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Boston community marks 90th anniversary of Armenian Genocide

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  • Boston community marks 90th anniversary of Armenian Genocide

    PRESS RELEASE

    The Greater Boston Committee to Commemorate the Armenian Genocide
    P.O. Box 35538
    Boston, MA 02135
    Contact: David Davidian
    Tel: 857-373-9059
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: www.weremember1915.org

    April 26, 2005

    OVER 750 ATTEND PROGRAM AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY'S MORSE AUDITORIUM GIVEN
    BY THE GREATER BOSTON COMMITTEE TO COMMEMORATE THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE,
    IN COOPERATION WITH THE BOSTON UNIVERSITY ARMENIAN STUDENTS
    ASSOCIATION ON APRIL 21, 2005

    BOSTON - They came from the cities and suburbs, from France and Iran
    and Armenia -- students, survivors, descendants, and friends of all
    persuasions -- to Boston University's Morse Auditorium, the venue for
    Greater Boston's commemoration of the 90th anniversary of the Turkish
    genocide of the Armenians, held on April 21.

    This was an unprecedented event for the Boston community. Boston
    University's President Dr. Aram Chobanian greeted the gathering and
    shared with the audience his and his wife Jasmin's own family survival
    stories. He then lit a single candle as the room went dark to the
    strains of Kim Kashkashian's Kroonk filling the somber
    night. Quotations from Samantha Power 's "A Problem from Hell: America
    and the Age of Genocide" and New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof
    provided contemporary transitions between sections of the 75 minute
    program.

    An original documentary created for this event explained the social,
    economic, and political conditions in Ottoman Turkey preceding the
    extermination of the Armenians, explaining how the savage murder of
    the Armenian people was part of a premeditated plan to ethnically
    cleanse any non-Turkifiable minority in Anatolia. It showed painfully
    and clearly how today's Republic of Turkey was built on the bones of
    millions of Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians.

    The core of the program centered on three video taped survivor stories
    from Van, Bandirma, and Marash. John Kasparian of Worcester, Armineh
    Dedekian of Watertown, and Peter Bilezikian of Newton, gave
    compelling, personal accounts of their expulsion, death march,
    survival, and escape to freedom. Interspersed among their testimonies
    were four deeply moving live accounts from descendants between the
    ages of 10 to 45, sharing their family survival stories. They took the
    audience from Moush to Van then Tiflis and Soviet Plant 31, from
    Adapazar to Der Zor, Bandirma to Aleppo, Kharpert to Constantinople,
    as Arthur Martirosyan of Watertown, Taline Bilazarian of Andover,
    Katrina Menzigian of Arlington, and George and Kathryn Margaret
    Aghjayan of West Boylston related their histories.

    Just as emotions reached a crescendo, an up-beat clip projected the
    enthusiastic sights and sounds of Armenians world-wide proclaiming, "I
    am Armenian" from 5 continents from Australia to Canada. Christopher
    Babayan of Tufts University led the audience to declare, "tonight,
    everyone who stands for human rights and against genocide is an
    Armenian." The audience joined in singing Sardarabad as scenes from
    Yerevan together with interactive shots of the audience itself flashed
    across the screen. Cambridge poet Diana Der Hovanessian wrote a
    poignant poem for the occasion, which concludes with the words,

    By now they thought the last survivors and their children would be in
    graves. They didn't count on our children's children being even
    angrier and more outraged.

    Interviewed as the audience exited Morse Auditorium, David Davidian,
    creator of the event and director of the Genocide Archive Project in
    Belmont, said, "The enormity of this crime against humanity is very
    personal for each Armenian. We worked together to make this evening
    something more than a standard set of speeches or an academic
    exercise. We wanted to bring these stories to a new generation of well
    educated and creative people to carry on down the Road to Redemption
    until we are no longer faced with denial."

    The evening concluded with a candlelight march across Commonwealth
    Avenue to a symbolic sharing of bread and wine at Boston University's
    School of Management, where two video booths were provided to those
    who wished to relate their own family stories. A recording of the
    event is available for sale on DVD at www.preciouscultures.org.
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