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Marchers Seek Recognition of Armenian Genocide

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  • Marchers Seek Recognition of Armenian Genocide

    Marchers Seek Recognition of Armenian Genocide

    KXTV, CA
    April 22 2005

    Walkers concluded a 215-mile march from Fresno to the State Capitol
    Thursday to bring attention to the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians,
    a event that went mostly unrecognized when it occurred 90 years ago.

    >>From 1915 to 1923, the Turkish Ottoman Empire was responsible for
    the deaths of approximately 1.5 million Armenians. In a fervor of
    nationalism, first the Young Turks political party and then the Turkish
    Nationalists systematically exterminated or deported Armenians. When
    the genocide began, 2.5 million Armenians were living within the
    borders of the Ottoman Empire.

    The "March for Humanity" began April 2 in Fresno, home to one of
    the largest populations of Armenian-Americans in the United States.
    Participants in the march and State Capitol rally said they wanted
    to thank the California state legislature and 36 other states for
    recognizing the atrocities that occurred. Thursday afternoon Gov.
    Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a proclamation designating April 24 as a
    "Day of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide." On April 24, 1915 some
    200 Armenian community leaders were rounded up by Turkish forces and
    sent to prison to be executed.

    Descendants recounted the years of abduction, torture, and slaughter
    of men, women and children. Many Armenians were sent to the desert
    of Syria to starve to death. One of them was the relative of Father
    Yeghia Hairabedian. "My Great Aunt was one of them," he said. "When
    she was two years old she died on the death march, starving and
    begging for food."

    The genocide escaped world-wide attention and action in part because
    most of the killing occurred during World War I. Turkey was allied with
    Germany at the time. Some have accused the United States government
    of ignoring the genocide because of close ties forged with Turkey
    after World War I.

    Armenian-Americans want the U.S. to formally recognize the genocide
    of Armenians. Turkey has consistently refused to acknowledge its
    responsibility for the mass killings.

    An estimated one million plus Armenians live in the United States.
    California is home to about half of them, with large populations
    in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Glendale and Fresno. Many of them
    arrived in California in the late 1800s and later to escape Turkish
    domination and atrocities. The area around Fresno provided a climate
    and landscape similar to that of their native land in Western Asia.
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