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  • Armenian concert to thank Wales

    ic Wales, UK
    April 23 2005


    Armenian concert to thank Wales Apr 23 2005


    Karen Price, Western Mail


    WHEN Wales became one of the first nations in the world to recognise
    the Armenian genocide, one man wanted to say thanks.

    Arnaud Amat did not even know where Cardiff was when the National
    Assembly made the decision just over two years ago.

    But he sought the city out, came over on an exchange as a charity
    worker and has now organised the first ever concert of Armenian music
    on Welsh soil, which takes place tonight.

    More than a million people died in a series of massacres carried out
    by Turkish members of the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923. The
    Turkish government denies the killings constituted genocide but has
    come under increasing pressure over the last few years to recognise
    the crime.

    In December 2002, a cross-party group of AMs got together to declare
    the genocide "one of the sad chapters in the annals of contemporary
    history".

    Cardiff Council then became the first British city to recognise the
    genocide, incorporating it into its Holocaust Memorial Day
    commemorations in January.

    "The Welsh Assembly members' meeting came about when Europe was still
    not recognising the genocide as it should," said Mr Amat, who is
    French but of Armenia origin. "I wanted to see Cardiff and pay
    tribute to the people because of that."

    Mr Amat is now working in Cardiff for a year with the young people's
    charity ProMo-Cymru and has organised for Keram, a band playing
    traditional Armenian music, to perform in the city.

    The concert takes place in the Reardon Smith Theatre at the National
    Museum and Gallery in Cardiff tonight at 8pm.
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