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Hartford: 90 years after Armenian genocide, 14 survivors honored

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  • Hartford: 90 years after Armenian genocide, 14 survivors honored

    New Britain Herald, CT
    April 24 2005

    90 years after Armenian genocide, 14 survivors honored
    By GEORGE MOORE, The Herald Press04/24/2005


    HARTFORD -- At a ceremony at the Capitol Saturday, Maritza Ohanesian
    held tight in her hand an ancient yellowed photograph of a family
    portrait taken in 1914.


    Ohanesian, who was 9 years old at the time, stood by her father,
    mother and four younger siblings near her house in Husenig, Turkey.

    A year later, the Armenian genocide began, and Ohanesian's parents
    and siblings were killed one by one.

    As the sole survivor, Ohanesian was honored along with 13 other
    Armenians who survived the genocide at the 90th Commemoration of the
    Armenian Genocide held in the chambers of the State House of
    Representatives.

    The ceremony was sponsored by state Rep. John C. Geragosian, D-New
    Britain, and the Connecticut Armenian Community.

    An estimated 1.5 million Christian Armenians were killed by the
    Turkish Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923.

    Gov. M. Jodi Rell issued a official statement in recognition of the
    genocide, but the federal government has not officially recognized
    the mass killings as genocide, and neither has Turkey.

    Keynote speaker, Col. Moorad Mooradian said he considers the Armenian
    genocide to continue into this day because it has not been officially
    recognized by the American or the Turkish governments.

    "We continue in the struggle for truth and justice to get the
    Armenian genocide recognized," he said. "Today we commemorate the
    90th year of the longest genocide in history. Genocide scholars call
    denial the last stage in genocide. The Turkish government has refused
    to acknowledge the genocide."

    Mooradian urged Armenians to continually lobby the U.S. government to
    recognize the atrocity.

    Ohanesian, who turned 100 in March, received a letter from Vice
    President Dick Cheney honoring her as one of the oldest living
    survivors of the genocide. The letter was read at the ceremony.

    Master of Ceremonies Lt. Col. George Rustigian said this was a step
    toward recognition of the genocide, but not in an official capacity.

    Genocide survivor Yegsa Mazadoorian, 93, said she was 3 years old
    when Ottoman troops captured her mother and her two uncles and later
    killed them. Mazadoorian compared the treatment of her family and
    other Armenians with the way lambs are rounded up into a flock.

    "They opened the door and they put us out like lambs," she said.
    "Nothing to eat. Nothing to drink."

    Both Mazadoorian and Ohanesian were saved by Turkish citizens.
    Ohanesian was hidden from troops by a Turkish woman, and was later
    cared for at a number of orphanages until she was located by an uncle
    living in America and brought here.

    Mazadoorian was rescued by a Turkish couple. Because she was so young
    when rescued, she grew up speaking the Turkish of her foster parents,
    she said. She later learned her native language when she was brought
    to an Armenian orphanage. She was eventually located by her father
    who was living in America and brought here.

    Her son Harry N. Mazadoorian said she continues to speak fluent
    Turkish to this day, even though she has not used it extensively in
    many decades.

    April 24, 1915, is considered the start of the Armenian Genocide,
    because it was the day when 200 Armenian leaders in Constantinople
    were arrested by the Turkish government. Most of them were executed
    later.

    The event was made possible by the Armenian Genocide Commemoration
    Fund of Connecticut. It can be reached by mail at: P.O. Box 156, West
    Hartford, Connecticut, 06137.
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