakan, the first and biggest kingdom of greater Armenia. Van
was also where, in 1915, Armenians saved thousands of their own when
they held back the Ottoman army from city walls for a month. Resistance
leaders who survived the siege founded the Armenian republic.

The Van Museum, however, offers a different take on regional history.

One exhibit shows the “massacre (of Turks) undertaken by the Armenians
during the occupation of Van in 1915 by the Russian troops,” according
to the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism’s website. (The museum
was damaged in a 2011 earthquake and is being rebuilt.)

Present-day Van is part of unofficial Turkish Kurdistan. No Armenians
are left; Turkey’s 60,000 remaining Armenians mainly live in Istanbul.

But Van and nearby villages contain what are known as Turkey’s
“hidden Armenians,” descendants of women and children who converted to
Islam after they were adopted by sympathetic neighbors or forced into
marriage. Some are upfront about their origins, said Ferzan Demirtas,
a tour guide in Van. But others stay silent, still fearful after a
century of living as Kurds or Turks.

Cengiz Aktar, a scholar of Armenian-Turkish relations with the
Istanbul Policy Center, argues that the Turkish attitude toward its
Armenian minority is shifting. Aktar studies the politics of memory,
or the influence of politics in how collective remembrances take shape.

“The real memories are undertaken by Turkish society,” Aktar said,
adding that Turkish citizens are increasingly exploring the truth
behind what they learned in school.

Turkey’s attempt to rewrite history is evident in Yemislik, another
village outside Van, where Turkish officials replaced a former Armenian
monastery with a mosque. But Van is perhaps best known for the Armenian
Church of the Holy Cross on Akdamar Island in Lake Van.

It is one of the only Armenian churches restored by the Turkish
government, though it operates as a state museum.

On the eve of its reopening in 2007 after nearly a century of disuse,
Turkish officials balked at placing a cross on the church’s dome. They
relented after a few years.

So far, Turkish promises to restore other sites have gone unfulfilled,
leaving some to ponder whether Armenians of the diaspora should pitch
in. Aghjayan, however, questions the logic of asking Armenians to pay
for restoration of churches and villages from which their ancestors
were displaced.

“What kind of justice is that?” he asked.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/04/24/armenian-cultural-genocide_n_7130810.html

Dix Ans Apres, " Les Reverberes De La Memoire >> N’Ont Toujours Pas

DIX ANS APRES, ” LES REVERBERES DE LA MEMOIRE ” N’ONT TOUJOURS PAS TROUVE LEUR PLACE A GENEVE

REVUE DE PRESSE
Le mémorial fantôme du génocide arménien

Cette année, on commémore a la fois le centenaire du génocide
arménien et les 10â~@~Ians de blocage du projet de monument du
souvenir a Genève.

Allez demander dans quel camp se trouve la balle maintenant :
le Conseil d’Etat vous renverra vers la Ville de Genève, qui vous
renverra vers la communauté arménienne, qui vous renverra vers les
autorités. Récit d’une décennie d’imbroglios.

Tout commence en avril 2005. Le Conseil administratif genevois se
déclare favorable a la pose d’une statue commémorant le génocide des
Arméniens, dans le cimetière des Rois. Cet emplacement est refusé
par les porteurs de l’idée : ” C’était un malentendu. Il n’a jamais
été question d’un monument funéraire ”, explique Stefan Kristensen,
membre actif de la communauté arménienne et coordinateur du projet.

Une décision politique

En décembre 2007, une motion de Gérard Deshusses renouvelle la
demande sous un aspect légèrement différent : un monument ” a
la mémoire commune des Genevois et des Arméniens ”. Près d’un
an après, le Conseil administratif charge alors le Fonds d’art
contemporain de la Ville de Genève (FMAC) d’organiser un concours
d’idées. A l’époque, trois lieux sont proposés aux participants :
le square Pradier, le square Chantepoulet et le bastion Saint-Antoine.

