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  • Ceremony highlights Armenian memories

    Detroit Free Press , MI
    April 18 2005

    Ceremony highlights Armenian memories

    90th anniversary of genocide observed
    April 18, 2005


    BY LAURA POTTS
    FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

    For years, a lock of hair was Sandra Azoian Hutchinson's touchstone
    to the Armenian genocide.

    The tresses were buried some years ago with Hutchinson's great aunt,
    who had taken the hair from her two young sons just before the boys
    were killed in front of her in what is now Turkey. The grieving mother
    later fled to Michigan, where she pled with generations of her family
    to make sure the lock was tucked into her casket, and begged them
    not to forget those years of suffering.

    On Sunday, Hutchinson joined hundreds of Armenian Americans to
    commemorate the 90th anniversary of the genocide, which claimed the
    lives of 1.5 million Armenians.

    Dignitaries, clergy and Armenian-American community leaders gathered
    at the Ford Community and Performing Arts Center in Dearborn to share
    stories of loss and to generate remembrance and hope.

    "It also can help inspire us to stop modern genocides, which still go
    on," said U.S. Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., who made a brief appearance
    before the commemoration ceremony. "It can encourage and energize us
    just to remember them."

    Levin and others emphasized a need for the current Turkish government
    to recognize the atrocities, which began in 1915 and included forced
    marches, drownings, beatings and other horrors, they said.

    The crowd -- which included a handful of survivors -- listened as
    politicians spoke about illuminating what they said is a largely
    forgotten tragedy, and religious leaders prayed and led the crowd in
    traditional songs. About 70 young people from the United Commemorative
    Committee, all dressed in black and wearing armbands representing
    Armenia's red, blue and orange flag, marched to the stage, where
    the names of Armenian cities that lost large numbers in the genocide
    were read.

    "It was marvelous, especially the participation of the young people.
    That was so emotional and very touching," said Betty Apigian Kessel,
    67, of Bloomfield Township. "But we are filled with hope. We are not
    just here to recognize death and destruction."
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