Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

UCLA: Students commemorate Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • UCLA: Students commemorate Genocide

    Students commemorate Genocide

    By Van-Anh Tran
    DAILY BRUIN CONTRIBUTOR
    April 22, 2004
    [email protected]

    About 50 students marched in silence around the UCLA campus Wednesday
    in commemoration of the 89th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide by
    the Turkish government - which some countries, including the United
    States, do not officially recognize.

    Starting on April 24,1915, the Turkish government of the Ottoman
    Empire started an ethnic cleansing policy by relocating its Armenian
    population toSyria.

    Between 600,000 and 1.5 million Armenians are believed to have been
    killed, and no consensus number is agreed upon by historians.

    There is also debate on whether the killing of Armenians during World
    War I by the Turkish government can be called a genocide, but most
    Armenian students on campus don't see it as a debatable issue.

    "The Armenian genocide is not a political issue, but a historical
    fact," said Raffi Kassabian, treasurer of the Armenian Student
    Association and a third-year political science student. "As a great
    civilization, we must learn from the past so we will not repeat what
    happened in the future."

    Participants in the silent march were dressed in black and carried
    posters with slogans like "Recognition ends repetition" and "We seek
    justice."

    One poster bore an American eagle with the message "United We Stand,"
    despite the fact the U.S. government has not officially acknowledged
    the genocide. The silent march ended with a presentation, including
    speeches, poetry readings and music performances at Bruin Plaza.

    "We do these events to increase the awareness about the genocide,
    because there have been denial in the past on campus about it," said
    Christina Ohanian, cultural director of the Armenian Student
    Association and a second-year political science student.

    The association sponsored the event with the help of Alpha Epsilon
    Omega and Alpha Omega Alpha, UCLA's Armenian fraternity and sorority,
    respectively.

    "It is important that Armenian students organize such events, because
    one unrecognized genocide tells us it's OK that it happened and that
    we do not need to recognize it," said Lory Bedikian, a 1994 alumna who
    read poetry at the presentation.

    Sion Abajian, Bedikian's grandmother, is an Armenian genocide survivor
    who still has nightmares about her experiences crossing the Syrian
    desert, Bedikian said. Abajian used to talk a lot about her
    experiences and has burning sensations on her feet that doctors
    speculate are caused psychologically from her memories, Bedikian said.

    Posters and information were displayed on Bruin Plaza throughout the
    day to attract students and offer more information about the genocide.

    "I believe that if we would have recognized the genocide of 1915, then
    it wouldn't have been repeated in Rwanda and Bosnia," said Tamar
    Nazerin, member of Alpha Omega Alpha and a third-year physical science
    student.

    The only U.S. president to recognize the killings as a genocide was
    Ronald Reagan.

    Concerns for U.S.-Turkish relations have often been cited as the main
    reason for the United States not formally acknowledging the
    genocide. Many nations, including France, Israel, Russia and Canada,
    have recognized that the genocide was a crime against humanity.

    UCLA's Undergraduate Students Association Council passed a resolution
    Tuesday night acknowledging all the atrocities perpetuated against
    humanity, including the Armenian killings.
Working...
X