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Daily Illini: Campus remembers Armenian genocide

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  • Daily Illini: Campus remembers Armenian genocide

    Daily Illini, IL
    April 25 2005

    Campus remembers Armenian genocide

    Candlelight vigil on Quad honors 1.5 million killed in genocide 90
    years ago

    By Gina Siemplenski

    The Armenian Association (ArmA) held a candlelight vigil on the Quad
    Sunday night to remember the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
    genocide by the Turkish military.
    About 20 attendants remembered the annihilation of 1.5 million
    Armenians in Ottoman Turkey and the deportation of almost the entire
    Armenian population from its ancestral lands in the Asia Minor that
    began on April 24, 1915.
    Selected readings, poetry and prayers were read in addition to a
    90-second moment of silence. A song called "Krunk" was also played on
    a violin by ArmA treasurer and business major Lauren Buchakjian. The
    song was composed by a victim of the genocide.
    Zaruhi Sahakyan, president of ArmA, said there were two purposes for
    the ceremony.
    "First, we want to remember those innocent victims in 1915 and the
    years after. Second, if we do not learn from the past then we are
    doomed to repeat it," Sahakyan said.
    Controversy continues to surround the mass killings. While virtually
    everyone acknowledges that the massacre happened, Turkey disputes
    that it was planned and carried out by the state - thus the label
    "genocide" does not apply, it says.
    "The evidence is absolutely overwhelming and not just in the American
    archives," said Robert Krikorian, professor at George Washington
    University in Washington, D.C.
    However, more and more countries, regions and cities recognize the
    Armenian genocide, Sahakyan said.
    "This is an important development since a greater acknowledgement of
    genocide by the community of nations will serve the purpose of
    preventing and condemning a genocide in the future and will
    ultimately promote the understanding of the issue in Turkey itself,"
    Sahakyan said.
    Sahakyan asked that the world community heed the lessons of the
    Armenian Genocide.
    "First to recognize the early 'seeds' of genocide and act speedily to
    prevent a full-blown genocide and secondly, to resist and rebuke the
    deniers of genocide because denial will only encourage rogue states
    to attempt genocide in the future," Sahakyan said.

    Many people believe that because the international community did
    nothing to punish Turkey for its crimes in Armenia, Hitler became
    more confident that he could successfully carry out the massacre of
    six million Jews in the Nazi Holocaust, Sahakyan said.
    "Hopefully one day humankind will be freed of the scourge of genocide
    once and for all," he said.
    The vigil drew many people of Armenian heritage, including Jacob
    Portukalian, freshman at Vincennes University in Vincennes, Ind., to
    attend the ceremony.
    "I would like to think of this as an opportunity to remember what
    happened to my people and reflect on their tragedies," Portukalian
    said.
    The vigil's goal was to offer prayers for the soul, but today a more
    academic approach will be taken to understanding the historic event,
    Sahakyan said.
    Students who want to know more about the Armenian killings are
    encouraged to attend the seminar "American Genocide and Historical
    Memory," delivered by Krikorian. It is at 2:00 p.m. at the Illini
    Union, room 210.
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