Le projet de l’artiste francais Melik Ohanian, Les réverbères de la
mémoire, est retenu a l’unanimité par le jury d’experts. Il s’agit
d’une sculpture en bronze en forme de candélabre de 8â~@~Imètres. Son
coÔt : un demi-million de francs, dont 105â~@~J000â~@~Ifrancs
financés par le FMAC et 400â~@~J000 par la communauté arménienne. Il
est alors prévu de l’installer au bastion Saint-Antoine en avril
2013. Mais la Commission des monuments, de la nature et des sites
(CMNS) émet un préavis négatif. ” Elle explique que cet emplacement
est situé sur un patrimoine classé et protégé et que l’histoire
des Arméniens n’a rien a voir avec l’histoire genevoise, résume
Michèle Freiburghaus, directrice du FMAC. On nous a conseillé de
prendre exemple sur la Chaise cassée de l’artiste suisse Daniel
Berset, a la place des Nations, et de viser ce périmètre qui ferait
plus de sens. ”

Attention, voisinage sensible

Ironie du sort, c’est justement le choix de cette zone qui va
déclencher les problèmes les plus sérieux. Le monument est envisagé
dans le parc de l’Ariana, aux abords immédiats du Palais des Nations.

L’Office des Nations Unies a Genève ne prend aucune position
officielle et estime que la décision sur l’emplacement revient
aux autorités locales. Une lettre du Con­seil d’Etat a la Ville,
en juin 2014, affirme que le gouvernement ” est favorable, sur le
principe, au monument (…) malgré les diverses pressions ” mais
souhaite préserver ” la neutralité la plus absolue de la Genève
internationale ” dans les abords du Palais des Nations. Il demande
de transmettre ” un autre projet d’implantation ”.

Une deuxième lettre du Conseil d’Etat au Département fédéral des
affaires étrangères fait mention d’une ” série d’interventions
tout a fait inhabituelles, et parfois au plus haut niveau diplomatique.

Plusieurs ambassadeurs ou représentants officiels, notamment
arméniens ou turcs, ont intercédé de manière très insistante
auprès de nous. ” Des interventions ” souvent accompagnées de
menaces a peine voilées de représailles sur le plan diplomatique,
économique ou politique ”. Le gouvernement sollicite alors la
détermination du conseiller fédéral Didier Burkhalter.

Celui-ci répond en décembre dernier que l’installation du monument
a cet endroit risquerait de ” fortement perturber cette nécessaire
sérénité et impartialité de l’espace multilatéral a Genève. Elle
aurait des conséquences négatives au niveau international et
pourrait gravement porter atteinte a la réputation et a l’image de
la Suisse. ” Il recommande de refuser l’octroi d’une autorisation
de construire a cet emplacement, ” au vu des spécificités du lieu
”. A la suite de cette immixtion, une motion déposée en février
2015 par le député Guy Mettan demande d’autoriser au plus vite le
projet en passant outre aux pressions. La motion est soutenue par la
gauche et le PDC, mais combattue par le MCG, l’UDC et le PLR. Elle
est refusée… a une voix près !

Pourquoi la communauté arménienne n’a-t-elle toujours pas proposé
de lieux alternatifs depuis ? ” C’est une question de dignité,
répond Stefan Kristensen. Le Conseil d’Etat a cédé aux pressions de
la Turquie négationniste, appuyée par le chef du DFAE. Imaginez-vous
que la communauté juive propose d’elle-même de déplacer un monument
dédié au souvenir de la Shoah parce que des milieux nazis font
pression ?

Les Arméniens se sont fait massacrer, et ils devraient encore
devancer les souhaits des héritiers de leurs bourreaux ?! On est
victimes d’une manÃ…”uvre politique malhonnête du gouvernement. ”

” Le Conseil d’Etat genevois a reconnu unanimement le génocide
arménien, ce qu’aucun autre Canton n’a fait avant lui, rappelle son
président, Francois Longchamp. Nous nous sommes engagés a délivrer
une autorisation de construire très rapidement dès qu’un nouveau
lieu aura été choisi. ”

La communauté arménienne formulera des propositions prochainement. Le
parc Trembley et le parc Beaulieu lui ont été proposés.

