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ANC WI: Wisconsin Armenians Commemorate The Armenian Genocide

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  • ANC WI: Wisconsin Armenians Commemorate The Armenian Genocide

    Armenian National Committee of Wisconsin
    4100 N. Newman Road
    Racine, WI 53406
    www.anca.org

    April 26, 2004
    For Immediate Release

    Contact: A. Zohrab Khaligian
    [email protected]


    WISCONSIN ARMENIANS COMMEMORATE THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    MADISON, WI--For the fourth year in a row, Wisconsin Armenian Americans
    gathered at the Wisconsin State Capitol in Madison to commemorate the
    Armenian Genocide. Over 70 people--including 13 State Representatives and
    Senators--attended the reception and program held on Tuesday, April 20 in
    the GAR Hearing Room. The event was co-hosted by the Armenian National
    Committee (ANC) of Wisconsin, State Representatives Mark Honadel, Bonnie
    Ladwig, and Jeff Stone, and State Senators Jeff Plale, Mary Lazich, and
    Cathy Stepp.

    The purpose of the program was to thank the Wisconsin State Assembly and
    State Senate for adopting Armenian Genocide resolutions, which designate
    April 24 of each year as "Wisconsin Day of Remembrance for the Armenian
    Genocide of 1915 to 1923," and to continue to educate and promote awareness
    of Armenia and Armenian issues, particularly the Armenian Genocide. The
    featured speakers included Robert O. Krikorian, Ph.D., Representative Jeff
    Stone, and Senator Mary Lazich. The program also included the reading of
    commemorative statements from US Senators Russ Feingold and Herb Kohl.

    Zohrab Khaligian, representing the ANC of Wisconsin, presented the welcoming
    message. Khaligian thanked everyone for attending the program and voiced
    his disbelief that almost 90 years had passed since the Ottoman Turkish
    government attempted to eliminate an entire nation, that their crime has
    gone largely unrecognized and totally unpunished, and today the crime of
    genocide continues as rumors abound about atrocities in Sudan.

    Khaligian thanked the State Assembly and Senate for not ignoring the past
    and setting the record straight by adopting Genocide resolutions which
    reaffirm the Armenian Genocide as a fact of history. Khaligian also thanked
    Wisconsin's US Representatives Tammy Baldwin, Mark Green, Jerry Kleczka,
    Paul Ryan, and F. James Sensenbrenner for co-sponsoring the Genocide
    Convention Resolution--H.Res.193--which is currently waiting to be brought
    to the House floor for a vote. Khaligian singled out Representative
    Sensenbrenner for his leadership on the House Judiciary Committee, ensuring
    that this legislation was adopted at the committee level following intense
    pressure to eliminate the mention of the Armenian Genocide by pro-Turkish
    lobbyist Bob Livingston and the Turkish Ambassador to the United States
    Faruk Logoglu.

    US Senators Russ Feingold and Herb Kohl were also thanked for cosponsoring
    the Senate version of the Genocide Convention Resolution (S.Res164).
    Khaligian introduced Katie Crawley from Senator Feingold's Middleton office
    and Darci Louma from Senator Kohl's Madison office, and then read each of
    the Senator's commemorative statements. (Full text of statements below).

    Guest speaker Robert O. Krikorian, Ph.D. was then introduced. Dr. Krikorian
    is a historian with the Office of the Historian at the US Department of
    State, a Professorial Lecturer at the Elliott School of International
    Affairs at George Washington University and a fellow at the university's
    Institute for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies. It was announced
    that prior to the program, Dr. Krikorian was the featured speaker at a
    series of lectures organized by the ANC of Wisconsin. The series included a
    talk on Saturday, April 17th with the Racine Chapter of the Armenian Youth
    Federation on Dr. Krikorian's experiences in Armenia and Artsakh from
    1988-1991. A lecture titled "Education and Responsibility" on Sunday, April
    18th at St. Hagop Armenian Church in Racine and an academic lecture entitled
    "In the Shadow of War: The Ottoman Empire and the Destruction of the
    Armenians" on Monday, April 19th, which was presented twice, once at the
    University of Wisconsin-Parkside Library, and once at the University of
    Wisconsin-Madison Memorial Union. The Friends of the UW-Parkside Library,
    and the UW-Madison Armenian Student Association and History Department
    hosted the latter two lectures, respectively.

