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  • ArmeniaNow.Com Genocide Issue, April 22, 2005

    ARMENIANOW.COM GENOCIDE ISSUE, April 22, 2005
    Administration Address: 26 Parpetsi St., No 9
    Phone: +(374 1) 532422
    Email: [email protected]
    Internet: www.armenianow.com
    Technical Assistance: (For technical assistance please contact to
    Babken Juharyan)
    Email: [email protected]

    ICQ#: 97152052

    UNDERSTANDING HERITAGE: NEW WEBSITE PREVIEWS DOCUMENTARY ABOUT AN
    INHERITANCE OF THE GENOCIDE

    By John Hughes
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    There is a point in Araz Artinian's upcoming documentary when the
    filmmaker is visiting an Armenian church that is deteriorating in
    Turkey.

    Narrating a story that has been the theme of her 31 years in a family
    of Armenian activists, Artinian says she must sit in the ruins, so
    that she can feel what her father has been fighting for, for so many
    years.

    `The Genocide in Me' is a four-year project that represents three
    generations' lifetimes and is an attempt by a Diaspora daughter to
    understand why much of her life has been shaped by her father,
    Vrej-Armen Artinian's unceasing campaign for the world to recognize
    that his ancestors and so many more were victims of genocide at the
    hands of the Ottoman Turks. (Artinian was born in Canada, her parents
    in Egypt.)

    The documentary - about an hour in length - is still in editing, and
    is scheduled for release in September. It is an insightful look into
    the effects of ethnic passion impressed upon a young and inquisitive
    mind.

    Meanwhile, today (April 24), she has opened www.twentyvoices.com, a
    website that uses information and materials from her research, in
    commemoration of the 90th anniversary of the Genocide. The site holds
    175 images, 30 musical pieces and video from the upcoming documentary.

    Artinian, who was head researcher on the film `Ararat', and who won
    six international film festival awards for her own 1999 documentary
    `Surviving on the Richter Scale' (about post-earthquake Gyumri),
    underscores the title of her latest work in the very dialogue she
    engages around her family table, and in home movies of her childhood.

    Most compelling, however, are interviews sprinkled throughout the film
    with survivors of the 1915-18 Genocide whom the Montreal-based
    Artinian met with in their homes in North America.

    Using tight face shots that fill the frame, the horrors of 90 years
    ago are strikingly told by survivors, some of whom have died since
    being interviewed for the film.

    It is information from those interviews that is the heart of
    www.twentyvoices.com.

    On the site, visitors find information about the survivors, including
    an active menu that includes locator maps of where the `voices'
    originated, and even music that came from their villages.

    Artinian's great grandparents were survivors of the 1894-97 massacres
    that took the lives of her great-great grandparents.

    Grandparents on her mother's side survived the 1915 killings.

    `I had met them once when I was very young,' Artinian told ArmeniaNow,
    `so I haven't directly heard first hand testimonies within my
    family. But I can say that the Genocide (especially the Turkish
    denial) has always been the hottest topic at home. Mom would sometimes
    tell us stories from her grandmother and mother. Her father never
    talked about it.'

    Artinian's own father, however, talked plenty about it, including this
    past week as a participant in an international conference held in
    Yerevan.

    How big an impact does the issue of recognition have on a Diaspora
    child in such a household?

    `When you hear the word `recognition' every time your family gets
    together every weekend, and when you go to the washroom for whatever
    reason and see the same word on the Armenian daily, weekly, monthly,
    yearly newspapers and magazines that are piled up on the main storage
    of the toilet, you start believing that this is a big part of your
    daily life and a permanent need in the lives of Armenians,' Artinian
    says. `It totally overpowers you. It becomes a religion.'

    The activist's daughter wanted to know what inspired the
    `religion'. And so she turned her camera on her family and
    herself. One interview with her father, in which she asks him how he'd
    react if she married a non-Armenian, is especially provocative. And,
    while the concept of the film itself might hint of self-indulgence,
    the style in which Artinian has written, directed, filmed and narrated
    `The Genocide In Me' saves it from being a `vanity' project and
    manages to have universal appeal for any of us who might ever ask:
    `Why am I who I am?'

    Essentially, the documentary is the story of a people who are being
    lost, and of a person who is finding herself.

    The project has received funding from the Canada Council for the Arts,
    from the Quebec Arts Council, from SODEC and from private sponsorship.

    And, like her father's passion to travel the world to champion the
    cause of recognition, the daughter poured herself into her project,
    selling jewelry in a bazaar and working in a fitness center to
    underwrite her art.

    `With this film I feel compelled to tell the Armenian story, which is
    also my story,' Artinian says.

    Growing up in a family where recognition is a thread that weaves
    family history, she says: `you know that the Genocide is not only
    something that happened in 1915. You know that you are a remnant of a
    very ancient civilization which today is struggling to keep its
    national identity alive on foreign lands. You feel your people's
    struggle on your skin every day.'

    MARIAM REMEMBERS: TOO YOUNG TO UNDERSTAND; TOO OLD TO FORGET

    By Zhanna Alexanyan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    It is 90 years later:

    `I can vividly remember the Turk; his name was Chle.

    `He came, went up on our roof. My uncle was sitting there with his
    child.

    `My uncle's name was Mkrtich. He said, `Mkrtich take the child inside,
    come let us talk a bit.'

    `The child was of my age. He brought her inside, and he was just going
    outside when the Turk shot him to death. My uncle was naïve, and
    the Turk was prepared.'

    Mariam Avoyan, who lives in the village of Nerqin Bazmaberd near
    Talin, remembers 1915, when she was six. It is when she learned the
    words `slaughtering and looting'.

    She was in Sasoon, in what is now Turkey, until her family was chased
    out.

    Murder leaves a lasting impression, so Mariam says: `I will never
    forget the massacre'.

    Calm and quiet, the thin woman is moved when she talks; her blue eyes
    go wet.

    `I can vividly remember the massacring. It began in the time I was
    already maturing,' Mariam says. `In those times Armenians and Turks
    used to live in peace.'

    But not anymore. Not since six-year olds became witness to genocide.

    `They gathered Armenians in one place - men, women, children and
    began. The Turkish soldiers surrounded the Armenians. They brought
    the gazaghi (kerosene in Sasoon dialect), poured all over the people
    and set them afire. As they set the fire they let loose those who
    would run, to shoot them.

    `Where could they run? The smell of smoke and blood covered the earth,
    the sky went dark, and people could not see each other. The people
    including children, women, men, would make thousands. They set the
    fire...When they saw them fall, they went away,' says Mariam, with
    more suffering than hatred in her 96-year old face. She is mindful to
    also talk about the Turks who were kind to the Armenians.

    But it is not they for whom the history of these days is written and
    disputed . . .

    `The next morning they came for looting. They turned the corpses and
    took away the gold ware. My uncle's wife, Margarit, held her child in
    her arms. She was not killed, but the child was dead.

    `When the Turk turned her over to take away her jewelry he recognized
    her and said `Margarit, get up. I have eaten bread from your hand. Get
    up, let me take you home'.'

    Mariam's family - father, mother and seven children - escaped Sasoon
    toward their eventual refuge.

    `The slaughtering then started. Whoever was killed was killed. Those
    who remained ran away to the mountains, gorges, and forests. We ran to
    Mush.'

    And to Mush, Mariam remembers, came Armenia's hero from Russia,
    General Andranik who fought the Turks and helped the Armenians on
    their way to safety.

    But many did not survive the journey, including Mariam's father,
    Grigor Avoyan, a man well known in Sassoon.

    `On the road in snow, in gorges we suffered hunger and thirst. We were
    killed also on the road.. My parents came with us to Jghin (a village
    in `Western Armenia'). I remember Jghin; we were hungry when we got
    there. My father along with others went to gather herbs for us to
    eat. The Turks appeared and took my father, three other men and two
    women...'

    Besides taking them away the Turkish soldiers made one of the Armenian
    men write a list of others' names. After finishing the assignment they
    called him.

    `When he approached the Turk cut off both his ears, put them into his
    pocket and went away. The man remained in the field. We stayed there a
    day in the mountains, then we saw the man again. He said the Turks had
    taken my father Grigor and killed him. The Turk had told my father `I
    was looking for you with a candle, but found you without one'.'

    The journey for Mariam's family began with seven children. It ended
    with only two. The rest died of starvation and illnesses.

    `My elder brother fell ill on the road. My father was at a loss. He
    said to the people `You go. My child is dying'. But my brother died
    on the road and my father put a stone over his body. My brother and I
    reached Gharakilisa (now Vanadzor),' Mariam recalls.

    `My sister Soseh was older than me -- 12 years old. In those times the
    10-12 year old girls were getting married. A Turk used to say to my
    father: `Grigor, give Soseh to my son and I will protect you till the
    end of your life'. My father said: `I will not disgrace Armenia and
    the Armenian name'. He didn't give her, saying `I will not betray
    Armenians; Armenians should remain Armenian'.'

    Reaching Armenia the remaining family moved from place to place until
    they settled in the Talin region, where the majority were also from
    Sasoon.

    `We grew up suffering and weeping,' Mariam says. `I neither ate fully,
    nor slept, nor dressed, nor laughed.'

    In 1926 Mariam got married and her own family includes six children
    and 56 grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

    Ninety of her 96 years have held memories of horror for which there
    can be no escape.

    `If there was justice on earth, the Armenian genocide would be
    admitted,' Mariam says.

    FROM `THOSE DAYS' TO THESE: MEMORIES STAY FRESH AND PAINFUL

    By Marianna Grigoryan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    The steps are slow but firm; clothes are tidy, manners polite.

    It is the 57th spring the eldest and the most respected professor
    Gevorg Melikyan walks in the corridors of the Agricultural Academy
    where the faculty treats him with reverence, the students with
    interest.

    In Melikyan's memories swirl a carefree childhood with caring parents,
    a big house and a comfortable living that disappeared in a moment
    bringing deprivation and suffering.

    Melikyan is among those few remaining who have survived the Genocide,
    who has witnessed refuge and violence.

    The professor is not only an instructor in matters of agriculture, but
    a walking history.

    Gevorg Melikyan was born in 1913 in Igdir. These years later while
    telling about the Genocide and the events of those years he stares
    into the distance and returns to the past with every word.

    `When we took the hard path of refuge together with our relatives and
    neighbors I was five years old,' remembers the professor. `Several
    episodes have left unforgettable imprints in my childhood memories
    that wind in my mind like a film. My grandfather was a priest, my
    grandma didn't want to talk about leaving, and the day we were to
    prepare for refuge my grandma had a heart attack.

    `We had a big house, my parents used to run a shop in Igdir. We
    learned we must run away in the night. Our house had two doors. My
    father carefully locked the back door and approached the main one
    closing it with such movements as if we planned to return there in two
    days.'

    Sharing the burden of years one after another, the elderly man puts
    his hands together and reminds that the Genocide was the detailed plan
    of the Turkish authorities to annihilate Armenians.