” Ca donne encore plus de signification a cette Ã…”uvre de rencontrer
autant de difficultés, estime Michèle Freiburghaus. Plus c’est
problématique, plus elle s’enrichit. ”

La renaissance italienne

A défaut de trouver leur place a Genève, Les réverbères de la
mémoire retrouvent vie en Italie. A l’issue de la messe historique
présidée par le pape Francois, dimanche 12 avril dans la basilique
Saint-Pierre de Rome – messe pendant laquelle il a prononcé pour
la première fois le terme de génocide -, le souverain pontife
a en effet recu une version miniature de l’Ã…”uvre. Par ailleurs,
l’installation grandeur nature sera exposée dans le cadre de la
Biennale de Venise du 9 mai au 22 novembre prochain. (24 heures)

vendredi 24 avril 2015, Stéphane ©armenews.com

http://www.24heures.ch/suisse/memorial-fantome-genocide-armenien/story/15254596
http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=110661

Leading World TV Channels Offer Live Broadcast From Genocide Centena

LEADING WORLD TV CHANNELS OFFER LIVE BROADCAST FROM GENOCIDE CENTENARY COMMEMORATION IN YEREVAN

12:22 24/04/2015 ” SOCIETY

A number of leading world TV channels, including CNN, Mir, Euronews,
France 24 and Russia 24, are broadcasting live the Armenian Genocide
centenary commemoration ceremony at the Armenian Genocide Memorial
Complex Tsitsernakaberd.

A commemoration ceremony dedicated to the Armenian Genocide centenary
is underway in Yerevan. Over 60 foreign delegations, including the
Presidents of Russia, France, Serbia and Cyprus, are participating
in the ceremony.

http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2015/04/24/live/

The Armenian Genocide And The Burden Of Shame

THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AND THE BURDEN OF SHAME

Heidi Boghosian Become a fan

New York City Attorney

Posted: 04/24/2015 10:43 am EDT Updated: 3 minutes ago

A part of me cringed each time I uttered my last name in grade school.

For just as soon as I said it, I was asked: “What kind of name is
that?” Blank stares and silence usually followed when I said Armenian.

I felt embarrassed by who I was because I couldn’t explain it to
my classmates. All I knew was that something unspeakable, something
secret, had happened to the Armenian people. The only public reference
I had was friends’ parents cautioning fussy eaters to “remember the
starving Armenians.”

Every week I overheard my father speaking Armenian on the phone
with his sister Hasmig and mother Baidzar, the sounds of hard Ks,
Vs and Zs, punctuating their incomprehensible conversation. Over time
some of the words became familiar to me but the fact that I couldn’t
understand their language underscored how little I knew of my family
history. Kept in the dark, how could I embrace my heritage?

In the 1970s my father would proudly point out the occasional famous
Armenian in popular culture–the actor Mike Connors (born Krekor
Ohanian) of the television show Mannix, or Cher (born Cherilyn
Sarkisian). He told me that there weren’t many Armenians left in the
world, alluding vaguely to the 1915 massacre of the Armenians by the
Ottoman Turks.

It was my mother, who was Irish, who explained–when we were
alone–that as a teenager my grandmother had seen her family
slaughtered on the steps of a church. She was taken as a slave into a
Turkish household where for she served the woman of the household by
day, then was forced to service the male by night. After three years,
my grandmother and another Armenian girl from a few doors down were
able to escape in the middle of the night. They ultimately made their
way to an orphanage in Corinth. My grandfather Mesrop, who had fled
to the United States during the genocide, paid for her passage from
Greece. They married and moved to New Britain, Connecticut to work
in the hardware factories.

I was slow to learn about Armenian culture, one of the oldest settled
societies in the world. Nonetheless, living with an Armenian father,
I grew to understand key elements of that culture: tradition, modesty,
personal reserve and propriety about the way certain things are done.

Those traits help inform the reluctance of some Armenians to talk
about the genocide, especially the details of how girls like my
grandmother were abused.

Armenians lived in the Caucasus region of Eurasia for approximately
3,000 years. Theirs was the first nation to adopt Christianity as its
official religion in 301 AD. In the 15th century, part of Armenia was
absorbed into the Ottoman Turkish Empire, ruled by Muslims. There,
Armenians were viewed as Christian “infidels,” and treated unequally
and unjustly.

As the Ottoman Empire crumbled in the late 1800s, Turkish leaders were
angered by Armenian efforts to secure civil rights. A state sanctioned
program to suppress Armenian civil rights brought protests by Armenians
and then massacres by Turkish officials. When the post-Ottoman Young
Turks assumed power, their “Turkification” campaign deemed Christian
non-Turks a threat to the new state. Turkish leaders sought to create
a Pan-Turkic and Pan-Islamic empire consisting of Turkish-speaking
Muslim regions in the Caucasus and Central Asia.

