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Beirut: Armenians to mark 'the Great Slaughter' with low-key events

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  • Beirut: Armenians to mark 'the Great Slaughter' with low-key events

    Daily Star - Lebanon
    April 23 2005

    Armenians to mark 'the Great Slaughter' with low-key events
    History, Memory, identity to be marked on Sunday

    By James Fitz-Morris
    Special to The Daily Star


    BEIRUT: Armenians across Lebanon will attend special church services
    and other commemorative events Sunday to mark Mets Eghern - the Great
    Slaughter. This year is the 90th anniversary of the arrest of close
    to 200 Armenian community leaders - an event Armenians say was the
    beginning of an organized campaign to drive their people out of the
    region and left more than one million dead.

    In Armenia, a weeklong series of events will be capped off with a
    massive march, which organizers say will draw thousands of diaspora
    Armenians.

    In Lebanon, however, due to the current political climate, Armenian
    community leaders have opted for low-key events to mark the anniversary
    and no major demonstrations.

    Instead, Armenians will honor the anniversary by thinking about their
    links to the land of their parents, grandparents and great-grandparents
    - and the lives they have made for themselves in their new homelands.

    "If someone asks me if I am Armenian or Lebanese, I say to them,
    'Are you Arab or are you Lebanese?' They are both, just as I am both
    Armenian and Lebanese. I see no problem with that," says Ari, whose
    grandparents were among tens of thousands of Armenians who came to
    Lebanon in the early 1920s.

    He adds: "Like in the United States, people are all of many different
    origins, but are all the same nationality."

    Houry Jerejian, chairperson of the Lebanon-based Armenian Educational
    Benevolent Union (AEBU), says: "We, as a community of diaspora,
    want to keep Armenians Armenian."

    Ari, who declined to give his family name, says he gave his child
    an Armenian name - adding if he has another, he or she will also be
    given an Armenian name.

    According to Ari, "the issue isn't about being narrow minded, it's
    about safeguarding one's identity."

    AEBU supports efforts to provide education for underprivileged children
    and low-cost health-care services for the community at large.


    However, the community does a lot of work to support not only one
    another here in Lebanon, but those back in Armenia as well.

    "We do a lot of work, especially after the earthquake (in Armenia in
    1995)," says Jerejian. "Among the many projects we helped to build
    a factory that makes artificial limbs."

    There are an estimated five million to six million Armenians living
    abroad - compared to the close to three million living in Armenia.

    The Armenian diaspora has funded such projects as the construction of
    a new airport, the revival of cultural institutions such as museums
    and an orchestra and opened factories to create jobs.

    Many in the community also make frequent trips back to Armenia,
    including Ari who says he has helped in economic development projects
    back in the land of his grandparents - but he says he is unsure if
    he would move back there permanently.

    "It depends on the circumstances," he says. "I can't say that I will
    definitely go back, but I can't say that I will definitely stay.
    Everybody has to decide for themselves."

    Armenians maintain that up to 1.5 million of their people were
    massacred between 1915 and 1917, an atrocity commonly known as the
    Armenian Genocide.

    At the time, the Ottoman Empire - Turkey's predecessor - was heading
    toward collapse as the World War I was raging.

    Turkey maintains no such genocide took place, admitting there were
    massacres but saying they occurred on both sides during a bloody war.

    Most countries and international humanitarian organizations have
    recognized the Armenian genocide - including Lebanon.
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