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Australia: Sydney Armenian Community Commemorates the Genocide

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  • Australia: Sydney Armenian Community Commemorates the Genocide

    PRESS RELEASE
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of Australia & New Zealand
    10 Macquarie Street
    Chatswood NSW 2067
    AUSTRALIA
    Contact: Laura Artinian
    Tel: (02) 9419-8056
    Fax: (02) 9904-8446
    Email: [email protected]


    26 April 2005


    LEST WE FORGET
            
    Sydney, Australia - As Armenian communities around the world observed solemn
    commemorations on this 90th anniversary year of the Armenian Genocide,
    Armenian-Australians have united also to mark not only the memorial of its
    Armenian martyrs but also the ANZAC.

    The Primate of the Diocese of Australia and New Zealand, His Eminence
    Archbishop Aghan Baliozian presided over and attended a number of
    commemorative events over the course of the weekend.

    On Saturday, 23 April, the Primate accompanied by parish priests and deacons
    held a prayer service at the Cenotaph (war memorial) at Martin Place, Sydney
    during a wreath-laying ceremony for the undying memories of the victims of
    the Armenian Genocide and the ANZAC soldiers who fought in WWI. A large
    contingent of faithful Armenian community members flocked the memorial to
    pay their personal respects.

    On Sunday, 24 April, a Divine Liturgy and Requiem Service was offered by
    Reverend Father Norayr Patanian at the Altar of the Armenian Genocide
    Monument at Macquarie Park Cemetery in the northern suburbs. On the same
    morning, the Divine Liturgy was celebrated by Reverend Father Bartev
    Karakashian at St Benedict's Catholic Church for the Armenian congregation
    of western suburbs. The Primate delivered the day's sermon at the northern
    suburbs' service and soon after attended a dedication ceremony to install a
    commemorative plaque in Memorial Park, Meadowbank in the city of Ryde
    following the Council's unanimous passing of a motion officially recognising
    the Armenian Genocide on 12 April, 2005 - the first local government of
    Australia to do so. Archbishop Aghan Baliozian was invited by Ryde City
    Council to open the dedication ceremony with his prayer and blessing.

    Mid-afternoon the Primate accompanied by parish priests and deacons attended
    a Requiem Service at the Armenian Genocide Memorial at Rookwood Cemetery
    where the faithful of the area gathered to partake in the solemn service
    offering prayers for the repose of the souls of the Armenian martyrs.

    In the evening, the 90th Anniversary Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide
    under the primateship of His Eminence Archbishop Aghan Baliozian was held at
    Willoughby Town Hall, Sydney. Guest speaker for the evening was Mrs Hilda
    Tchoboian, Chairperson of the Armenian European Federation. The
    commemoration evening gathered a capacity crowd of over 800. The Primate
    delivered the closing address recalling on an account given by Ambassador
    Henry Morgenthau, American Ambassador at Constantinople from 1913 to 1916,
    likening the resilient Armenian spirit to the following episode with Talaat
    Pasha. At a dinner party when the Ambassador appealed to Talaat on the
    mistreatment of the Armenians, Talaat angrily grabbed a bunch of grapes from
    the table, squeezed the grapes to a pulp extracting every ounce of juice,
    throwing it to the ground and asserted this was how he was going to quash
    the Armenians. To which the American Ambassador replied yes, he had indeed
    succeeded in extracting the juice from the grapes and pulverising the fruit
    but was unable to crush its seeds.

    Early Monday dawn on 25 April, the Primate accompanied by Diocesan Council
    Chairman, Mr Armen Baghdasarayan, attended the Chatswood-Willoughby ANZAC
    Dawn Service, a service of remembrance and homage. ANZAC Day is a national
    day of remembrance and marks the anniversary of the first major military
    action fought by Australian and New Zealand forces during the First World
    War. When forces landed at Gallipoli in Turkey on 25 April, 1915 they met
    fierce resistance from Turkish defenders and over 8,000 Australian soldiers
    were killed with a multitude of heavy casualties. 25 April has become the
    day on which Australians remember the sacrifice of those who died in war.

    Early morning on 25 April, His Eminence Archbishop Aghan Baliozian travelled
    to Auckland, New Zealand and met with the small Armenian community to
    commemorate the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide that same evening.
    The Archbishop celebrated the Divine Liturgy and Requiem Service at St
    Peter's Anglican Church, Takapuna that was followed by a commemoration
    evening where the Primate gave the keynote address.
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