On April 24, 1915, the Armenian genocide began with the Turkish
government’s arrest and execution of several hundred Armenian
intellectuals, clergy, artists, poets, and others. Armenians were
sent on death marches, often stripped naked, through the Mesopotamian
desert without food or water, until they dropped dead. “Butcher
battalions”–violent criminals released from prison specifically
for this purpose–carried out drownings, crucifixions, bayoneting,
live burnings, and throwing off cliffs. By 1923, fewer than 100,000
Armenians remained in the Ottoman Empire.

Many Armenian women genocide survivors were raped or forced into
harems. Later, they were ashamed to talk about what they had
experienced. The Turkish nationalist party’s multi-pronged plan
to render Armenians extinct included taking attractive Armenian
brides and virgins into Turkish harems where many gave birth to
children fathered by their masters. In Armenian Golgotha, Grigoris
Balakian–an intellectual who was arrested in the earliest phase of
the genocide–wrote: “The young brides and virgins were yanked from
the embrace of their crying mothers and taken to Turkish harems;
even ten-year-old girls were subjected to all manner of savage,
unbearable Turkish debauchery.”

These practices, and other unconscionable acts, help explain why
parents often spoke in Turkish or Assyrian instead of English or
Armenian when discussing the crimes they experienced. They did not
want their children to understand. Children of survivors describe
the topic as secret or forbidden.

Such absence of talk, and mystery about the genocide, contributed
to perpetuating a sense of shame. Observers to the worst crimes of
humanity–some burned alive, others poisoned by Turkish physicians
and pharmacists or drowned, starved to death, or left to perish from
disease–how could surviving witnesses not be haunted for the rest
of their lives?

On the centennial of the genocide, to help dispel the shame that some
Armenians feel, it is time to talk openly about the genocide. This
chapter in history–secreted away for a century–does not belong just
to Turks and Armenians. It belongs in the moral consciences of all
citizens of the world.

The talking so necessary to help dispel the shame has started. On
April 12, 2015 Pope Francis reaffirmed the Vatican’s past position
that Turkey committed the first genocide of the 20th century. In words
that angered Turkey enough to recall its ambassador to the Holy See,
the Pope said: “It seems that the human family has refused to learn
from its mistakes caused by the law of terror, so that today, too,
there are those who attempt to eliminate others with the help of a few,
and with the complicit silence of others who simply stand by.”

While many around the world hoped that President Obama would
acknowledge the Armenian genocide by its 100th anniversary, it
will be still be a victory if global awareness increases. Formal
acknowledgement should follow after the shame is shared.

Follow Heidi Boghosian on Twitter:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/heidi-boghosian/the-armenian-genocide-and_b_7131564.html
www.twitter.com/HeidiBoghosian

Rakel Dink: A Century Of Genocide

RAKEL DINK: A CENTURY OF GENOCIDE

04.24.2015 10:01NEWS

Rakel Dink, in the article titled ‘A Century of Genocide’ she wrote
for the April 24, 2015, issue of Cumhuriyet newspaper, relates what
befell her family and relatives in 1915, how she met Hrant Dink,
and the struggles they put up together: Today, first at Balıklı, at
my Cutak’s grave, then in Ã…~^iÃ…~_li, at Sevag’s grave, and finally,
in Taksim Square, to commemorate the ones we lost during the 1915
Genocide, I will silently wait for this country to become free.

Today, the day you read this article, is April 24. A heavy, and very
painful day of mourning. Today, I will briefly try to write for you,
with the help of God, my own story.

I was born in 1959, in the Armenian Varto Tribe, which is today
administratively linked to Å~^ırnak. Today its name has been changed
to Yolagzı Village. Varto is the name of my father’s grandfather;
it comes from the name Vartan. Back in the day, my great grandfather
Vartan migrated to this area from Van. The lands of the tribe are
in the southern foothills of Cudi Mountain. Close to the borders
with Iraq and Syria. The Cudi Mountain presents a majestic view when
seen from our lands. And from our neighbouring Hasana Village, the
mountain appears as if it has spread its wings over the land. Today,
neither the Hasana Village, nor the Armenian Varto Tribe exist. In
1915, the firman (edict) for destruction arrived. In our tribe, they
used to call it ‘Fermana Me Xatibi’, in Kurdish. Our tribe managed
to survive this firman with the help of an Arab Muslim tribe we knew
as the “Tribe of Tayans”, in the depths of the Cudi Mountain, hiding
for many years in the highlands, in coves and caves. “Cudi is the
name of a saint. Christ protected us for her sake,” the elders used
to say. In fact, there is even a legend claiming that the caves they
sought shelter in did not actually exist…

Did she fall prey to the wolves, or perhaps to the birds?