    `Several episodes have remained unforgettable in my memories,' he
    says. `A street was full of passing people - with carts, horses,
    camels. People had taken with them whatever they managed to take,
    mainly small bundles, people had little time and were trying to
    escape. It was a true mess; many lost their relatives, children on the
    road. I can vividly remember we passed kilometers of people
    walking. Part of them came to Eastern Armenian, another part tried to
    find refuge in the Arab world or fled to Europe. People said we would
    be safe as soon as we crossed the river Arax, but few succeeded.'

    Getting over the river was not a guarantee of things getting easier.

    Melikyan says despite the hardships they managed to reach Yerevan
    where there was hunger and terrible illnesses in that time.

    According to him although the time was very difficult the Armenians
    were strong enough to continue their lives, create families and tried
    to succeed. The professor, who has been awarded with `Anania
    Shirakatsi' and National Academy of Sciences Golden Medals, has two
    sons and four grandchildren.

    `We had numerous relatives who lived in villages, all of them were
    massacred, we found none,' he says. `Many children were lost, the
    majority of families suffered loss. The people were doomed to
    sufferings, persecutions and exterminated. Those are facts we can
    never forget.'

    DEATH AND LIFE JOURNEY

    Manik Hayrapetyan carefully puts bright red tulips in a jug. In this
    old age the flowers are her occupation.

    Manik's daughter-in-law Gayane says until recently she would get
    emotional hearing about `those years' and wouldn't tell much about
    them.

    `My grandfather came from Van,' says Gayane. `The Turks buried alive
    his big family and only my grandfather survived by a miracle, who then
    grew up in the special American orphanage in Yerevan. My
    mother-in-law's story is also sad like the stories of all those who
    witnessed the Genocide.'

    Manik Hayrapetyan was born in 1915 on the migration in search of
    refuge.

    `Turks slaughtered everywhere, women and children were left and many
    mothers couldn't survive the starving and suffering and left their
    children,' tells Manik, pointing her finger up. `Men were either in
    the army or killed and there were mainly women, elderly and children
    on the road of refuge.'

    The elderly woman says she has heard the majority of stories from
    adults while growing up. Manik says they lived in Izmity, her father
    was a teacher who knew Turkish and did translations.

    `We were at home when the news came that Turks were going to burn the
    village, people ran away any way they could. They dressed boys like
    girls; beautiful women's faces were dyed with mud to escape. The road
    was long, we were walking,' she says. `The greater part of children
    died on the road unable to stand it.'

    Manik is moved telling the story of her birth.

    `My mother gave birth to me on the road nearby the Turkish village of
    Gonya, when people passed by like caravans. Knowing she could not
    take care of me, she left me on the road. But my 18 year old sister
    Armenuhi returned and saved me.

    `But the Turks took away Armenuhi and we heard nothing else about her
    . . .'



    `AH, ARMENIA': FROM 40 DAYS TO 90 YEARS IN THE LIFE OF MUSA LER ARMENIANS

    By Gayane Lazarian
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Every spring 95-year-old Trfanda Adajyan looks at the blossoming white
    flowers of the apricot tree in her yard and remembers the trees of the
    orchard left in Musa Ler's Yoghunoluk village. From the memory of a
    child, she says the blossoms left behind were more plentiful and more
    beautiful.

    `We had vast orchards of orange, fig and olive trees,' the old woman
    recalls. `Our fruits tasted very good. The fruits grown today do not
    have that taste. Yoghunoluk's lands were very fertile. The taste of
    all our produce was different. . .' She says even potato was sweeter
    in the land from which she was chased away.

    Sorrow comes to her eyes recalling Musa Ler (the village on the
    Turkish-Syrian border).

    Trfanda still remembers the oath that her father, brothers and
    relatives were taking on the top of the hill made famous in the novel
    `Forty Days of Musa Dagh': `I was born here and will die here. I am
    not going to die as a slave. I will die here with a weapon in my
    hands, but I will not become an emigrant.'

    On July 26, 1915, the Turkish government issued a special order to
    force Armenians to emigrate to the Syrian deserts within seven
    days. The Musa Ler Armenians did not obey the order. Instead they took
    to a hill and held out defending themselves against overwhelming odds.

    She remembers quite well their two-storied house in Yoghunoluk.

    `There were three rooms upstairs and four rooms downstairs. We had
    balconies around the house. My dad was a trader, he was selling
    sheep. My father was a man of great stature. My mother was
    fair-haired. Thank God, at that time all of us managed to survive and
    not to incur that many losses like other areas did, but we were
    destined to become migrants, too,' she says.

    Trfanda, who spent those mythologized 40 days on Musa Ler, often
    confuses the events. Her daughter, 60-year-old Shake Adajyan and
    granddaughter 41-year-old Azniv Khachatryan try to help her.

    `Everyone - young or old - from six Armenian villages (Kebusie, Vagf,
    Khdrbek, Yoghunoluk, Haji Habibli, Bitias) climbed the mountain. The
    male population of the village, anticipating the massacre, armed
    themselves and resorted to self-defense,' says Azniv.

    On July 29, 1915, a council of representatives of six Armenian
    villages took place in Yoghunoluk where the majority decided to resort
    to self-defense.

    Trfanda continues: `Mothers with their children on their shoulders and
    food in one hand were forging ahead up the hill. I remember there was
    no water. Men would go and steal it from Turkish positions. It was at
    that time that there was little food and we boiled harisa in big bowls
    not to die from hunger.'

    The weather at that height was rather damp and the Musa Ler folks
    immediately put up tents, built huts and hovels to accommodate the
    people.

    Then her daughter, Shake, tries to remind Trfanda of those years and
    the mother, heaving a sigh, says that there are plenty of those
    stories. Her thought immediately brightens and she begins to tell the
    way as if at that moment she saw the French `Joanna d'Arc' and
    `Kichen' ships hurrying to the mountain by the Mediterranean Sea.

    `It was foggy at that time and Turks could not see the Armenians. The
    French ships saw that we spread a sheet on the mountain asking for
    help. The captain of the ships told us to wait for three days after
    which he'd come and take us. I remember it well. We were eight
    children - five sisters and three brothers. My father's name was
    Yesayi, my mother's name was Zaruhi,' she says.

    The French battleships, passing through the Mediterranean Sea, noticed
    the white sheets spread on the top of the mountain that had red
    crosses painted on them and the inscription: `Christians are in
    Danger'. Fires were burning around them. On September 13-15, the
    French transported them (400 people) to Port Said where they got help
    from the Armenian community of Egypt. They lived there for four years
    in tents, earning their livelihood in different trades - comb-making,
    spoon-making, shoe-making, carpet-weaving, needlework.

    Trfanda suddenly remembers with pride that the parents of the first
    president of independent Armenia, Levon Ter- Petrosyan, were from
    their village. `His mother is my cousin. She was born at the time when
    the French ships appeared in the sea, and that's why she was given the
    name of Azatuhi (Free). Many children were born on the ship and they
    were named Kichen in honor of the freedom brought to them,' she says.

    In July 1919, the Musa Ler people were given the opportunity to
    return. But they found only ruins where homes once stood.

    `Our houses were half-ruined and burned, the orchards were
    destroyed. The people yet having not overcome infectious diseases
    contracted in Port Said began to restore what had been destroyed and
    cultivate the orchards that had run wild,' says Trfanda.

    However, 20 years later, on July 23, 1939, British diplomacy granted
    to Turkey the province of Alexandrette, also including Musa Ler. It
    became impossible for Musa Ler people to live in those places; they
    left for good. They were transferred to Pasit meadows (Syrian shore),
    then with great suffering and losses to the semi-desert of Lebanon -
    Aynchar.

    Azniv says: `It took hard labor and iron will to build a school and a
    church in Aynchar, to cultivate those desert territories to turn them
    into an area full of fruit trees. The Armenian village of Aynchar
    exists even today.'

    However, Mother Trfanda moved from Musa Ler to Beirut where she got
    married. Her five children were born in Beirut. In 1946-47, during the
    years of mass repatriation, 70 percent of Musa Ler people - nearly 700
    families and one of them was Trfanda's - returned to Soviet
    Armenia. Trfanda now has 26 grandchildren and one great grandchild.

    Today, many live in a village named for their beloved home, Musa Ler,
    near the Zvartnots Airport outside Yerevan. Each September, the
    village hosts a great festival of harisa (a stew made from grains and
    lamb) to commemorate the day they were rescued.

    Trfanda says she read Franz Werfel's `40 Days of Musa Dagh' and that
    it is all about them.

    Shake describes the people of Musa Ler in a special way: `They are
    very willful, stubborn, keep their word. And for them conscience and
    honor come before all.'

    Trfanda interrupts her daughter and says that she would describe the
    people of Musa Ler extraction more precisely: `We are really
    highlanders. If we say that matsun is black, then it is black, it is
    impossible to change that. We are very smart.'

    Azniv says that the link among Musa Ler people is very strong. Even
    today the villagers of those six villages are like relatives. They
    marry their children among themselves, if they say that some girl is a
    Musalertsi, then it means that she is from among themselves. Trfanda
    adds: `Let the bride bring no dowry with her, we don't need any dowry,
    her being a pure child is enough for us.'

    The incessant yearning of Musa Ler people is handed down from
    generation to generation. Everyone cherishes the unfulfilled dreams:
    to return to the land of their forefathers one day. Azniv says: `This
    yearning is deep rooted in everyone's hearts. If they are told now:
    `Go, we give your lands back', they will run back like one man, and
    even I will.'

    Shake has booked a trip to Musa Ler through a travel agency and will
    go there with a tourist group in August. Trfanda says: `Bring me a
    handful of earth from the village, bless your eyes.'

    Mother Trfanda slowly begins to sing one of the songs that she used to
    sing in her native village: `...They'll take me to the gallows and
    from the gallows I will cry in a subdued voice - ah Armenia...'

    RECOGNITION: NOBEL PEACE PRIZE WINNER URGES TURKEY TO ADMIT

    By Anna Saghabalian
    Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

    Lech Walesa, Poland's former president and a Nobel Peace Prize winner,
    made on Thursday an emotional case for the recognition by Turkey of
    the 1915 genocide of Armenians, saying it should be a precondition for
    Ankara's accession to the European Union.

    `The massacres of Armenians in Turkey were the first genocide of the
    20th century,' Walesa declared in a speech in Yerevan.

    `Armenia is justly demanding that the recognition of the Armenian
    genocide be a precondition for Turkey's membership in the European
    Union,' he said. `Without a universal acceptance of historical
    justice, we can not meet the challenges of the contemporary world.'

    Walesa was addressing an international conference devoted to the
    upcoming 90th anniversary of the start of the mass killings and
    deportations of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey. His visit came just two
    days after Poland became the ninth EU country to officially describe
    the slaughter of some 1.5 million Armenians as a genocide.

