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Armenian community still living the history

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  • Armenian community still living the history

    Armenian community still living the history
    By Doug Irving Daily Breeze

    Daily Breeze
    Monday, May 24, 2004
    SOUTH BAY: Local members of ethnic group aid in struggle to gain
    recognition for travesty -- one memory at a time.

    Steve Charelian grew up with the stories of his grandfather, a
    survivor who had crawled into the dusty chimney of a bakery when the
    killing started.

    Only a few thousand people in the South Bay share Charelian's Armenian
    ancestry, a small community stitched together by the memories of what
    happened all those years ago. Their children still learn to speak
    the language at a community center in Lomita, and that's where they
    learn about the genocide.

    Armenians say some 1.5 million people were killed from 1915 to 1923
    in massacres organized by the old Ottoman Empire. They have urged
    the United States to recognize their ordeal as a systematic genocide,
    the first of the 20th century.

    For those of Armenian descent living in the South Bay, there is more
    to the history than grainy photographs and academic reports. There
    are parents and grandparents who remembered walking past corpses or
    hiding from soldiers.

    Charelian's grandfather would sometimes talk about the morning he
    found his family dead. "I woke up and I went to my mom and tried to
    wake her up," he would say, speaking softly and in Armenian. "She
    wouldn't wake up. Nobody would wake up."

    "That echoes in my head," Charelian says now.

    The Ottoman Empire rounded up hundreds of Armenian activists, academics
    and public officials on April 24, 1915. Armenians recognize that date
    as the start of the genocide.

    In the years to come, Armenians were deported from what is now Turkey
    toward the Syrian desert. Some starved along the way, or froze to
    death. Others were executed by soldiers or armed gangs.

    While Armenians believe the Ottoman government carried out the
    systematic massacre of 1.5 million people, Turkish-American groups
    insist that no more than 600,000 Armenians died, many from the
    hardships of World War I.

    "We acknowledge that there have been some bad events at that time,
    there have been people that were killed," said Terken Gupur, the
    director of policy and communications at the Assembly of Turkish
    American Associations in Washington, D.C.

    "It was not a systematic killing," she added. "It was during the time
    of war."

    Armenians have long sought world recognition of their suffering as
    a full-fledged genocide. The United Nations defines genocide as an
    effort to destroy, "in whole or in part," a national, ethnic, racial
    or religious group.

    In recent years, presidents Bush and Clinton have carefully avoided
    the word genocide in proclamations marking the day of remembrance on
    April 24. This year, Bush called it an annihilation, and one of the
    "most horrible tragedies of the 20th century."

    But California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has called it a genocide. And
    California's teaching standards require 10th-graders to learn about
    what happened to the Armenians as part of their curriculum on human
    rights violations and genocide.

    The Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles includes the Armenian Genocide
    in its exhibit on crimes against humanity. "We're unambiguous about
    calling that a genocide," museum director Liebe Geft said.

    Last month, Rolling Hills Estates formally recognized the Armenian
    Genocide. Councilman Frank Zerunyan introduced the proclamation.

    His grandfather survived only by slashing his own throat so soldiers
    would think he was dead. Zerunyan remembers his grandfather years
    later playing the ud, an instrument similar to a guitar, and sobbing
    for his lost father and uncle.

    Zerunyan's grandmother also survived a march toward Syria. She talked
    about passing rivers that had turned red with blood.

    Genocide "can only be eradicated by constant recognition, by calling
    it what it is," Zerunyan said.

    "If the Rwandan rebels knew that every genocide was recognized,
    every genocide was punished, they would have thought very hard,"
    he said. "And they would have known there was nowhere in the world
    they could go."

    Little more than 2,000 people in the South Bay claimed Armenian
    ancestry in the 2000 Census. They make up less than 1 percent of the
    population in all of the South Bay cities.

    But it's a tight-knit community, and many of its members can share
    stories of what their relatives went through. "This is a big chunk
    of our history," said Lori Khajadourian, a member of the South Bay
    chapter of the Armenian National Committee of America.

    Her grandfather was only about 7 years old when he heard the soldiers
    coming. He and a brother hid in an earthen storage pot; they never
    saw their parents or siblings again.

    The push for formal recognition of the killings as genocide has taken
    on a higher profile in recent years.

    A movie released last year, "Ararat," explored the events of those
    years. A heavy-metal group with Armenian roots, System of a Down,
    has grown in popularity with lyrics such as: "The plan was mastered
    and called Genocide/Took all the children and then we died."

    Armenian-American groups are lobbying Congress to pass a resolution
    that deplores the Armenian Genocide along with the Holocaust and
    genocides in Cambodia and Rwanda.

    "Euphemisms don't count," said Elizabeth Chouldjian, a spokeswoman
    for the Armenian National Committee of America.

    Nevart Barsoumian's great-grandmother froze to death as she fled
    Turkey, after she gave away her shawl. Barsoumian remembers her
    grandmother weeping whenever she hung the laundry to dry -- a chore
    she had helped her mother with before they had to flee.

    Barsoumian now teaches the history of what happened to a few dozen
    students at the Lomita community center.

    People "should know that we had a genocide," she said. "If they don't
    recognize it, it's all on the air, like nothing happened."

    Publish Date:May 24, 2004
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