Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Holland: Armenians in Nijmegen commemorate genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Holland: Armenians in Nijmegen commemorate genocide

    Armenians in Nijmegen commemorate genocide
    By our correspondents

    De Gelderlander (Dutch regional paper)
    April 23, 2005

    NIJMEGEN - "Who remembers the Armenians?", Adolf Hitler said shortly before
    the invasion of Poland. Meaningful, because the genocide on the Armenian
    people, which started exactly ninety years ago today, has become forgotten.

    The Armenian youth organization VAN in Nijmegen is holding a commemoration
    ceremony in community center De Driesprong at Cyclamenstraat 10 for the one
    and a half million Armenian victims.

    "It is my duty to organize this", says G. Abrahamian, co-founder and
    chairwoman of VAN. The primary goal of the organization, which counts fifty
    members, is preservation of the Armenian culture. Abrahamian: "We do not do
    this in an isolated manner. Everyone is welcome."

    Because with the commemoration ceremony VAN not only tries to attract
    Armenians, but also non-Armenians. "We know what happened, but many people
    do not. We therefore want to spread the message to the outside. However,
    being a small community nobody writes about you in The Netherlands. It is
    even difficult to have your story published in the newspapers when you are
    unknown."

    Armenians from Nijmegen and from others parts of The Netherlands will go to
    Assen in great numbers. In Assen there is a monument in commemoration of the
    genocide on Armenians, that was unveiled in 2001 with great Turkish
    protests. In Turkey, the massacres continue to be a subject that is not
    talked about or published. The Turkish rulers at the time were the ones who
    ordered the massacres. Officially, the murders are denied by Turkey.

    "It is a sensitive issue, for both Turks and Armenians. When differences of
    opinion are not settled by countries, you simply cannot deal with each
    other," says Abrahamian. She adds: "But I do have Turkish friends."
Working...
X