    Dr. Krikorian explained that the Ottoman Empire's massacre and deportation
    of the Armenian people during World War I should be understood in the
    context not only of the war itself, but in the decline of the empire.
    Beginning in the latter part of the 19th century, the Ottoman Empire
    suffered a series of military and political reverses, culminating in its
    total defeat in 1918. The significant losses of territory in the Balkans,
    North Africa, and Western Armenia preceding the Genocide created the
    preconditions for carrying out this final solution to the Armenian Question.

    The final two speakers were Representative Jeff Stone and Senator Mary
    Lazich. A co-host since the first commemorative program, Representative
    Stone commended the Armenian American community of Wisconsin for remembering
    their history in an effort to prevent history from repeating itself.
    Senator Lazich, speaking for the first time since becoming a co-host in
    2002, read excerpts from an article written by Dr. Richard Hovannissian to
    highlight the enormity of the Armenian Genocide.

    Prior to closing the program, Zohrab Khaligian thanked Representative Bonnie
    Ladwig for her support and guidance in making the State Capitol program a
    success. Representative Ladwig will be retiring from the Assembly in the
    Fall due to health reasons and will be sorely missed by the
    Armenian-American community in Racine.

    In closing, Khaligian explained that the objective for obtaining recognition
    of the Armenian Genocide can no longer be to obtain justice for the Armenian
    people. As the crime of genocide has continued to the present day, the
    Armenian people and their supporters must strive to obtain recognition and
    justice for the Armenian Genocide in order to prevent future genocides from
    ever occurring again. Khaligian wondered aloud that if the crime of
    genocide is allowed to continue, who will be left alive?

    The Armenian National Committee is the largest Armenian American grassroots
    political organization in Wisconsin and nationwide. The ANC actively
    advances a broad range of issues of concern to the Armenian American
    community.

    ####

    ----------------------------
    Statement by Senator Herb Kohl
    ----------------------------

    Dear Friends

    Please allow me to extend my best wishes and greetings to all of you who
    have gathered today to commemorate the 89th Anniversary of the Armenian
    Genocide. I regret my schedule prevents me from attending, and I hope this
    event raises awareness and pays tribute to the victims of this seminal
    moment.

    I also hope this event provides everyone in attendance with an opportunity
    to reflect on the tragic events of 89 years ago, and steels our resolve to
    prevent it from ever happening again. We have an obligation to future
    generations to share our lessons and experiences so that atrocities are
    never repeated. Commemorations like this lay the important foundation of
    that critical task, while also offering a fitting forum to pay our respects
    to the victims of the tragedy.

    Thank you for your efforts to promote peace, tolerance and a memorial of the
    past. Best wishes.

    Sincerely

    Herb Kohl [signed]
    US Senator


    -------------------------------
    Statement by Senator Russ Feingold
    -------------------------------

    Statemen t of US Senator Russ Feingold
    Commemorating the 89th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
    April 20, 2004

    "I am sorry that I am unable to attend this important commemoration. Thank
    you to the Armenian National Committee of Wisconsin for organizing this
    event. Today, we remember the Armenian men, women and children who lost
    their lives during the Armenian genocide. 89 years ago between 1915 and
    1923, the Ottoman empire undertook a policy to isolate, exile and eliminate
    the Armenian population. One and a half million Armenians were
    systematically murdered in this campaign. Hundreds of thousands more were
    forced to flee their homes.

    The Armenian genocide must not be denied or forgotten. We have an
    obligation to remember and remind others of the horror that occurred. As
    seen by the killings in Bosnia, Kosovo and Rwanda over the past decade,
    targeting people for their ethnicity is still a frequent occurrence. Its
    repetition demands that we speak out and inform others in order to prevent
    future atrocities.

    Today, I join you in solemnly remembering the victims of the Armenian
    genocide, and in honoring their memory by reaffirming our resolve to prevent
    genocide from occurring again."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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