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Los Angeles: Armenians Mark Genocide

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  • Los Angeles: Armenians Mark Genocide

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    April 25 2004


    Armenians Mark Genocide

    Events including a protest and rally commemorate the 1915 start of
    violence against the ethnic group that took 1.5 million lives.

    By David Pierson, Times Staff Writer


    Thousands of Armenian Americans throughout the Los Angeles area
    commemorated a grim chapter in their history - the killing of 1.5
    million of their countrymen and women by the Turks between 1915 and
    1922 - with protests, prayers, a blood drive and even a rock concert.

    The events included a solemn ceremony in Montebello, a raucous
    protest along Wilshire Boulevard and a rally in east Hollywood that
    some said was more a display of national pride than a somber
    remembrance of the Armenian genocide.

    Despite the diversity of events, Armenian American organizers across
    town said they were pleased that their history is being honored and
    taught to the younger generation.

    Ashot Dermenjian held his daughter Alyssa's hand as he walked up to
    the plaque at a towering Montebello memorial, a cluster of pillars
    reaching skyward. The cream-colored structure was surrounded by
    flowers Saturday as hundreds paid their respects. Officials,
    including Mayor James K. Hahn and City Councilman Antonio
    Villaraigosa, addressed the crowd.

    Dermenjian said a prayer and made the sign of the cross. "This is her
    first time here," Dermenjian said of his 10-year-old daughter. "I'm
    going to bring her every year now. They have to know what their
    ancestors went through.

    "The sad thing is, I don't know anything about my family past my
    grandfather. I don't know what they did, where they are from or what
    kind of work they were in."

    The Wilshire Boulevard Turkish Consulate was fenced off and guarded
    by LAPD officers Saturday as a boisterous crowd of hundreds of
    teenagers and young adults outside expressed their passion by
    chanting to passersby.

    Urged on by members of the local chapter of the Armenian Youth
    Federation, they held up placards and shouted: "1915, Never Again" to
    passing cars.

    "This can happen to any people if the denial keeps going on," said
    Armen Soudjian, a 19-year-old college student carrying a video camera
    to make a documentary about the protest.

    The Hollywood resident said he would attend a rock concert at the
    Greek Theatre that night held by System of a Down, a popular Armenian
    American rock group who chose the performance date for its historic
    importance.

    "No matter what you're doing today," Soudjian said, "we're all still
    here for that one cause" - official recognition by Turkey of what
    Armenians call the Armenian genocide. Turkish officials deny that the
    genocide occurred.

    In Glendale, home to more than 40,000 Armenian Americans, the civic
    auditorium displayed modern artwork reflecting the atrocities of the
    genocide, old articles from the New York Times and a telegram from
    1915 written by the U.S. ambassador to Turkey, Henry Morgenthau,
    advising the State Department of the killings.

    Alongside the paintings, the Red Cross set up a blood bank at the
    event because "89 years ago, so much blood was shed for no good. Now
    we can give it to anyone who needs it," said one of the event's
    organizers, Stepan Partamian.

    Partamian, who is host of an Armenian television show in Glendale,
    said many Armenians suffer from an identity crisis because the
    diaspora dispersed them to so many countries after they fled
    persecution. He said April 24, the day historians say the killings
    began, unites Armenians of different backgrounds, whether their
    families fled to Lebanon, Egypt, Iran or any other country.

    How to commemorate the day is another matter. In Armenia, people make
    a pilgrimage to Tsitsernakaberd, a hilltop where a giant memorial
    stands.

    "They climb up there, they leave flowers out of respect and there are
    no speeches," said Partamian, a 42-year-old Glendale resident.

    That more solemn approach is in stark contrast to the raucous
    demonstrations around Los Angeles, especially in east Hollywood,
    where some protesters complained that the event resembled the
    atmosphere of a national soccer game.

    "People honking? That's inappropriate," said 18-year-old Hovsep
    Hajibekyan, sitting at the entrance of the Hollywood and Western
    subway station. "It's disappointing. This is a day to go to church
    and be with family."
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