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Boston Globe: Armenians to commemorate genocide

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  • Boston Globe: Armenians to commemorate genocide

    Armenians to commemorate genocide
    Events in region culminate April 24
    By Rhonda Stewart, Globe Staff, 4/11/2004

    As the world marks the 10th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide, members of
    Watertown's Armenian community prepare to commemorate the eight-year
    genocide that devastated their native country.

    Beginning Tuesday, events will be held throughout the area leading up to a
    program at the Armenian Cultural and Educational Center in Watertown on
    April 24. On that date in 1915, the Ottoman Turkish government began a
    campaign of genocide in which more than 1 million Armenians were killed.

    Last week, ceremonies were held around the world to remember the 100 days of
    killing in Rwanda during which an estimated 800,000 people were murdered.
    But the United States does not officially recognize the eight-year period of
    killings in Armenia as genocide. In Congress, Democratic Representatives
    Barney Frank and Stephen Lynch are among a bipartisan group of lawmakers who
    have signed a letter encouraging President Bush to characterize the murders
    as genocide.

    The Turkish government's position is that the killings do not constitute
    genocide, and officials also dispute the number of Armenians killed.

    Henry C. Theriault, a professor at Worcester State College, said that
    despite growing public acknowledgment of genocides such as those in Rwanda
    or the Holocaust in World War II, it is still common for mass killings to be
    covered up or denied.

    Theriault, who is also the coordinator of the college's Center for the Study
    of Human Rights, will give a talk at Boston College Tuesday night called
    ''The Challenge of Denial: The Armenian Genocide and Beyond."

    ''Denial isn't just about past genocides," he said. ''This is a real ongoing
    problem. There's a long history of genocide. It's continuing today and part
    of it is really confronting the full history and the full problem in the
    present."

    Half of the 120,000 Armenians in Massachusetts live in Greater Boston,
    according to the Washington-based Armenian National Committee of America. On
    April 24, French author and political scientist Gerard Chaliand will deliver
    a keynote address at the Armenian Cultural and Educational Center. The
    Greater Boston Armenian Genocide Commemoration Committee is sponsoring
    programs in Watertown, Newton, Arlington, and Belmont to mark the genocide
    anniversary.

    Joyce L. Barsam, a founding director of the National Center for Genocide
    Studies, said the Armenian diaspora exists largely because so many people
    left their native country to escape the genocide. This was true for Barsam's
    late mother, who was born as her family was fleeing to safety.

    ''I think almost everyone in the diaspora has a blood relationship to
    someone who was a victim or a survivor of the genocide," she said. ''Each of
    us feels it very personally. It's not a theoretical historical issue, it's a
    living fact."

    © Copyright 2004 Globe Newspaper Company.
    http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2004/04/11/armenians_to_commemorate_genocide/
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