    A resolution adopted by the lower house of the Polish parliament, the
    Sejm, says that the international community has a `moral obligation'
    to condemn the genocide. The resolution, which has already drawn
    protest form Ankara, is expected to be endorsed by the country's
    Senate.

    `The massacres of Armenians were started by the bloodthirsty [Ottoman]
    Sultan Abdul Hamid II,' Walesa said in his speech. `In 1915, the
    Turkish government ordered the slaughter of Armenian intellectuals and
    the deportation of hundreds of thousands of Armenians that either
    starved to death or were brutally killed by Turkish soldiers and
    Kurdish bandits.'

    `If I or anyone else forget that crime, then let God forget us,' he
    added.

    Walesa served as Poland's first post-Communist president from 1990
    through 1995, presiding over his country's successful transition to
    democracy and the market economy. He is even better known as the
    legendary leader of the Solidarity movement whose 1980 campaign of
    civil disobedience precipitated the collapse of Communism in Poland
    and elsewhere in Eastern Europe. That role earned him a Nobel Peace
    Prize in 1983.

    The 61-year-old ex-president argued that the end of the Cold War has
    greatly facilitated international recognition of the Armenian
    genocide. `Until 1989 nobody wanted to anger Turkey which was a
    strategic member of NATO and counterbalanced Soviet influence in the
    region,' he said. `But that role of Turkey has since decreased.'

    Also appealing to Turkey to end its vehement denial of the genocide
    was Yossi Sarid, Israel's former education minister and another
    participant of the conference. `Yes, it wasn't your fault,' he said,
    addressing the Turks. `You didn't personally take part in it and the
    direct perpetrators died long ago. But you should take responsibility
    for the Armenian genocide.'

    Sarid has repeatedly lambasted successive Israeli governments for
    refusing to recognize the genocide for fear of jeopardizing Israel's
    strategic relationship with Turkey.

    President Robert Kocharyan likewise called for the Turkish recognition
    as he opened the two-day forum on Wednesday. Kocharian said his
    administration will continue to raise the issue in the international
    arena and encourage Armenian lobbying efforts abroad.

    Kocharyan's predecessor, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, favored a more cautious
    line, anxious not to further antagonize the Turks. Ter-Petrosyan's
    former national security adviser, Jirair Libaridian, also took part in
    the conference and defended that policy.

    `Different periods require different policies,' he told RFE/RL. `In my
    view, the policy of the former Armenian authorities was right and that
    of the current authorities is a bit wrong.'

    Libaridyan, who is a U.S. citizen of Armenian descent, also noted that
    Turkish denial has actually contributed to recent years' progress in
    the Armenian campaign for worldwide recognition of the tragedy. `They
    (the Turks) themselves put the issue under spotlight by saying that it
    didn't happen,' he said. `So people wonder what didn't happen.'

    RECOGNITION: AN ASSESSMENT OF OFFICIALS AND ANALYSTS

    By Aris Ghazinyan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Today, Germany - historically one of Turkey's staunchest European
    allies - past a resolution calling for Turkey to admit the Armenian
    Genocide. Poland took the same step earlier this week.

    Uruguay, Canada, Argentina, Switzerland, France, Italy, Lebanon, the
    Vatican, Sweden, Belgium, Slovakia, Greece, Russia, as well as a
    number of international organizations (on June 18, 1987, the European
    Parliament adopted a Resolution on the Armenian Genocide), have
    official policy to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    `All of us are now witnessing an unprecedented process of the
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide in many countries of the world,'
    Fadey Sargsyan, the President of the National Academy of Sciences of
    Armenia, says. `Today the world community is more and more inclined
    toward the necessity of recognizing and condemning this heinous crime
    against humanity. Such are the realities of today, and Turkey cannot
    but reckon with it.'

    Turkey has assumed a hard line in the process of recognizing this
    crime. On the threshold of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
    Genocide, official Ankara initiated special parliamentary hearings on
    April 13 supposed to demonstrate to the world `the total incompetence'
    of arguments that allow this act to be qualified as genocide.

    Official Ankara has already sent out letters to 11 countries in which
    it denies Turkey's involvement in the Armenian tragedy. Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Taip Erdogan stated in this connection that a
    Declaration signed by 550 deputies of the Great National Assembly of
    Turkey had already been adopted. This Declaration will be sent to the
    House of Lords and the House of Commons of the United Kingdom in order
    to clear up the situation with the so-called `Blue Book'. Published
    in 1916 by Viscount James Brandy and historian Arnold Toynbee, this
    book, in fact, unmasks the essence of Turkish policy aimed at the
    total liquidation of the Armenian ethnos.

    `The Blue Book' is engaged by the British propaganda at the request of
    the USA,' stated the Turkish premier. `It is extremely unfair to make
    decisions on Turkey on the basis of evaluations of marginal groups in
    the countries of the Western world.'

    `Today, official Ankara simply has to adapt its invariable policy to
    the new realities,' says political analyst Levon Ghazaryan in this
    regard. `It implies a search for and finding of new forms of
    presenting this issue, and the latest hearings in the Turkish
    parliament are called to do this. They should be viewed in the context
    of global processes, as they were the official statement of the fact
    of the realization by the Turkish authorities of the presence of a
    basically new international situation. The hearings, thus, were aimed
    at exposing new counterarguments from the Turkish public-political
    entrails corresponding to today's realities.'

    Commenting on the existing situation, Armenia's Foreign Minister
    Vardan Oskanian notes:

    `On the threshold of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
    Turkey is emphatically assuming a tougher position towards this
    issue. Against the background of the approaching sad date it seemed
    that what was committed should minimize the ardor of Ankara, however
    the opposite is taking place. The Turkish parliament specially
    initiates hearings on the Genocide the result of which is an appeal of
    Turkish deputies to the parliamentarians of the countries that
    recognized the Armenian Genocide. Revising their own history, Turkey
    is trying to make other countries revise their histories, too. I am
    sure that such a policy will boomerang in Ankara itself.'

    `Turkey, which is now aspiring to become a member of the European
    Union, has no moral right to knock at the doors of the organization
    based on the unquestionable respect for and observance of panhuman
    values,' Oskanyan said on April 13.

    `Ankara should first of all admit to committing the crime in order to
    gain that right. In terms of Turkey's possible accession to the EU,
    this issue must be given an adequate political debate within
    international circles.'

    `At present, 20 percent of the Turkish society tends to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide. This tendency increases from year to year, and one
    should point out that the only issue that concerns the progressive
    representatives of the Turkish public is Yerevan's further steps,'
    Director of the Institute of Philosophy and Law of the RA National
    Academy of Sciences Gevorg Poghosyan says in this connection. `What
    exactly will the recognition of the Genocide entail? That's the
    question that alerts them today. There is also an opinion that unlike
    the RA Government, the Armenian Diaspora still assumes more radical
    positions.'

    Armenia's official stance on possible further steps is well known. It
    was voiced by President Robert Kocharyan, the first time it was
    unveiled in January 2001 when Armenia was joining the Council of
    Europe.

    `The issue of Turkey's recognizing the Armenian Genocide is not
    connected with the issue of territorial concessions,' said the
    Armenian head of state. `The problem of territories should be regarded
    in terms of the provisions of the Sevre Treaty signed on August 10,
    1920, according to which an Armenian state with a gateway to the sea
    was to be created in part of the historical homeland of
    Armenians. However, this issue is not on Yerevan's foreign policy
    agenda today.'

    On April 13, 2005, the same thought was emphasized by
    Oskanian. `Today, it is difficult for me to forecast whether this
    issue will find its place on Armenia's foreign policy agenda during
    the tenure of future presidents or not. I can only say that official
    Yerevan is currently seeking the international recognition of the
    Genocide.'

    Director of the Institute of History of the RA National Academy of
    Sciences Ashot Melkonyan does not consider the policy of official
    Yerevan being conducted in this direction to be weak. On the contrary:
    `The change of power in Armenia in 1998, among other things, ushered
    in a totally new stage in the history of the development of this
    problem. A decade ago, the first president of Armenia tried to
    convince us all that the national claims of Armenians were detrimental
    and dangerous and considered the problem in the aspect of state
    security. The new foreign policy of the state, on the agenda of which
    the issue of the international recognition of the Genocide is among
    the priorities, proves the incompetence of the arguments put forth by
    Levon Ter-Petrosyan. The unprecedented process of Genocide recognition
    in dozens of countries is the result of the consistent work of the
    current authorities of Armenia in the sphere of foreign policy.'

    At the same time, he stressed that Armenian public organizations
    should raise different issues connected with the provision `on
    national compensation', including the matter of historical territories
    alienated from the Armenian ethnos.

    `If by force of different political reasons official Yerevan does not
    raise this issue today, then the public organizations operating in
    Armenia ought to conduct this policy,' says Melkonyan. `They ought to
    do it at least for the reason that it maximally corresponds to the
    aspirations and expectations of the whole nation scattered the world
    over. It fully reflects the national idea and therefore should take
    place in the public and political life of the country.'

    RECOGNITION: AN ASSESSMENT OF OFFICIALS AND ANALYSTS

    By Aris Ghazinyan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Today, Germany - historically one of Turkey's staunchest European
    allies - past a resolution calling for Turkey to admit the Armenian
    Genocide. Poland took the same step earlier this week.

    Uruguay, Canada, Argentina, Switzerland, France, Italy, Lebanon, the
    Vatican, Sweden, Belgium, Slovakia, Greece, Russia, as well as a
    number of international organizations (on June 18, 1987, the European
    Parliament adopted a Resolution on the Armenian Genocide), have
    official policy to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    `All of us are now witnessing an unprecedented process of the
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide in many countries of the world,'
    Fadey Sargsyan, the President of the National Academy of Sciences of
    Armenia, says. `Today the world community is more and more inclined
    toward the necessity of recognizing and condemning this heinous crime
    against humanity. Such are the realities of today, and Turkey cannot
    but reckon with it.'

    Turkey has assumed a hard line in the process of recognizing this
    crime. On the threshold of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
    Genocide, official Ankara initiated special parliamentary hearings on
    April 13 supposed to demonstrate to the world `the total incompetence'
    of arguments that allow this act to be qualified as genocide.

    Official Ankara has already sent out letters to 11 countries in which
    it denies Turkey's involvement in the Armenian tragedy. Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Taip Erdogan stated in this connection that a
    Declaration signed by 550 deputies of the Great National Assembly of
    Turkey had already been adopted. This Declaration will be sent to the
    House of Lords and the House of Commons of the United Kingdom in order
    to clear up the situation with the so-called `Blue Book'. Published
    in 1916 by Viscount James Brandy and historian Arnold Toynbee, this
    book, in fact, unmasks the essence of Turkish policy aimed at the
    total liquidation of the Armenian ethnos.

    `The Blue Book' is engaged by the British propaganda at the request of
    the USA,' stated the Turkish premier. `It is extremely unfair to make
    decisions on Turkey on the basis of evaluations of marginal groups in
    the countries of the Western world.'

