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ANC-SF: Armenian-Americans Join "Sudan: Day of Conscience" in SanFra

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  • ANC-SF: Armenian-Americans Join "Sudan: Day of Conscience" in SanFra

    PRESS RELEASE

    Armenian National Committee
    San Francisco - Bay Area
    51 Commonwealth Avenue
    San Francisco, CA 94118
    Tel: (415) 387-3433
    Fax: (415) 751-0617
    [email protected]
    www.ancsf.org
    www.teachgenocide.org

    Contact: Roxanne Makasdjian (415) 641-0525


    Armenian-Americans Join "Sudan: Day of Conscience" in San Francisco

    San Francisco, August 25, 2004 - Armenian-American community members
    joined hands with others at San Francisco's Civic Center to raise public
    awareness about continuing massacres in Sudan. The event, called
    "Sudan: Day of Conscience" was organized by the Save Darfur Coalition in
    tandem with several other organizations, including the Bay Area Armenian
    National Committee, the Interfaith Council, Human Rights Watch, the
    Jewish Community Relations, and the United Muslims of America. Local
    Armenian priests from the St. Gregory and St. John churches also
    participated it the rally.

    In light of the escalating violence and the looming threat of genocide
    in Sudan, representatives spoke about the desperate need for united
    action on all levels--regionally, statewide, nationwide, and globally.
    Referring to the recent past, they illustrated the destructivenss of
    international blindness to gross violations of human rights. It was
    only ten years ago that the genocide in Rwanda took the lives of 800,000
    victims as the world stood idly by despite the many warning signs of the
    atrocities. In Sudan, government-backed Arab militias, known as the
    Janjaweed, have been engaging in campaigns to displace and wipe out
    entire communities of African tribal farmers. Witnesses report that
    villages have been razed, women and girls are systematically raped and
    branded, men and boys murdered, and food and water supplies specifically
    targeted and destroyed. There have also been reports of government
    aerial bombardments of explosives as well as barrels of nails, car
    chassis and old appliances hurled from planes to crush people and
    property. Over fifty thousand have died and over a million have been
    driven from their homes. Only in the past few weeks have humanitarian
    agencies had limited access to a portion of the affected region.

    Representing the ANC, Haig Baghdassarian spoke to the several hundred
    people gathered about the Armenian Genocide and traced the bloody
    history of the 20th century, pointing to the genocides which followed
    and condemning international reluctance to take action. "When will we
    learn that we cannot tolerate this to happen time and time again?
    Perhaps not until, we as Americans, can tell our Turkish allies, that
    although we may be friends, we will not allow them to deny history and
    escape with impunity for the murder of a nation. And perhaps, not
    until, we as Americans can come to terms with our own bloody past - and
    the destruction of the indigenous peoples of America."

    "But these noble goals may take years or even decades to achieve, and we
    cannot stand by and watch yet another genocide occur, whether it's in
    central Europe or in the heart of Africa, or on the very periphery of
    human civilization," said Bagdassarian

    Reverend Father Avedis Torossian, pastor of St. Gregory Armenian
    Apostolic Church, and Reverend Father Sarkis Petoyan, pastor of St. John
    Armenian Apostolic Church were also present to express their solidarity
    with the "Sudan: Day of Conscience". The peaceful collaboration of the
    representatives of the Armenian community with those of the Jewish,
    Cambodian, and Rwandan communities demonstrated how the one common
    aspect of these groups' histories can unite them in trying to prevent
    genocide from becoming a dark chapter in the lives and history of
    another people.


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