As they escaped in 1915, the newly born child of a relative began
to cry, and could not be silenced. The mother-in-law said, “You keep
walking, pass the baby to me, my daughter,” and took her, and then…

I can’t utter the words, you can guess what happened. That baby was
the child of my maternal grandmother’s elder sister… Another person
in the convoy could no longer carry their daughter, blindfolded her,
and left her below a tree. They placed a piece of dry bread in her
hand. They blindfolded her so when harm did come, she was not afraid.

Every time they tell this story, they begin to cry, saying, “Did she
fall prey to the wolves, or perhaps to the birds”. Who knows? Maybe
she is the grandmother of one of you out there…

My father Siyament’s surname was Vartanyan, but it was changed to
Yagbasan when the Surname Law came into force. My mother was Delal.

They were both highly skilful people who did whatever they did in
the best possible way, and they were courageous and honest. They made
their living the hard way, never set eyes on other people’s property,
never breathed a lie, and always defended what’s right, true and just.

Even in the face of persecution. And they gave and taught us what they
carried within themselves, setting an example with their very lives.

My mother fell ill when she was 35. I was eight years old. She passed
away into eternal peace. During that year a group of philanthropists
visited our village. Encouraged by our Patriarch Shenork Srpazan back
then, they travelled to the villages in Anatolia to find remnants of
the sword. Since not a single Armenian school was left in Anatolia,
their aim was to take children of a suitable age and bring them
to Istanbul. Along with my father, Hrant Guzelyan and Orhan Yunkes
brought 12 children to Istanbul. We were the second group. We were
placed in boarding school to learn our language and religion and to
receive education.

Our fathers would keep guard

When we were in the village, many nights, our fathers would keep
guard. Dogs would howl. It seemed as if a spirit of fear wandered. Of
course, they tried not to let the children realize, but you would
sense it from their mood, and from the women’s incessant whispering of
prayers, and you would see the anxiety. At different times, twice our
shepherds were murdered. The week before the last remaining people
of the tribe migrated to Istanbul, they murdered a man from the
neighbouring Hasana Village, which was another Christian village,
and hurled each part of his remains in a different corner. Fear
gradually increased.

The agha of the neighbouring Dadar Village, a tenant of my father,
had conjured up a fake deed and filed a lawsuit against my father. For
40 years, my father pursued these cases and the field surveys. He was
injured many times, at times he tired, but he never gave up. My father
passed away at the age of 72 in Brussels, while, to use your phrase,
as a member of the “Diaspora” his “land demand” continued. The case
is still open.

I met my beloved husband at boarding school. We first met at the
summer residence of the boarding school, the Tuzla Armenian Children’s
Camp. Together, we played knucklebones, we ran, we sang hymns, and we
learned to help each other, to console each other, to cry with those
who cried, to laugh with those who laughed, and to love and respect.

We learned righteousness, honesty and sharing. We learned how to
separate the good from the bad. On April 23, 1977, on Children’s Day*,
we two children got married. Let me tell you something: We loved each
other, and we loved to love.

In 1978, they shot our camp director Guzelyan. He was injured but
survived. In 1979, they imprisoned him on the pretext of raising
Armenian militants. We, a family with two children, took responsibility
as directors of the camp during summers. Hrant was a student at
university on the one hand, and our struggle to make a living continued
on the other. In 1986, our third child was born. And then, the Tuzla
Camp was seized by the state. It still stands today, dilapidated. I
wish they had used it for a good purpose. They took it from us and
gave it back to its former owner. Then it apparently changed hands
several times. It brought no good to any of its new owners.

And the places in Istanbul where the children stayed were closed one
by one during the winter.

Today, in this age of information, no one has the right to say ‘I
don’t know’. My life story, or other people’s life stories… One
observes how each person who survived during that period managed it
only by a miracle.