    `Today, official Ankara simply has to adapt its invariable policy to
    the new realities,' says political analyst Levon Ghazaryan in this
    regard. `It implies a search for and finding of new forms of
    presenting this issue, and the latest hearings in the Turkish
    parliament are called to do this. They should be viewed in the context
    of global processes, as they were the official statement of the fact
    of the realization by the Turkish authorities of the presence of a
    basically new international situation. The hearings, thus, were aimed
    at exposing new counterarguments from the Turkish public-political
    entrails corresponding to today's realities.'

    Commenting on the existing situation, Armenia's Foreign Minister
    Vardan Oskanian notes:

    `On the threshold of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
    Turkey is emphatically assuming a tougher position towards this
    issue. Against the background of the approaching sad date it seemed
    that what was committed should minimize the ardor of Ankara, however
    the opposite is taking place. The Turkish parliament specially
    initiates hearings on the Genocide the result of which is an appeal of
    Turkish deputies to the parliamentarians of the countries that
    recognized the Armenian Genocide. Revising their own history, Turkey
    is trying to make other countries revise their histories, too. I am
    sure that such a policy will boomerang in Ankara itself.'

    `Turkey, which is now aspiring to become a member of the European
    Union, has no moral right to knock at the doors of the organization
    based on the unquestionable respect for and observance of panhuman
    values,' Oskanyan said on April 13.

    `Ankara should first of all admit to committing the crime in order to
    gain that right. In terms of Turkey's possible accession to the EU,
    this issue must be given an adequate political debate within
    international circles.'

    `At present, 20 percent of the Turkish society tends to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide. This tendency increases from year to year, and one
    should point out that the only issue that concerns the progressive
    representatives of the Turkish public is Yerevan's further steps,'
    Director of the Institute of Philosophy and Law of the RA National
    Academy of Sciences Gevorg Poghosyan says in this connection. `What
    exactly will the recognition of the Genocide entail? That's the
    question that alerts them today. There is also an opinion that unlike
    the RA Government, the Armenian Diaspora still assumes more radical
    positions.'

    Armenia's official stance on possible further steps is well known. It
    was voiced by President Robert Kocharyan, the first time it was
    unveiled in January 2001 when Armenia was joining the Council of
    Europe.

    `The issue of Turkey's recognizing the Armenian Genocide is not
    connected with the issue of territorial concessions,' said the
    Armenian head of state. `The problem of territories should be regarded
    in terms of the provisions of the Sevre Treaty signed on August 10,
    1920, according to which an Armenian state with a gateway to the sea
    was to be created in part of the historical homeland of
    Armenians. However, this issue is not on Yerevan's foreign policy
    agenda today.'

    On April 13, 2005, the same thought was emphasized by
    Oskanian. `Today, it is difficult for me to forecast whether this
    issue will find its place on Armenia's foreign policy agenda during
    the tenure of future presidents or not. I can only say that official
    Yerevan is currently seeking the international recognition of the
    Genocide.'

    Director of the Institute of History of the RA National Academy of
    Sciences Ashot Melkonyan does not consider the policy of official
    Yerevan being conducted in this direction to be weak. On the contrary:
    `The change of power in Armenia in 1998, among other things, ushered
    in a totally new stage in the history of the development of this
    problem. A decade ago, the first president of Armenia tried to
    convince us all that the national claims of Armenians were detrimental
    and dangerous and considered the problem in the aspect of state
    security. The new foreign policy of the state, on the agenda of which
    the issue of the international recognition of the Genocide is among
    the priorities, proves the incompetence of the arguments put forth by
    Levon Ter-Petrosyan. The unprecedented process of Genocide recognition
    in dozens of countries is the result of the consistent work of the
    current authorities of Armenia in the sphere of foreign policy.'

    At the same time, he stressed that Armenian public organizations
    should raise different issues connected with the provision `on
    national compensation', including the matter of historical territories
    alienated from the Armenian ethnos.

    `If by force of different political reasons official Yerevan does not
    raise this issue today, then the public organizations operating in
    Armenia ought to conduct this policy,' says Melkonyan. `They ought to
    do it at least for the reason that it maximally corresponds to the
    aspirations and expectations of the whole nation scattered the world
    over. It fully reflects the national idea and therefore should take
    place in the public and political life of the country.'

    TURKEY DENIES: BUT WHAT IF THEY ADMITTED?

    By Aris Ghazinyan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    To the surprise of none, word from Ankara is that Turkey is no closer
    than ever to calling what happened on its soil 90 years ago
    `genocide'.

    Parliamentary hearings last week underscored official entrenchment on
    the subject. The sessions themselves were seen by some as damage
    control, as Turkey has braced itself for a year of news and propaganda
    intended to remind the world that 1.5 million Armenians suffered and
    died under Turkish siege.

    `The stubborn and frenzied attempts of today's leadership of Turkey to
    turn a blind eye to its own history testify to the fact that the
    officially voiced intention of their predecessors - the total
    liquidation of the Armenian ethno- cultural element - is still alive
    and is in the process of being implemented,' people's artist of the
    USSR, Rector of the Institute of Theater and Cinema, and Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) member Sos Sargsyan told
    ArmeniaNow. `The Armenian people, who are `still standing in the way
    of the establishment of a Pan-Turkic empire', in the opinion of
    Turkish authorities must be driven out of their historical Homeland.'

    `I regard the explicitly open hearings in the Turkish parliament as a
    cynical challenge to the international community,' said public
    activist and publicist Zory Balayan in an ArmeniaNow interview. `It is
    remarkable that this challenge is not only taking place on the
    threshold of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, but is
    also being viewed in the aspect of Turkey's possible membership in the
    European Union. In the context of the resolution of the `Armenian
    Question', Ankara, in fact, does not care much about the position of
    the EU on the fact of the hearings proper. It is a sort of probe of
    the all-European opinion, the test of its durability and vigilance. If
    Europe represented by its political forces fails to respond to this
    political action properly, then it means that it is ready to admit
    Turkey to the EU. Turkey has never abandoned its Pan-Turkic policy and
    is not going to do it today.'

    `The hearings in the Turkish parliament are being taken in the context
    of Armenian-Turkish relations and in this connection do not represent
    anything special,' said the leader of the Nationalist Party of Armenia
    Ruben Gevorgyants. `This is just a separate link of a longer chain
    that stretches both in time and space. Turkey's traditional position
    on Armenia is known well and therefore one should hardly accentuate
    attention on the fact of the hearings. I do not expect territorial or
    material compensations from today's generation of Turkish
    politicians. All I need is Turkish repentance - an official apology
    for what was done.'

    `From the viewpoint of the way being thrust on us by Turkey - the
    discussion of the very fact of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman
    Empire - the hearings that took place in the Great National Assembly
    of Turkey have no essential significance,' says political analyst
    Levon Ghazaryan. `However, in the internal political aspect these
    hearings are revolutionary indeed. In 1919 the Turkish parliament and
    government in fact recognized the Genocide and even convicted their
    perpetrators. But in the subsequent decades any mention of the tragic
    events of the beginning of the 20th century has been an unshakeable
    taboo for the Turks. Of course, it doesn't mean that today's Turks
    know nothing about those events. But any mention of them was banned
    not only officially but also by internal censorship. Today, under the
    pressure of the world public opinion the Turks had to remove that
    taboo. And although the hearings externally were a sort of response to
    Armenians and a categorical refusal to recognize the Genocide, in real
    fact the process of the destruction of the traditional Turkish
    consciousness will be impetuously accelerating its pace and we will be
    able to watch the favorable results of this process in the nearest
    future.'

    But what will change in Armenia itself if Turkey does recognize the
    fact of the Genocide `in the near future'?

    `In this case the Armenians scattered the world over will regard
    modern-day Turkey not as a successor of the state that committed
    genocide against many peoples, but as a country worthy of a European
    concept of panhuman values,' political analyst Rafael Zakharyan told
    ArmeniaNow. `There is no entity of international law in the European
    Union that could be accused of not admitting to the crime before
    humanity.'

    `I think that it would be profitable for today's Turkish government to
    recognize the Armenian Genocide,' says political scientist Suren
    Zolyan. `The fact of the recognition does not imply any territorial
    concessions according to the points of Armenia's foreign policy
    agenda. Maybe in the future one of the Armenian presidents will
    initiate territorial claims.'

    `The recognition of the Genocide is first of all a moral issue for
    both Turkey and Armenia,' says political analyst Rafael
    Zakharyan. `This issue predetermines the prospects of regional
    cooperation. I don't know whether Armenia's foreign policy agenda will
    be narrowed or broadened because of it. But unequivocally, in this
    case new prospects will be held out for the whole region. I think that
    in the future, communication vectors will become dominant in the
    regional public consciousness. The installation of new, long-term
    communication projects will become the basic line of discussions on
    the governmental and parliamentary levels of regional states. If
    Armenia advances any territorial claims to Turkey, then they will
    become a subject of all-regional discussions.'

    OUTSIDE EYE: A NON-ARMENIAN'S VIEW OF LIFE IN HIS ADOPTED HOME

    By John Hughes
    Editor

    It is sadly appropriate that on these of all days we should learn of
    the death of a true Armenian hero.

    When hundreds of thousands go up Tsitsernakaberd Hill Sunday in
    Yerevan to mourn casualties of hate, a comparable handful will mark
    the day at an Armenian church in London made considerably empty by the
    passing of George Kurkjian, a man who was victim to none and a
    champion of love to plenty who don't even know it.

    He died Thursday, after fighting longer than anyone should have to
    against cancer.

    I don't know how old he was. 80 maybe. But I know he appreciated
    youth. About the last thing he said to me was `how are those young
    journalists in Armenia?'

    Appropriate, yes, that we remember George on this weekend of nameless
    commemoration.

    He fought for Genocide recognition. He fought harder for preservation
    of the Armenia that is left in its aftermath.

    He was a man of some means and I'm guessing he spent a part of it on
    causes that would urge the world to remember the crimes suffered by
    his parents' generation, and observed every April 24.

    But if there are monuments to which George Kurkjian's name should be
    attached, they are not of static stone or affixed in bronze on a wall
    to be ignored.

    Monuments to the heart of George have passed through the halls of a
    school he maintained in Gyumri. (One graduate, in fact, is a member of
    the ArmeniaNow staff.) I came to know of George through that school,
    when I once wrote that it was cold inside because of a lack of
    heat. No children attending Lord Byron School should study while cold
    George said, and saw to it that they shouldn't.

    Ever mindful of his heritage's horrible history, George invested in
    Armenia's future.

    On a December 7, I walked with him and his gracious wife Diana to a
    cemetery outside Gyumri. We cried for the victims of the 1988
    earthquake. Then we went to a desolate village and laughed with
    villagers for whom George had bought some cows. I watched a man who
    owned a Rolls Royce overstep cow dung to personally visit his gift to
    that desperate family.

