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Armenian lights star to honor slain family

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  • Armenian lights star to honor slain family

    El Paso Times, TX
    April 24 2004

    Armenian lights star to honor slain family

    Darren Meritz
    El Paso Times

    Linda Stelter / El Paso Times

    Photo: Greg Yakoobian has extensively studied the history of Armenia
    and the killings in 1915 of some of his mother's family. He has
    lighted the Star on the Franklin Mountains in their memory and the
    others killed. The family picture shows his mother Rose, right, with
    her mother and father and her sisters.


    A century-old dispute between the Turks and the Armenians is bringing
    some attention to El Paso's Star on the Franklin Mountains.

    Though only small populations of either ethnicity live here, El
    Pasoan Gregory Yakoobian has sponsored lighting the Star on the
    Franklin Mountain today in remembrance of the Armenians who were
    killed at the hand of the Ottoman Empire during World War I.

    Yakoobian, who spent 20 years in the U.S. military, contends that the
    Turks killed as many as 1.5 million Armenians during ethnic cleansing
    in what some have called the first Holocaust.

    Though questions abound about the accuracy of describing the deaths
    of Armenians in the then Ottoman Empire as a genocide, Yakoobian
    stands firm.

    "My parents were there, and their parents and other relatives were
    killed," he said. "My father did not like to talk about the subject
    at all. It was almost like post-traumatic stress disorder."

    He recounted the oral history that has been passed down through his
    family. He said that Armenian women during that time were often given
    three choices -- convert to Islam, be sold into slavery or be killed
    -- and that men were summarily executed during a march of the
    displaced.

    Other perspectives on treatment of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire
    are also widely believed.

    Emriye Ormanci, vice consul at the Consulate General of Turkey in
    Houston, said that while few clues point toward ethnic cleansing or
    genocide of the Armenians during World War I, the Turks made the
    decision to displace the Armenians because of their allegiance to the
    Russians.

    "Feelings are on the one hand, but the truth is something really
    different," she said. "Yes, the Ottoman Empire had to make some
    regulations to change the place of the Armenian population because
    they were sided with the Russians, but of course you should also take
    into consideration that it was a time of war."

    She also said, "We admit that there was loss on the Armenian side and
    we are really sorry, but they should also understand that there was
    loss on the Turkish side. This is something that should be left to
    the historians."



    http://www.borderlandnews.com/stories/borderland/20040424-109648.shtml

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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