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  • Somber ceremony recalls horrific genocide

    Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, NY
    April 25 2005

    Somber ceremony recalls horrific genocide


    Enid Arbelo
    Staff writer


    (April 25, 2005) - With lit candles in hand, about 50 people recited
    the Lord's Prayer in Armenian.

    They listened in silence as the names of relatives, friends and loved
    ones who died during the Armenian genocide in 1915 were read and
    remembered.

    Members of the Armenian Church of Rochester hosted a prayer service
    and special ceremony Sunday at St. Thomas Episcopal Church to
    commemorate the 90th anniversary of the massacre of 1.5 million
    Armenians in Turkey.

    Although April 1915 was a cruel time for the Armenian people, the
    world soon forgot about the first major genocide of the 20th century,
    said Max Boudakian, the keynote speaker after the prayer service.

    That's why the group thought it was important to gather and be
    assured their voices would be heard.

    "The world had turned a deaf ear to the Armenians. That is why the
    1915 Armenian genocide is often referred to as 'The Forgotten
    Genocide,'" said Boudakian, of Pittsford.

    He also shared stories about a recent trip to the Armenian Genocide
    Memorial in Yerevan and his mother Gadarine Boudakian, Rochester's
    last genocide-era survivor. She died in 2000 at the age of 94.

    "The genocide curtain of silence is slowly being opened," he said,
    noting that recognition of the tragic events seems hopeful and
    attainable. The Turkish government has never officially recognized
    the Armenian genocide.

    At Sunday's event, Armenian-born Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra
    violinist Tigran Vardanyan performed, and others read poetry and sang
    songs about loved ones lost to the genocide.

    Wearing pins symbolizing the Armenian flag made from orange, blue and
    red ribbons, the group sat quietly as a brief program documenting the
    genocide was given. The slides depicted a horrific truth for many in
    the room.

    "All Armenians have been touched," said Berdjouhi Esmerian,
    chairperson of the Armenian Church of Rochester.

    The frustration, she said, is that despite the catastrophic history,
    Armenians still have not gotten the recognition or compensation they
    deserve.

    So people, such as Cathy Salibian of Fairport, came to remember the
    tragic events, but also look to the future.

    "People say, 'It's over. Why don't we just move on?' It's not over,
    and denial is one way to allow it to happen over and over again," she
    said.
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