    Once we sat over a small table and George told me about an event that
    sealed his commitment to Armenia. At the time, he asked that I not
    write about it, because it was too personal. I hope you don't mind,
    George, if I tell it now . . .

    Shortly after the 1988 earthquake, George went to Gyumri to offer his
    help. Among those he met was a little girl whose leg was amputated
    from the disaster.

    `What can I do for you,' George asked the child.

    `Can you tell me when they'll bring my leg back?', the girl replied.

    Tears rolled down the big man's face and he shook, telling me that
    story more than a decade after it became, he said, `the reason I'll do
    whatever I can to help these people'.

    I don't mean to turn him into a saint. That's between George and the
    God he served. There are people, Armenians specifically, who George
    didn't care for, nor perhaps would they praise him as I do.

    And, there's more I didn't know about him than what I know.

    But I know that on these - of all days on the Armenian calendar -
    George Kurkjian's name deserves to be on the lips of those who will
    pray for the peace of souls departed.

    For so many here who will never know that they should thank you, I am
    thanking you now George. Have a good rest.

    IDEA TO ICON: 40 YEARS AFTER ITS CONCEPTION, TSITSERNAKABERD IS APRIL
    24'S CENTER OF ATTENTION

    By Julia Hakobyan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    It has become the international symbol around which the world's
    Armenians are joined. It's spire, meant to pierce conscience, points
    toward heaven; flame below, meant to be `eternal'.

    But how did Tsitsernakaberd (it means `swallow's fortress'), the
    Genocide Memorial, come to be the center of attention - especially on
    April 24?

    In January 1965 the state institute of design announced an open
    contest for the design of the genocide memorial to be built in
    Armenian capital.

    Two friends, architects Arthur Tarkhanyan and Sashur Kalashyan who
    were working at the Armenian State Project but knew each other from
    their native town Gyumri decided to join their ideas and work together
    on the design. In May Tarkhanyan, 33 and Kalashyan 29, learned they
    won the contest.

    The young architects, who got a tiny bonus for the contest, did not
    know that the complex they designed would become an integral part of
    Armenians' memory of a bloody slaughter of 1.5 of their ancestors in
    Turkey in 1915.

    Thirty-eight years ago this Sunday -- April 24, 1967 -- the memorial
    opened and the first of millions of pilgrims since climbed the gentle
    hill to pay homage.

    The memorial became a calling card for the architects, who went on to
    design many projects in Armenia. But, 40 years after they joined
    ideas, they say their first is still their best.

    `In 1965 when I learned about contest I knew little about the
    genocide,' says designer Kalashyan, now 69. `I know that it sounds
    ridiculous now, but at that time, many people in Armenia had even no
    idea of that Armenian tragedy. The genocide issue was a taboo like
    many things during the ruling of `iron curtain'.'

    In 1965 when the contest was announced Armenians all around the world
    commemorated the 50th anniversary of genocide. Kalashyan says that at
    that time in Armenia intellectuals,were organizing meetings in the
    city to demand from authorities the construction of the memorial.

    `I wonder how the Kremlin allowed the construction of the genocide
    memorial, but it happened. The contest was in fact announced only
    after Moscow approved the idea.'

    The state budget allocated 300,000 rubles (about $60,000) for the
    construction of the memorial, which would be built on the Hill of
    Tsitsernakaberd Park. The complex includes a 44 meters high stele,
    symbolizing the survival and rebirth of the Armenian people; a
    structure, bending in grief in memory of victims and a 100 meter
    basalt wall which leads to the complex.

    Kalashyan says that the wall, engraved with the names of Armenian
    provinces from which Armenian's were deported and killed, was build
    actually to isolate the area from the city panorama from the left. The
    circular memorial 30 meters in diameter is shaped as unroofed pyramids
    and consists of 12 basalt slabs. At the center is the eternal flame
    and steep steps leading to the fire make people bow their heads.

    `The idea of each memorial is not in its beauty, but in shapes that
    should bear the emotional effect. We were guided by that and may be
    that is an answer why today so many years later, when new
    architectural innovations and technologies are available, the genocide
    memorial does not lose its conceptual intention,' he says.

    His colleague Arthur Tarkhanyan recalls that together they designed
    several versions of the memorial. One of them, a memorial shaped as a
    cross in his opinion was equally powerful, but he says he is glad they
    chose another one.

    During his career Tarkhanyan has been co-designer on hundreds of
    residential buildings in Yerevan, as well as the Complex of Academy of
    Science on Baghramyan Avenue, `Russia' cinema, Youth Palace, Zvartnots
    airport, and the sport- concert complex, near the memorial.

    For several years Tarkhanyan, 73, has not been able to go to the
    memorial because of poor health. But each time, he says when he sees
    the memorial he is proud of his work and for his contribution to
    Armenian history.

    MUSEUM

    Thirty years after the genocide memorial construction Kalashayn
    designed the museum of genocide. It was built in 1995 when Armenians
    were marking the 80th anniversary.

    `The idea of a museum appeared long before 1995, but during Soviet
    times, of course we could not dream of having a genocide museum and
    display the documentary proof of genocide,' Kalashyan says.

    The two-story building was designed and built underground not to break
    the architectural composition of the complex.

    The museum's internal design is a combination of a light and dark,
    which symbolized evil and the victory over it.

    The city municipality allocates annually some 20 million dram (about $
    46,000) for the maintaining of the museum as well as memorial, where
    some 50 people work.

    The Museum exhibit is the second floor in a space which is over 1000
    square meters. The first floor of the Museum is allocated for a
    170-seat hall (Komitas Hall), storage rooms for museum and scientific
    objects, a library and a reading hall as well as for administrative
    and technical maintenance offices.

    On one of the walls of the museum is a five meter high map engraved in
    stone that shows the historical Armenian Plateau and Armenian
    settlements on the territory of Western Armenia and Ottoman Turkey
    which existed until the massacres of the Armenians.

    The Introductory Hall exhibits photographs and ethnographic tables
    with information about the Armenian settlements and Armenian
    population figures in 1914 in Ottoman Turkey.

    The second exhibit hall (700 square meters) presents eyewitness
    reports and documents about the massacres and atrocities perpetrated
    against the Armenians. The exhibit has many large photographs taken
    during 1915-1917, archival documents, portraits of prominent
    Armenians, victims of the atrocities, friends of the Armenian people,
    and documentary films.

    During its 10 years the museum has published more than 60 works
    devoted to genocide issues.

    MUSIC

    For the past several weeks Hrach Mushegyan has spent most of his time
    in Tsitsernakaberd Park.

    Mushegyan promises that unlike previous years this year's pilgrims
    will walk to pure music from modern loud speakers of high quality

    For that purpose, Mushegyan and his 15-member team have erected 150
    loud speakers and 8.5 kilometers of cable along a two-kilometer path
    from the beginning of the park till the memorial.

    `Unfortunately after April 24 we will have to take back the loud
    speakers. They are of a very high quality and it is not safe to leave
    them at the park,' says Mushegyan, a Yerevan Municipality employee.

    The sound equipment has been provided by a donation from the Lincy
    Foundation.

    `Music is the strongest emotional instrument,' Mushegyan says. On
    Sunday, hundreds of thousands will mark the solemn occasion under the
    music of Komitas, classic music and contemporary music of composer Ara
    Gevorgyan.

    It is projected that more than a million people will visit the
    memorial on Sunday, including the official delegations from 15
    countries, prominent scientists and politicians from 20 countries. On
    April 24 in all Armenian Churches in Armenia and abroad special
    liturgies will be said. In Yerevan's St. Gregory the Illuminator
    Cathedral representatives of Roman-Catholic, Georgian Orthodox,
    Romanian, Russian, Assyrian and other denominations will join the
    liturgy.

    ONE DAY IN 90 YEARS: HOW APRIL 24 CAME TO BE ARMENIA'S LANDMARK DAY OF
    MOURNING

    By Suren Deheryan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Why April 24?

    For years (even as far back as the late 1890s), Armenians were being
    prosecuted, persecuted, murdered, on order of Turkish authorities.

    But April 24, 1915, has become the calendar day that unites Armenians
    world-wide in commemoration of events that unfolded over years.

    Eighty-one year old Clara Solakhyan of Yerevan is not a historian, but
    the retired doctor knows well why this date marks the Armenian
    calendar of suffering.

    Clara's uncle Artashes Solakhyan was killed just before the famous
    date, and signaled the tragedy that would follow. He was among
    intellectuals killed by the Ottoman Turks in an action that instigated
    a million or more Armenian deaths.

    A teacher, actor and political activist, Artashes Solakhyan had been
    jailed for eight months for being Armenian. He was 31, when his body
    was found in a pit near the jail.

    Clara's father, Arshavir, wrote in his memoirs: `his body was axed and
    daggered and dumped along with the bodies of his four fellow
    prisoners.'

    Artashes' family identified his body by recognizing the ornamental
    socks on the body, knitted by his mother.

    Clara Solakhyan's colleague and friend Valentina Nersisyan, also 81
    and also from the `Western Armenia' town of Van, shares a connection
    with the date.

    After the massacres began, Valentina's maternal grandfather, Nshan
    Nalbandyan, brought his family to Echmiadzin. A military commander in
    Van, Nshan returned to defend the other Armenians there. He never made
    it back to Yerevan.

    `In 1915 the massacres of Armenians were committed every day. However,
    April 24 was chosen, since on that very day in 1915 the Western
    Armenian intelligentsia were arrested and destroyed,' says historian
    Ruben Sahakyan, a specialist in 1915-1918 Armenian history.

    That bloody day was Friday - a cursed black Friday for the Armenian
    people when starting at midnight Turkish soldiers began invading
    homes, arresting or brutally killing prominent Armenian writers,
    poets, publicists, among whom were Grigor Zohrab, Daniel Varuzhan,
    Siamanto, Ruben Sevak, as well as numerous other representatives of
    science and arts. The great Armenian composer Komitas went mad under
    the influence of the ongoing atrocities and horrors.

    The book entitled `The Monument to the Perished Intellectuals'
    published in 1985 mentions the names of 761 intellectuals, national
    and educational workers. Meanwhile, according to the archive data of
    the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of France that number reached 2,800.

    `But it is not the number that matters here, but the fact that before
    1915 Armenian culture was equally developing both in Western and
    Eastern Armenia, with both parts assisting and enriching each
    other. After 1915, the western part vanished. That is, the Armenian
    people incurred also vast spiritual damage, which is more difficult to
    repair than any material loss,' says Sahakyan.

    Seeing the potential leaders among Armenian intellectuals, the Young
    Turks' Government destroyed them thereby decapitating the nation in
    the hope of easily subduing the others.

    Though, before 1915 thousands of Armenians had already become victims
    of the Ottoman Empire. More than 300,000 Armenians were destroyed in
    Western Armenia and Armenian-populated areas of the Ottoman Empire in
    the 1890s as a result of Sultan Abdul Hamid's program.

