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Utah Armenians march to remember ancestors' deaths

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  • Utah Armenians march to remember ancestors' deaths

    Salt Lake Tribune, Utah
    April 23 2005

    Utah Armenians march to remember ancestors' deaths

    Genocide claim: Those at the gathering seek closure to what they call
    slaughter by Turkish Ottoman Empire

    By Jason Bergreen
    The Salt Lake Tribune


    Photo: Krikor Meguerditchian holds his two-year-old grandson, Garo,
    Friday at a march to commemorate their Armenian ancestors' killings.
    (Rick Egan/The Salt Lake Tribune)

    Two-year-old Garo Meguerditchian peeked over his grandfather's
    shoulder and shook a miniature Armenian flag Friday as the pair and
    more than 20 others marched in Salt Lake City to commemorate the 90th
    anniversary of the Armenian genocide.
    Though the peaceful demonstration was small, four generations of
    Armenians gathered outside the Wallace F. Bennett Federal Building at
    noon to remember the deaths of 1.5 million of their ancestors.
    "We are trying to let people know and spread the word that our
    fallen countrymen haven't been forgotten," said organizer Armen
    Taroian.
    Historically, Armenians have contended that Muslim Turks who ruled
    the Ottoman Empire during its decline at the turn of the 20th century
    subjected the Christian Armenian population to deportation,
    starvation and massacre between 1915 and 1918. The genocide is
    officially commemorated on April 24, when in 1915, 200 Armenian
    community leaders were arrested in Constantinople and later killed.
    Today's Turkish government has refused to acknowledge the past
    killings and commonly refers to the violence as a side reaction to
    World War I.
    Members of Friday's march carried signs reading, "1915 never
    again;" "We will never forgive, we will never forget;" "Take your
    hands off our land;" and "Eastern Turkey is Western Armenia."
    Marcher Garene Bekearian said: "We need closure. It's been 90
    years and it's not there yet."
    Utah Armenians, who come from

    Lebanon, Iran, Syria and Armenia, also want their children to
    embrace their heritage.
    "I think every Armenian wishes their grandchildren to know they
    are Armenian," Krikor Meguerditchian, said smiling at Garo. "We are
    trying to keep our language. That is number one."
    Krikor was born in Lebanon and moved to Salt Lake City in 1979.
    "Half my life is over there and half is over here," he said,
    smiling again and returning to the march.
    Armenians also would like the world community to acknowledge and
    denounce the genocide and have the United States proclaim April 24 as
    an official day of remembrance, Taroian said.
    The 2000 U.S. Census lists 2,024 Utahns of Armenian ancestry and
    359 of Turkish ancestry.
    "We want to normalize relations," Taroian said. "We all know
    Turkish people here and if our characters match, we are friends."

    http://www.sltrib.com/utah/ci_2680722

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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