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Glendale: Going After Recognition

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  • Glendale: Going After Recognition

    "Going after recognition"

    Schiff asks Bush to call deaths of Armenians at the hands of Ottoman
    Turksa genocide.

    By Gary Moskowitz, Glendale News-Press
    April 24, 2004

    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/glendale/news/la-gnp-assemblyside24apr24,0,7785375.story?coll=3Dla-tcn-glendale-news


    GLENDALE - To Sarkis Asatryan, remembering the Armenian Genocide today
    is not enough.

    Asatryan, a Hoover High School senior of Armenian descent, believes
    people need to work hard to make sure that the 1.5 million Armenians
    killed between 1915 and 1923 did not die in vain.

    Since the Armenian Genocide began on the night of April 24, 1915,
    today marks its 89th anniversary.

    "My grandfather's brother was killed because he wanted to buy bread
    and the government would not let him, and he was beheaded," said
    Asatryan, 18. "I think the first step is to educate people not just
    about the Armenian Genocide, but the genocide of Native Americans,
    Cambodians, Serbs and Jews, and what an inhumane thing genocide is.

    "I think we are truly making an effort to make the Armenian Genocide
    known to the world. To me, we have to remember where we've been to
    know where we are now. I think Armenians consider themselves a race
    born to survive no matter what," Asatryan said.

    Armenians say the Ottoman Turks deliberately slaughtered some 1.5
    million of their people between 1915 and 1923. Turkey denies the
    charges of genocide, saying the Armenians were among the many victims
    of a partisan war raging during World War I as the Ottoman Empire
    collapsed.

    Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Glendale) sent a letter to President George
    W. Bush this week, calling on the president to recognize the
    atrocities committed against the Armenian people by actually using the
    term "genocide" in his annual statement commemorating the events of
    1915.

    Schiff was joined by Rep. George Radanovich (R-Mariposa), Rep. Frank
    Pallone Jr. (D-N.J.), Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R-Mich.) and more than 165
    members of the bipartisan Armenian Caucus in asking the president for
    formal recognition of the genocide.

    "It's enormously important for us to recognize the first genocide of
    the 20th century," Schiff said Friday. "I think it does further injury
    to the survivors and doesn't set the right tone for our commitment to
    avoiding future genocides. We will keep working on it until we get the
    job done, and I hopethe president lives up to recognizing it.

    "I think Glendale feels this most keenly because a great many Armenian
    families here have direct experience with the genocide. Imagine going
    through a tragedy like that in your family and have your own country
    fail to recognize that. Denial of genocide is a second injury,"
    Schiff said.

    The Canadian Parliament on Wednesday formally declared that Ottoman
    Turks committed genocide against Armenians in 1915, according to news
    reports.

    The Parliament's House of Commons voted 153-68 to support a motion
    declaring the events of 89 years ago as genocide, despite a plea from
    Foreign Minister Bill Graham not to aggravate NATO ally Turkey.

    Razmik and Frida Aghourian, owners of Oven Fresh Bakery in Montrose,
    normally would be open for business from 7:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. today,
    but decided to close in commemoration of the genocide.

    The Aghourian family will attend an Armenian Apostolic Mass today
    instead of working, Frida Aghourian said. The Aghourians are among
    many local business owners who opt to close their doors every April 24
    in commemoration of the genocide.

    "It's to respect all the people who suffered and died," Frida
    Aghourian said. "It's to recognize and let everybody know something
    horrible happened."
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