Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Jerusalem post: Armenians mark 90th anniversary of genocide

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

  • Jerusalem post: Armenians mark 90th anniversary of genocide

    The Jerusalem Post
    Apr. 24, 2005 18:59
    Armenians mark 90th anniversary of genocide
    By SARA FISCHER

    http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=111 4322082590
    Armenian demonstration in front of Turkish Consulate in Jerusalem
    Photo: Sara Fischer

    While many gathered with family and friends to celebrate freedom from
    tyranny this Pessah, Israel's small Armenian community remembered the
    fateful years of the Armenian genocide.
    Armenians gathered outside the Turkish Consulate in the Sheikh Jarrah
    neighborhood of Jerusalem on Sunday to demonstrate against Turkey and
    remember the massacre of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians, which took
    place 90 years ago. The demonstrators urged Ankara to acknowledge the
    violent events under Ottoman rule.
    Officially, Turkey today says that 300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks
    died during civil strife. Ankara earlier this month called for the two
    countries to jointly research the killings.
    Turkey, which has no diplomatic ties with Armenia, is facing increasing
    pressure to fully acknowledge the event, particularly as it seeks membership
    in the European Union. France, Russia and many other countries have already
    declared the killings were genocide; Israel and the United States both have
    not.
    The issue is extremely sensitive in Turkey, and Turks have faced prosecution
    for saying the killings were genocide.
    In Jerusalem, young and old congregated, jointly singing the Armenian
    national anthem, waving the Armenian flag, holding signs admonishing the
    Turkish government and pictures depicting the atrocities. "The struggle will
    continue on until we get the recognition and justice," community leader
    Abraham Shemmessin said.
    On Monday, hundreds of Armenians will gather in Jerusalem's Old City for a
    memorial service in St. James Cathedral followed by a parade and a
    candlelighting ceremony at the Armenian memorial on Mount Zion. Other events
    are scheduled throughout the day.
    "The genocide is a sign of memory and resurrection and an important ritual
    which has been denied, what we want is recognition," Armenian historian
    Albert Aghazarian told The Jerusalem Post.
    Nearly every Armenian here has a story of his own connected with the
    killings, despite being the second, third or fourth generation of survivors.
    Garo Sandrouni, owner of the Jerusalem Armenian Art Center, lost his
    grandfather in the massacre. He was survived only by Sandrouni's grandmother
    and father who fled to Lebanon and then to Jaffa. Growing up, he said, his
    father never spoke about the genocide.
    "He never talked about that... it was very hard to accept... he never wanted
    to share his sadness with us, he never wanted to remember those years,"
    Sandrouni said.
    However, Sandrouni and his children think differently when it comes to
    speaking about the genocide. Sandrouni said, "we should remember that and
    never forget so that other countries will not make the same mistake with
    other people. This is the way and so I always talk about it."
    In Armenia yesterday, hundreds of thousands marked the anniversary of the
    mass killings with candles and a moment of silence, vowing to press their
    case to have the killings recognized by Turkey, and the world, as genocide.
    Turkey began arresting Armenian intellectuals, diplomats and other
    influential leaders in Constantinople on April 24, 1915, as violence and
    unrest grew, particularly in the eastern parts of the country. Armenia
    claims the Young Turk administration attempted to ethnically exterminate the
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.
    Michael Stone, a professor of Armenian Studies at the Hebrew University of
    Jerusalem, said the Armenian people must preserve their language and culture
    and remember what happened so that the world would know. "We need to learn,
    understand, love and remember," he told a gathering in Bat Yam Thursday
    evening.
    For now, the Armenian community in Jerusalem stands united in its struggle,
    as the back of T-shirts Armenians are wearing around the Old City state: "90
    years on, the march for recognition still continues."
Working...
X