    The newly formed Young Turks' authorities continued the previous
    program, pursuing with renewed vigor the policy of exterminating
    Armenians, killing in 1915-1917 and subjecting to famine and disease
    hundreds of thousands dispatched into harsh desert exhile.

    The third phase of the Armenian Genocide involves 1918-1919, when in
    Eastern Armenia and Azerbaijan another massacre began, in which again
    half a million Armenians became victims. During these nearly 30 years,
    more than two million Armenians became victims of the first "ethnic
    cleansing".

    `Turkey does not want to recognize the 1915 Genocide, because it knows
    that if it admits it, then it should also admit the following
    campaigns against Armenians during which a large number of Armenians
    were also killed,' says the historian. `The goal of the Young Turks
    was to remove that obstacle that prevented them from establishing a
    direct link with Azerbaijan. They haven't abandoned that thought till
    today.'

    According to the historian, the official ideology of the Young Turks
    was to create a Pan-Turkic state, or the `Great Turan' theory, to
    create a powerful Turkish empire stretching from Bosnia to Altai.

    `But the Turks saw that the Ottoman Empire was gradually shrinking,
    and they didn't make a majority in their own empire, and in fact in
    1913 at a secret congress of the Young Turks' party it was decided to
    turn Mohammedan nations (Arabs, Kurds) into Turks and destroy
    non-Mohammedan nations (Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians),' says Sahakyan.

    During those years, besides Armenians about 100,000 Greeks were
    subjected to deportation. Ernest Hemingway writes about the massacre
    of Greeks in the town of Izmir. And in the Van province up to 300,000
    Assyrians were killed or displaced.

    It would be decades before a movement arose to keep the Genocide in
    public debate.

    `Today the hand of the clock is moving in favor of Armenians,'
    Sahakyan says. `After 70 years of silence about the Genocide this
    issue is being actively debated by many countries. It is clear that
    the great powers are trying to use it for their purposes, but it meets
    our interests.'

    Doctor Clara, who is far from the interests of great powers, is now
    trying to fulfill her only dream - to publish in full and present to
    the public the handwritten seven copybooks of memories where Artashes'
    wife, Kalipse Solakhyan described in detail the events in Van in 1915
    and her husband's jail memories.

    A few years ago Doctor Valentina twice and Doctor Clara once visited
    the homeland of their ancestors in the city of Van from where they
    returned with tearful eyes having traveled the paths of their parents.

    `I long for Van, every stone there is dear to me,' says Professor
    Valentina Nersisyan. `My granny told me so much about their life that
    I seem to have passed through all that. My grandmother used to say to
    me: `Don't leave me here, my girl, if they give the land back'. They
    didn't give the land back, but on two occasions I brought a handful of
    earth from there and water from Lake Van and scattered it over her
    grave. Van is dearer to me than Yerevan.'

    For years after deportation the Armenians displaced from the lands
    that had for centuries belonged to their ancestors would count days
    awaiting their return to their homeland. Sunday will be the 32,850th
    day.

    FACES SHAPED BY HORROR: 90 SURVIVORS HONORED IN COMPELLING PHOTO
    POSTER

    By Suren Musayelyan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Ninety survivors of the Armenian Genocide are the faces of their
    troubled generation, honored in a poster produced by Photolure, a
    Yerevan photo news agency.

    `These Eyes Have Seen Genocide' bears the images of old men and women
    who were children in 1915 and are a diminishing link to Armenia's
    darkest history.

    The agency's editor-in-chief Herbert Baghdasaryan says the number of
    people presented on the poster is symbolic in the year when the nation
    and Diaspora is commemorating the 90th anniversary of the Genocide.

    He says that they wanted to do something within their professional
    abilities on this occasion.

    `Everyone does what he does best and we wanted to do something for
    this anniversary,' says Baghdasaryan. `A mason would make something
    out of a stone, but we are photo journalists and that's how this idea
    emerged.'

    The poster is printed in a limited edition. Its original size is 3.20m
    to 7.20m. The oldest man whose image is presented is now 108 years old
    (born in 1897). The images were taken in Yerevan, the Armavir,
    Aragatsotn and Ararat regions (marzes).

    Baghdasaryan says that it took them more than a month to realize this
    project, although the main work was done within less than two weeks.

    `When we had a clear idea of what we wanted to do we saw that the
    volume of work was huge and so we needed some sort of sponsorship,'
    says Baghdasaryan. `We found that assistance at the office of the
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyn) and all we needed to
    do was to complete the work as soon as possible.'

    Baghdasaryan says that Genocide Museum Director Lavrenty Barseghyan
    was a great help to the project as he provided them with the list of
    Genocide survivors who were likely to have survived till today.

    Photolure's chief says their main goal was documental rather than
    artistic, but adds: `Portraits of children and elderly people are very
    immediate and require practically no extra effort.'

    The main work was accomplished by Photolure's photographers Melik
    Baghdasaryan and Mkhitar Khachatryan. Photographer Hayk Badalyan also
    contributed to the project.

    The photographers say that the most difficult part of the project was
    finding the people, especially in the city.

    `It was much easier to work in the provinces than in Yerevan,' says
    Melik Baghdasaryan. `It was more difficult to find people in a big
    city where people open their doors reluctantly, but in villages
    everyone would show you the way without address and would give you a
    very warm welcome.'

    `We were very happy when we entered somebody's home and found that he
    or she was alive,' adds Mkhitar Khachatryan. `Even after 90 years
    people were disturbed to relive their memories, and we tried not to
    stay at their homes too long not to cause them too much stress.'

    The Photolure team, who are grandsons of Genocide survivors from Van
    and Mush, say that in some way this project had also personal
    importance for them.

    `Unfortunately, many representatives of the younger generation know
    little about their forefathers, where they hailed from and what
    happened to them in the past,' says Melik Baghdasaryan. `And this work
    in some way is a reminder of the living memory of the Genocide next to
    us.'

    DEATH PAGES: ARCHIVES HOLD FAMILIAR HORROR

    By Gayane Lazarian
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Exclusive documents in which the eyewitnesses of the Genocide tell
    about their towns, villages, families, personal misfortunes and
    sufferings are kept in the National Archives of Armenia. About 700
    eyewitness accounts were transferred here along with documents from
    the editorial office of the Tbilisi `Mshak' newspaper and other
    documents.

    National Archives Director Amatuni Virabyan says that the narrators
    are presented name by name, and the stories are very much
    alike. Presented are the general pictures of survivors' places of
    residence, how many villagers there were in the village, how many
    churches, schools, manuscript gospels there were and how the massacres
    began.

    The eyewitness accounts were collected in 1916 on the initiative of
    the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun)
    Committee. Information was collected from Armenian refugees who took
    asylum in different places of the Transcaucasus.

    The work was done by Hayk Achemyan, Hambartsum Galstyan, Garegin
    Turikyan, A. Hatsagortsyan, Suren Meloyan, G. Nerkararyan, Shirin,
    who visited the orphanages of Baku, Tbilisi, Dilijan, Ashtarak and
    other places.

    The questionnaire was compiled so as to collect as exact information
    as possible about the loss of lives and destruction of material and
    cultural values. The eyewitness accounts were collected one year after
    the massacres started and deportations, making the accounts essential
    documents for their historical accuracy.

    DAVID FARMANYAN'S EYEWITNESS ACCOUNT ABOUT THE MASSACRES IN THE VAN
    PROVINCE, ABAGHA DISTRICT, VILLAGE OF KHACHAN

    There were a hundred houses in the village of Khachan where 1,300
    Armenians lived. It had one church and one school.

    `On March 25, 1915, Pazet agha Myutir came to the village with 15
    policemen and began to brutally beat the headman Avetis, Priest Mesrop
    and several others and confiscated 18 units of the village's
    self-defense arms.

    On April 6, Myutir came again. They brought with themselves 32 people
    from the Nazarava village, 28 people were rounded from our village,
    they were all bound together, and I was one of them. At 10 p.m. they
    took us to Ghaymaz - the confluence of the Garasu and Phorakhane
    waters. First they stripped our village's priest Fr. Mesrop bare and
    told him that if he adopted Islam they would let him go, but otherwise
    would kill him. Of course, the priest refused. They started to pinch
    his beard, chop off his members with a yataghan (Turkish sword) and
    ended with cutting off his head and throwing him into water.

    They killed many in the same brutal way. Now it was my turn. Like
    others I was stripped bare and the executors were standing like death
    angels. I managed to escape and plunged into water. They opened fire
    and with my weak arms I managed to swim across to the other bank of
    the river. Another two people followed my example. The following day
    before dawn they beset the village and began killing
    indiscriminately. Half of us who fled died on the road, others settled
    in the villages of the Karvanta, Aghzi Tepen and Ghamalu regions with
    the fraternal help of Echmiadzin.

    NAA, Fund 227, Case 438

    RUBEN VARDANYAN'S EYEWITNESS ACCOUNT ABOUT THE MASSACRES IN THE
    VILLAGE OF GOMS IN BITLIS

    He was 12 years old at the time of the massacres. He resettled in
    Tbilisi.

    `They rounded up people from the village, took them and threw them
    into the river. Our friend Rasul kept my three brothers and mother at
    his house, then tried to make them become muslims, but when they
    refused he threw them out of his house. Gendarmes took us to
    Sgherd. While we were going we saw dead bodies and bones on both sides
    of the road. On the mountain one gendarme seized a child from his
    mother and smashed him against the rock because his mother could
    barely walk. And on another occasion he smashed a 10-year-old boy's
    head with a stone. That boy's feet were swollen and he couldn't
    walk. Twelve-year-old Isahak could not walk and he killed him too. He
    had tied two 6- and 8-year-old children to his horse and rode to
    Sgherd. There we stayed in a stable. At night they took us telling us
    that they were taking us to kill. But eventually my mother with my
    four-year-old brother in her arms and I managed to escape taking
    advantage of the darkness.'

    NAA, Fund 227, Case 432

    SANAM HOVHANNISYAN'S EYEWITNESS ACCOUNT ABOUT THE MASSACRES IN THE
    VILLAGE OF ERISHTER OF THE MUSH DISTRICT OF BITLIS

    She resettled in the village of Mavrak.

    `...We saw that Mush was in blaze, the nearby Khas and Mkragom
    villages had been burned down. Kurds began to massacre men. They
    locked people in houses and burned them. Many of us, women, fled
    towards the mountains with our hearts in our mouths. My husband
    Poghos, son Avo and grandson Grigor were killed. They raped beautiful
    women and girls, Islamized them. It was our turn, but we managed to
    escape. There were 18 of those who managed to escape.

