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  • A day for Armenians

    Sacramento Bee, CA
    April 22 2005

    A day for Armenians
    Remembrance of genocide is signed into law
    By Jennifer M. Fitzenberger -- Bee Capitol Bureau

    They walked 215 miles in the sun, rain and wind to keep alive the
    memory of hundreds of thousands of Armenians killed by rulers of the
    Ottoman Turkish Empire between 1915 and 1923.

    The 20-day journey for 15 Armenian Americans ended Thursday at the
    Capitol, where about 1,200 people gathered to thank the Legislature
    for supporting a bill to recognize the Armenian genocide on April 24
    of each year.

    "The younger generation still hasn't forgotten," said Vahan Aramian,
    20, of Fresno, who took a three-week break from his construction job
    to join the March for Humanity from Fresno to Sacramento.

    Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Thursday signed SB 424 by Sen. Chuck
    Poochigian, R-Fresno, which cements the remembrance date into state
    law. Until now, the Legislature's recognition had been inconsistent.

    "We must recognize crimes against humanity if we are to prevent
    them," Schwarzenegger said in his signing message. "Silence in the
    face of genocide effectively encourages those who would commit such
    atrocities in the future."

    March organizers said 36 other state legislatures officially
    recognize the Armenian genocide. Armenian Americans hope the Bush
    administration will follow California, home to about half the
    nation's 900,000 Armenians. The Turkish government - 90 years after
    the genocide - doesn't accept responsibility for the deaths, Armenian
    Americans say.

    Turkey doesn't recognize the deaths as genocide and says the toll -
    put at 1.5 million by Armenians - was closer to 300,000.

    "Justice begins with truth, and truth is being hidden," said
    Poochigian, whose grandparents lost family members during the
    genocide. "We stand up to the deniers. We stand up for truth."

    Assemblyman Greg Aghazarian, R-Stockton, said it's important not to
    forget history: "If we do not learn the lessons of the past, we are
    destined to repeat them."

    On April 24, 1915, the Armenian leadership in Constantinople
    (modern-day Istanbul) and other Armenian centers was executed. The
    surviving women, children and elderly were sent on death marches in
    the desert.

    Participants in the March for Humanity educated people they met along
    the way. Some knew nothing of the genocide or Armenian culture.
    Others had a skewed understanding.

    Most people were supportive. "We did get a lot of honks and
    thumbs-up," said marcher Chris Torossian, 19, of Fresno.

    Hundreds of people joined the full-time marchers on parts of the
    route. They walked down country roads and slept in churches and
    schools.

    At the Capitol on Thursday, a crowd cheered for the marchers.
    Supporters waved Armenian and American flags and held signs that
    said, "We will never forget" and "Remember the Armenian genocide of
    1915 R.I.P. 1.5 million."

    "This is a rally in support of all those who seek the truth and all
    those who understand that genocide cannot go by with impunity," said
    Steven Dadaian, chairman of the Armenian National Committee of
    America's Western region.

    "We believe in our roots," said Avedis Krikorian, 43, of Fresno, who
    helped organize the trip.
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