There is even more to it than murder

These days, the pathetic Perincek and his like make up stories saying,
“Hrant did not call it genocide”. They have teamed up with state cadres
in their pursuit for “freedom of expression”… Talaat Pasha and his
friends… Thus we see that there is even more to it than murder. We
saw the trials that took place after 19 January 2007. And at those
trials I saw the anger and hatred that is not satiated by murder.

My dear Cutak**… He wanted for you to reach the honour and greatness
of seeing the consequences through your own means, and he wanted
to do that without offending you. Because he was good. He loved
you very much. His wish and aim was to help you. We have seen many
guises of racism, heartless, blinded, and inhuman. In the middle of
the courtroom, they kicked and stamped the remains of the dead. Both
while we lived with the threats, and after the assassination. Is that
not the mentality of the Genocide?

Saying “No one is left… They are all gone, that is all”, “I wish
they had not left. They went, and with them, the abundance of the land
disappeared as well”, “We got along well, it was external powers that
sew discord” means nothing. It is necessary to sincerely recognize
the atrocity that took place, the grave robbing, the evil in laying
waste to all forms of intimacy, that all those rights you call the
rightful share of the servant of God were trampled under foot, that
belongings, property and dignity were destroyed and that no right
whatsoever was protected.

Which heart can comprehend the magnitude of that whole?

What I know, what I have heard, what I have experienced are perhaps
trivial. Perhaps they constitute a mere fraction of a larger whole.

But which mind, which heart can comprehend the magnitude of that whole?

Now I stand and look. I observe how grotesque and ridiculous humanity
looks in the garb of denial. Mine is a bitter smile. A smile turned
sour, full of tears. A smile in part full of anger and expectation.

I observe the world in 1915. I cry bitter tears for all humanity, and
its policies. I observe the humanity of 2015, and my soul wails inside
me. My life is drained out. I observe my country. I am ashamed. I cry.

A lump sticks in my throat. I cannot swallow. I let loose my voice. My
tears flow from my chest. I speak to God, I pour out my grief to Him.

And by faith in His name, I beg to Jesus. For Him to show mercy to
humanity. To lead hearts to repentance. Then the Lord will descend
upon the earth, and humanity will move on with sincere recognition.

Hearts will unite, wounds will be salved, and healing and joy will
come. And thus the old rotten mentality will be cast aside like a
dirty ragged garment. People will become pure, redeemed; they will
shed their weight and emancipate themselves from the noose of history.

Today, first at Balıklı, at my Cutak’s grave, then in Ã…~^iÃ…~_li,
at Sevag’s grave, and finally, in Taksim Square, to commemorate the
ones we lost during the 1915 Genocide, I will silently wait for this
country to become free.

* April 23, in commemoration of the establishment of the Grand National
Assembly of Turkey on that day in 1920, is celebrated in Turkey as
Children’s Day.

** Cutak means ‘violin’ in Armenian. It is also Rakel Dink’s nickname
for Hrant Dink, and a pseudonym Hrant Dink used when he began to
write columns.

http://www.agos.com.tr/en/article/11381/rakel-dink-a-century-of-genocide

Recognition Of Armenian People’s Tragedy, A Necessary Signal For Eli

RECOGNITION OF ARMENIAN PEOPLE’S TRAGEDY, A NECESSARY SIGNAL FOR ELIMINATING HATRED, INTOLERANCE, RACISM, XENOPHOBIA – ROMANIAN PRESIDENT

17:02 * 24.04.15

Romanian President Klaus Iohannis on Friday sent a message on the
occasion of the commemoration of 100 years since the Armenians’
historical tragedy, in which he says that the recognition of this
tragedy is an important and necessary signal to get rid of hatred,
intolerance, racism and xenophobia.

“One century after the tragic events of 1915, I bring a pious homage
to the victims of the Armenian people, who resisted over decades
the history’s ups and downs and the hardships from the beginning
of the last century. Hundreds of thousands of innocent souls have
perished then in a terrible crime that overshadowed humanity and
compels us today to recognition and reconciliation,” Iohannis said
in his message, the Romanian national news agency Agerpres reports,
citing the Presidential Administration.

The president added that the commemoration and the awareness of the
drama the Armenian people has passed through are today mandatory
approaches for our world to learn the lesson of the past.

“The respect for the victims forces us to turn our mind to the
disappeared and pray for them in silence. May the memory of the victims
stay eternally in our hearts!” says Iohannis in the above-mentioned
message.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/24/romania-genocide/1657015