    When the danger passed we came down from the hills and gave ourselves
    up, but Haji Musa bek again gathered Armenian prisoners. Before my
    eyes my son Avetis was gunned down, they beat me with the butt of the
    rifle and dragged me forward. One the road one woman had birth pangs
    and could no longer walk. One askyar (soldier) named Mamar crushed the
    woman's head with a dagger and also crushed her womb and putting on
    the edge of the dagger showed to the child as a threat. Harut's wife
    Yeva was also pregnant, and on her back she was carrying her
    three-year-old daughter. The child was crying out of hunger, the
    mother was so hungry that she didn't have milk to feed her child. The
    askyar ordered her to sit down and give breast to her daughter. Then
    he aimed his gun at them and with one single bullet put an end to
    their lives.'

    NAA, Fund 227, Case 454

    KHACHIK VARDANYAN'S EYEWITNESS ACCOUNTS ABOUT THE MASSACRES IN THE
    VILLAGE OF NABAYIN OF THE AGHERD DISTRICT OF BITLIS PROVINCE

    August 15, 1916

    The village of Nabayin had 40 houses with 300 Armenian villages,
    St. Gevorg Church, 15 handwritten gospels.

    `On June 10, 1915, 200 Kurds led by Gasym Osmanian attacked the
    village and killed many people with double-edged axes. They murdered
    Garnik Kirakosyan in an extremely cruel way. First they skinned his
    back, then put his eyes out with a knife, cut his arms, pulled his
    teeth out, but Garnik was still alive. Then they cut him into pieces
    with a dagger.'

    They would disembowel pregnant women and taking out yet unborn babies
    would put them on a stake and brag: `This is an Armenian flag.'

    They would force little boys to lie on the ground and putting their
    heads on stones they would knock their brains out with big rocks and
    leave them dying. Only two people survived in the village.'

    NAA, Fund 227, Case 423

    GOHAR SARYAN'S EYEWITNESS ACCOUNTS ABOUT THE MASSACRES IN TRAPIZON

    She resettled in Tiflis (Tbilisi). They killed her husband, her
    husband's brother and his sons.

    `June 13, 1915. They put up announcements everywhere giving us five
    days to pack up and leave for Mesopotamia. Everyone had to hand over
    their belongings to the government. To get to Mesopotamia from
    Trapizon by foot was considered by all us as equal to annihilation and
    there began a panic among people.

    They began to take groups of people outside the city. At a distance of
    half an hour's walk one could hear cries and screams. Many women and
    girls drank poison when policemen were entering their homes to take
    them out. They killed the last groups of people already near the
    city. There were hundreds, thousands of stripped dead bodies along the
    river. On boats they were taking Armenian officials with their
    families and drowning them in the sea.

    They took the deportees to Kemakh. They were throwing people into the
    river in the deepest gorge of the Euphrates.

    NAA, Fund 227, Case 453

    SAVED AGAINST DANGER: MUSEUM EXHIBITS MANUSCRIPTS PRESERVED AT RISK OF PERIL

    By Gayane Lazarian
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    A number of ancient manuscripts saved from different towns and
    villages of `Western Armenia' were displayed at Yerevan's Mashtots
    Matenadaran (Ancient Manuscripts Museum) last week.

    The `Saved Manuscripts' exhibition featured but a small part of the
    preserved 2,000 manuscripts (Gospels, Bibles, historical manuscripts,
    scientific papers, translations).

    `The genocide inflicted not only physical and material losses on
    Armenians, but also cultural ones. Thousands of manuscripts were
    burned, and destroyed along with people. Only a fraction of them was
    saved,' says Matenadaran's Director Sen Arevshatyan.

    Handwritten books were brought here by Armenian volunteers and
    fighters, rural migrants escaping along the horrible roads of
    deportation.

    Exhibition hall manager Aida Charakhchyan says: `Just imagine, people
    left everything, but putting their lives at risk they managed to enter
    the monastery in their village or town and take the manuscripts.'

    The most valuable is the `Selected Speeches from Mush' dated
    1200-1202, which was saved from the Apostolic Monastery of Mush. One
    half of that massive book (it weighs a total of 28 kilograms) was
    brought to Eastern Armenia by two peasant women, the other half was
    brought by the Russian officer Nikolay Aleksandrovich Derobertin years
    later.

    The oldest manuscript kept in Matenadaran is a Gospel piece dated 1070
    AD. Among the remarkable ones are the 13th century `Cilician Gospel',
    `The Book of Mournful Psalms' of 1662 saved from Mush's St. Karapet
    Monastery, `Avetyan' dated before 1687 from Ktuts desert, which was
    saved by a certain Vardan from Vaspurakan, a 17th-century `Sharaknots'
    saved from Varaga monastery, etc.

    `On the way from Western Armenia the first point that people reached
    was Echmiadzin. There they handed the books and manuscripts over. Now
    we can say that nearly 9,000 manuscripts were destroyed during those
    years. Monasteries and churches had their collections of manuscripts
    gathered by monks. We have 177 lists of manuscripts at Matenadaran
    today. A comparative study lets us see which of them reached us and
    which disappeared,' says Charakhchyan.

    Besides Matenadaran, saved manuscripts are also kept in the world's
    different scientific institutes, monasteries, libraries - Jerusalem,
    Vienna, Paris. Arevshatyan says that cases are known when Turk
    vandals, seeing the great material value of manuscripts, took them and
    sold them in Europe.

    `In 1916, one Turkish officer went to the well-known Armenologist
    Joseph Marquarti and offered to buy about 10 manuscripts. Marquarti
    bought them and granted to the Mkhitarian library of Vienna,' says
    Arevshatyan.

    According to the Matenadaran director, there are a lot of manuscripts
    also kept in Istanbul, but these manuscripts, he says, are not
    exhibited, but are kept secretly.

    French-Armenian historian Claude (Armen) Mutafian granted to
    Matenadaran a piece of the rich collection of manuscripts and
    engravings now kept with French-Armenian historian Sargis Poghosian's
    sister. That was a page of the 17th chapter of John's gospel written
    in an old Armenian handwriting style.

    THE GERMAN QUESTION: HISTORIAN STUDIES DEUTSCHLAND'S REACTION TO THE GENOCIDE

    By Arpi Harutyunyan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Recently the Department for the Armenian Question and Armenian
    Genocide at the Institute of History National Academy of Sciences
    published an exclusive collection of German documents on the Armenian
    Genocide.

    On the initiative of department head Stepan Stepanyan, who has been
    studying German archives for years, a summary of the German documents
    reveal topics never before spoken about.

    Nearly 500 pages, the volume is in Armenian and Russian and includes
    data on more than 200 documents.

    Three years ago Wolfgang Gust, a journalist working for `Spiegel'
    magazine, and his wife, Sigrid presented the documents to the Armenian
    scholar.

    The couple had once read the history of Armenia and Armenians and has
    been interested especially in the `Armenian Question'. They started to
    purposefully study the German archival materials. As a result they
    found numerous important documents relating to the genocide of
    Armenians and decided to send them to Armenia.

    Learning about Stepanyan's interest, they contacted him and passed the
    archival documents to him.

    `At the end of my studies I concluded that, had it been willing,
    Germany could have prevented our genocide,' Stepanyan says. `I have
    found a document where German Foreign Minister Arthur Zimmermann
    writes the German do not need Armenians and an Armenia populated with
    Armenians is harmful for their interests.'

    The Department for Armenian Question and Armenian Genocide at the
    Institute of History has been around since the 1960s, created during
    the same period as the Genocide Memorial.

    The department has published more than 300 works on the Genocide.

    During his leadership academician Mkrtich Nersisyan directed the
    publication of the first collection of documents titled `The Genocide
    of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire'.

    The volume includes documents from Russian, German, British and
    Armenian archives.

    The collection has been a research source for many academic works.

    Stepanyan, though, has always directed his interest toward Germany's
    position on the Genocide.

    `The German archives are really very reliable. From the beginning of
    the 19th century Germany has been and remains one of Turkey's biggest
    allies,' Stepanyan says. `This power has been aware of all the
    developments in Turkey, has been aware of the preparations Turkey made
    for the Armenian genocide. All these are clearly expressed in the
    materials of the German archives.'

    According to Stepanyan he is the first Armenian historian who has
    delved into the German archives after the Second World War.

    The majority of the documents he revealed describe the cruelty with
    which the Turks carried out their plan.

    `Armenians were disarmed and literally slaughtered, were burnt with
    oil, were thrown into rivers alive, women were raped, then killed, the
    bodies of pregnant women were cut and babies killed: this is how the
    Armenian massacre is described in the German documents,' Stepanyan
    says.

    Of the documents he revealed historian Stepanyan stresses especially
    the open letter addressed to the US President Woodrow Wilson in
    January 1919 by German writer and Armenian sympathizer Armin Wegner.

    The content is approximately the following: `Mister President, you do
    not close your ears when a foreigner talks to you. But I present you
    the history of annihilation of a nation the Young Turks did... In the
    spring of 1915 the Turkish authorities initiated the deportation and
    the genocide of 2 million Armenians.'

    Wegner documented the Armenian genocide in 1915, with more than 2,000
    photos. After exhibiting the photos in Germany he sent them to
    Armenia, but they have not been preserved.

    Historian Stepanyan says his department's research is essential. But
    he believes the state should take more action to facilitate general
    recognition of the Genocide.

    `We do our best. But we cannot promote anything alone,' he says. `Our
    state should never give up its exacting and stubborn position. And we
    historians should continue presenting the international community the
    dark pages of the Armenian Genocide.'

    SILENT WITNESS: GRAPHIC NOVEL SEEKS TO DRAW ATTENTION TO GENOCIDE

    By Gayane Abrahamyan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    The first of a planned series of illustrated novels telling Genocide
    stories has been released.

    `Order From Constantinople' is the work of painter Tigran Mangasaryan
    and film director Ruben Tsaturyan. It is the first in a seven-book
    series called `Silence'. The 56 paged book with 46 painted pages is
    produced for a general audience.

    Like frames in a film, produced in the `Bande Dessinee' style popular
    in France, the book draws the reader's attention with illustrations
    that change like frames in a film.

    `Visual art has much stronger and quicker influence than any
    scientific book,' says Mangarsaryan. `If today we have no
    opportunities for making films then the second most popular method is
    the graphic novel.'

    He says Armenians should learn from Jewish experience in raising the
    issue of the Holocaust worldwide. One of the best- known Bande
    Dessinee novels is `Mice', which is claimed by some experts to have
    been more popular than Spielberg's movie `Schindler's List'. In it,
    mice wearing striped uniforms in concentration camps represent Jews,
    cats bearing swastikas are Nazi Germans and pigs betraying Jews are
    Poles.

    The authors of the Armenian work are sure that this method of
    presenting the bitter history of the Genocide is precisely right for
    people in developed countries who simply have no time to read books.

    `Besides, no matter how thoroughly you describe with the written word
    a Turk's furious face, for whom slaughtering a child is just the same
    as slaughtering chicken, this face must be drawn. People must not only
    imagine these eyes they must see them to understand the unrecognized
    tragedy of a whole nation,' says Mangasaryan.

