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  • USC: Vigil Remembers Genocide

    "Vigil remembers genocide"
    Hymns and poems are used to commemorate the Armenian genocide that occurred
    89 years ago.
    By Aaron Burgin

    Published: Friday, April 23, 2004 -- USC Daily Trojan
    http://www.dailytrojan.com/news/2004/04/23/News/Vigil.Remembers.Genocide-669864.shtml

    Adrineh Khatchikian's voice lifted the spirits of a somber crowd of
    200 Armenian students, faculty and other onlookers commemorating the
    genocide that nearly wiped out a population of Armenians almost 90
    years ago.

    Singing "Kroonk," a hymn written by famed Armenian monk and songwriter
    Komitas, Khatchikian was part of the annual vigil held at Hahn Plaza
    created to inform people about the Armenian genocide, said Dina
    Yadegarian, president of the Armenian Student Association

    April 24 is the official memorial date for the estimated 1.5-million
    Armenians killed between 1915 and 1922 at the hands of the Talaat
    Pasha and the defunct Ottoman Empire.

    Commemorations were held at USC on Thursday, however, to ensure that
    most of the campus' Armenian student population, mostly commuters,
    could participate, Yadegarian said.

    Some who participated in the vigil, such as Markar Markavian,
    performed musical pieces for the event.

    Markavian performed "Dele Yaman and "Kroonk" on the tar, a traditional
    Armenian musical instrument, bringing some of the onlookers to tears.

    Several speakers, including ASA chaplain Father Vazken Movsesian and
    poet Lory Bedikian, addressed the crowd with a message of hope for the
    future and a possible recognition of the genocide by the Turkish
    government, which does not recognize the genocide.

    Movsesian, known as "Father Vazken" to students, said that there was
    an air of excitement surrounding the solemn occasion.

    "It is a very momentous occasion, because, despite the atrocities, the
    Turkish government's plans were foiled just by the presence of
    Armenians," Movsesian said. "It just shows our strength as a people,
    and our resolve to keep the memory of our people alive."

    Bedikian, a University of Oregon alumna, read two poems in honor of
    her grandmother, Sion Abajian, who, at 100 years of age, is one of the
    few living survivors of the genocide.

    She urged passersby to stop to recognize the event and to read the
    posters, brochures and pamphlets that told the story of the Armenians.

    The "ghosts" she spoke about in her poem that haunt her grandmother
    came from the lack of official recognition of the genocide.

    "It makes you feel like being the victim of a crime," Bedikian
    said. "You feel alone and isolated."

    In his speech, Movsesian said that the lack of acknowledgement of the
    genocide led to other genocides throughout the 20th century.

    "It adds insult to injury because of what we've gone through, the lack
    of recognition made the way for the Holocaust, Rwanda, Ethiopia and
    all sorts of atrocities," he said.

    "Hitler himself said, 'Who remembers the Armenians?'" Movsesian said.

    In terms of recognition by the U.S. government, the House of
    Representatives recognized the Armenian genocide on April 24, 1975 by
    designating April 24 as a "National Day of Remembrance of Man's
    Inhumanity to Man."

    Student Senate also recognized the Armenian genocide on April 24,
    1983.

    Only with recognition, Movsesian said, can the healing process
    actually begin, adding that only then could the Armenian deaths not be
    in vain.

    All of the speakers said the event was not meant to incite hatred
    toward anyone, but to recognize the events that occurred and the
    people who suffered and continue to recognize their legacy.

    Armenians who attended the commemoration looked on with grave faces as
    the speakers each addressed the audience with their words of
    encouragement and remembrance of their ancestors lost during the
    genocide.

    Arpine Shakhbandaryan, a student who attended the vigil, said she
    could only remember as far back as her great-grandparents' generation,
    something that her friends who were with her could relate to.

    She said the main reason she was there was because too many of the
    original survivors died without seeing any changes.

    "I'm angry and frustrated because most of those who survived are
    either of old age or dying without seeing justice," she said. "We're
    going to continue to battle so that these memories aren't forgotten."

    Vazken said he believes that the Armenians' strong Christian faith and
    belief in the resurrection will carry the day.

    Armenia was the first nation to adopt Christianity as its national
    religion.

    "We are the only nation who have adopted Christianity, never to enjoy
    a day of peace in their existence," Movsesian said. "We've always been
    the object of persecution and opposition."

    "However, Armenians strongly believe in the Christian notion of the
    resurrection, and we will always be strong and rise above all the
    adversity that has befallen our people."
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