    The author acknowledges, too, that if methods of presenting the
    Genocide are not backed up with facts then they may lose their
    value. But Mangasaryan is sure that an imaginative representation of
    reality will raise the issue of Genocide recognition much more quickly
    and will have greater influence.

    `There are numerous documentary materials and fat books in the
    Genocide Museum but who reads them? Even for me, who had to read some
    books for my work, it was very difficult. Every time I tried to put it
    off and find other sources,' says the painter.

    At the back of every book, the authors decided to place one
    documentary photo corresponding to the relevant events and a list of
    names of people who became victims of the Genocide, with dates of
    birth and places of residence (a list that will be completed only
    after the entire series is finished). There will be also a list of the
    countries that have recognized the fact of Genocide.

    The first book of the `Silence' series includes more than 300
    emotional and vivid illustrations. And, though the authors hope to
    make an international impact with their series, the first run of books
    is only 2,000 and is printed in Armenian. The authors paid for the
    publishing themselves, but are hopeful of finding a sponsor who will
    underwrite future releases - at least an English-language version.

    The heroes of `Order from Constantinople' are fictional characters
    taken from real-life stories, given the names Haykuhi and Harutiun.

    `When our hero is asked about the bitter days of the Genocide he says
    he cannot talk about it as it's hard for him to recall everything that
    had happened and he prefers silence,' explains Mangasaryan. According
    to him, the terror was so big that it is inhumane to talk about it.

    Dramatic developments of the hero's life will continue in the next
    book, which the authors have titled `The Letter on the Sand'. It will
    describe the slaughter that took place in the desert of Der Zor.

    Lavrenti Barseghyan, the director of the Genocide Museum of Armenia,
    welcomes the `Silence' series.

    `This book is necessary not only for telling the world about our
    tragedy but also for showing the young generation in Armenia and
    Diaspora the dark pages of their nation,' he says. `Even so, for me
    it's hard to accept the fact that the new generation doesn't read much
    and is more interested in such visual means, which are easy to
    perceive.'

    THE POWER OF SONG: NEW PIECE TELLS GENOCIDE STORY IN 17 LANGUAGES

    By Gayane Abrahamyan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    While politicians appeal to the world to recognize the fact of the
    Armenian Genocide, people of culture try to break the thick layer of
    indifference with the powerful weapon of their art.

    Composer Ara Gevorgyan's song `Adana', lyrics by American Daniel
    Decker, is translated into 17 languages and recorded by singers of 14
    nations across the world, including a Turkish singer.

    On April 24 the commemoration day of the Genocide this song will for
    the first time be presented in the Tsitsernakaberd memorial complex
    performed by foreign singers who've come here for the special day.

    Gevorgyan says 14 singers have been invited to perform the song at the
    Genocide Monument. Many can't make it because of performance
    schedules.

    `But the very fact that a song telling about the Genocide is sang in
    17 languages and many of the singers include it in their CDs I already
    a big achievement,' says Gevorgyan.

    With the support of the RA Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan, former
    Mayor of Yerevan Robert Nazaryan and the Ministry of Culture and Youth
    Affairs six singers will arrive in Armenia: Finnish pop singer Inka,
    singer and author of the lyrics Daniel Decker, Kai Auhagen from
    Germany, Bulgarian opera singer tenor Tzvetan Tzvetkov, Moldavian
    Vitalie Dani.

    `We have come to Armenia to let the world know that there was the
    genocide of Armenians and it is a fact, and if the world keeps silence
    now, then there is still a danger that a similar phenomenon will
    recur, Turkey must simply have the courage and admit the fault of its
    history,' says the author of the lyrics, singer Daniel Decker.

    The Finn singer Inca describes her visit to Armenia as a great
    mission, according to her, it is `not the tragedy of only one nation,
    but that of the whole world.'

    `I am very proud that I am here today, next to you and can perform my
    mission through a song to prevent this evil from being committed
    against mankind,' says Inca.

    The 6 minute long song starts with an introduction where the singer
    reads the following lines on the background of a plaintive score:

    In the city of Adana during the darkest days of the Ottoman Empire,
    there began a tragedy that marked the start of what was to become
    known as the Armenian Genocide. The people of Armenia were forced into
    starvation, torture and extermination. Armenian homes were burned to
    the ground as women were raped and tortured, children were bought and
    sold and men were killed before their very eyes. Often entire families
    were wiped out. They were accused, convicted and sentenced to die
    because they dared to call themselves "Christians", their crime was in
    believing in Jesus Christ who died for their sins.

    In 1915 1.5 million Armenians were ruthlessly slaughtered, because
    they would not renounce their faith in Christ. Unpunished and
    undeterred the ones responsible for the massacre in Adana set stage
    for the terrible genocide of the Armenian people.

    This is their story.

    Then the melancholic melody carries the words filled with 90 years of
    grief and pain:

    >From the morning sun till the day was done

    Fathers worked until their strength was gone,

    In the summer air under mother's care

    Children played within the village square.

    Through the soil and sand, farmers worked the land

    Gathering what they grew by their own hand,

    Living day by day, trying to make their way

    Unaware of the price they would soon pay.

    CHORUS

    Keepers of the sword, marched in one accord

    Striking down the weak, without a single word

    Ruthlessly they came, with one deadly aim

    Kill all who believed in Jesus' name.

    In the shroud of night, families took their flight

    Unprotected by the soldier's might,

    Hungry and alone, starved to skin and bone

    Forced to sleep on pillows made of stone.

    Wandering in the rain, trembling from the pain

    Cries for mercy offered up in vain,

    Naked and afraid, on their knees they prayed

    As they knelt before the warrior's blade... singing.

    CHORUS

    To the great I AM, Worthy is the Lamb

    To Him who sits upon the throne we bow before You,

    Holy is the One, God's Almighty Son

    Glory to the Christ, Our risen King.

    Though persecuted, they were not abandoned as they laid down their
    earthly lives, they would gain entirety with Christ. Though the world
    may forget, God would remember their suffering. Never again would they
    hunger or thirst. For the Son of God, Jesus Christ, would be their
    shepherd who would lead them to the springs of living water and God
    would wipe away every tear for their eyes. They would encircle the
    throne of God singing to the great I Am, worthy is the Lamp, who and
    is, and is to come.

    The author of the lyrics, Decker is also known for his performance of
    spiritual works.

    `Still last year I received a letter from one Turk who wrote at the
    beginning of his letter in capital letters `SHAME ON YOU', making an
    accusation that the words of the song are totally a lie, and I
    answered him that one should simply look at the facts and know the
    true history of one's own country,' says Decker.

    In the Armenian version of the song the performers will be accompanied
    also with `Cilicia' choir, the art director of which - Marika
    Yedigaryan - says this song is so melodic and includes so much emotion
    it has the power of unification.

    `We had such emotional experience while performing the song, there has
    been no rehearsal not interrupted with emotions,' says Yedigaryan.

    `All of our nation should be grateful to the singers who have
    performed the song and have included it in their repertoires for this
    way they have told their listeners about us, risking their reputation,
    willingly entering Turkey's blacklist, have stood by our side ignoring
    the fact,' says Gevorgyan.

    FIGHTING BACK: KICKBOXER USES HIS FEET TO PROMOTE HIS PEOPLE'S MESSAGE

    By Suren Musayelyan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    American-Armenian Shawn Yacoubian, 28, is fighting his way toward the
    top of the sport of kickboxing, with reasons that go beyond athletics.

    Yacoubian, currently ranked 10 by the ISKA (International Sport Karate
    Association) and 7 by the IKF (International Kickboxing Federation),
    says that apart from his sporting ambitions he has also another
    important mission in his life prompted by his ethnicity and date of
    birth.

    The descendant of genocide survivors who relocated to Pasadena,
    California, Shawn was born on April 24 and says that he has always
    used his date of birth as a means to convey the message of the
    genocide.

    `I view my birth date as a blessing more than a `curse',' he says. `I
    understand how many Armenians were killed on this very day in 1915,
    but I look at the day of my birth as a new beginning and all the more
    reason why I aim to succeed in becoming a popular Armenian fighter.'

    Yacoubian, whose parents are both from Syria (Damascus and Aleppo),
    says that even though he is a distant descendant of the people who
    suffered the horrors of the genocide and deportations and grew up in a
    totally different time and culture, he always feels the link between
    himself and his historical homeland.

    `I have always held my culture high and am proud to be Armenian,' he
    says. `I make it a point to let the commentators know my background so
    they can incorporate it while commenting about me during fights.'

    Shawn's early years of schooling began at an American Private school
    near his home in Pasadena. He then started attending an Armenian
    private school by the third grade and continued going to Armenian
    schools throughout his junior high years to the beginning of high
    school up until 9th grade.

    He says his Armenian parents were a great influence on him in starting
    martial arts at the age of 15 and had supported him from day one even
    though, he says, in the eyes of many fighting is looked down on.

    Now he has grown to be an active member of the Armenian community and
    says that fighting has helped him promote the Armenian cause
    throughout his career and not least because of his date of birth,
    something that he thinks has given the collective strength of the
    nation to his muscles.

    `I see myself as an entertainer of sorts with which I use my stature
    to bring forth education of my birth date,' he says. `My date of
    birth, in my opinion, symbolizes a rebirth (with a fighting spirit) of
    a culture that was slain in hopes of extinction.'

    Yacoubian says that although there have been numerous books and movies
    on the subject of the Armenian Genocide, yet it has not been
    recognized like the Jewish Holocaust and therefore, he says, he feels
    it is his duty to take part in protests along with other things to
    bring recognition to this `silent' genocide.

    `I feel for the many people who lost their lives in the genocide in
    the 1900's,' Yacoubian says. `I feel as it is my obligation and with
    my willingness I strive to teach others of the massacres.'

    Interestingly, Shawn's brother Raffi was also born on April 24. They
    are five years apart.

    Both actively participate in events commemorating the Genocide every
    year. Last year, for example, they went to the memorial statute in
    Montebello and then marched to the Turkish Consulate along with other
    protestors.

    This year among other things Shawn is one of the sponsors of a website
    commemorating the genocide events (www.GenocideEvents.com).

    The Armenian fighter widely known across the Armenian Diaspora has
    never been to Armenia, but says he will be thrilled when that day
    comes. He says he gets a lot of support from Armenia and the rest of
    the world.

    `I am connected to the Armenian community through organizations in
    schools and others who have helped promote me through independent
    Armenian channels,' he says.

    The fighter has a busy schedule this year. He will be fighting on the
    island of Trinidad in the Caribbeans for a WKA Pan-American title in
    April/May and at the same time will be preparing for a WPKA fight in
    Japan in June. After that he hopes to return to fight on the K-1 show
    in Las Vegas.

    In-between kickboxing fights this year Shawn will be competing in
    professional boxing as well `to stay busy'.

    To follow his career, visit his website at www.shawnyacoubian.com.
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