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UCLA: Coalition Of Students Rallies For Recognition Of Genocide

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  • UCLA: Coalition Of Students Rallies For Recognition Of Genocide

    COALITION OF STUDENTS RALLIES FOR RECOGNITION OF GENOCIDE
    By Jed Levine
    Daily Bruin Contributor
    [email protected]

    The UCLA Daily Bruin, CA
    April 24, 2006

    Members, allies of Armenian community take steps to gain formal
    acknowledgment of event.

    UCLA students, along with Armenian students from across Southern
    California, came together with the Armenian community Saturday
    night for "Blinded by Injustice: Rally Against Denial" to remember
    those who were killed in the 1915 Armenian Genocide and campaign for
    international recognition.

    Today marks the day of remembrance for the genocide that began 91
    years ago and lasted for eight years, killing an estimated 1.5 million
    Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turkey.

    While bodies like the California Congress, the European Union and
    other nations have officially acknowledged the genocide, both the
    United States and Turkish governments have not.

    For Haig Hovesepian, a pharmacology graduate student who was the
    UCLA representative coordinator of the event, the rally called to
    support involvement in the democratic process, something he believes
    is crucial to gaining formal recognition of the genocide.

    "It's not just enough to be aware and feel something about the issue,
    but also to do something about the issue," said Hovesepian.

    "(We) have to continually knock on the doors of their representatives
    and tell them this is important to you," he added.

    Saturday's rally in Glendale, the hub of the Armenian community in
    the U.S., was coordinated by the All Armenian Student Association
    Confederation, a coalition of Armenian Student Associations from 12
    universities in the Southern California area.

    More than 200 members and allies of the Armenian community were in
    attendance, including Congressman Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, a longtime
    supporter of the Armenian effort for genocide recognition.

    Schiff spoke to the crowd about his current efforts to pass
    HConRes195, which would be an official recognition of the genocide
    by the U.S. Congress and would urge Turkey to seek resolution with
    the Armenian people.

    He questioned why Congress voted to acknowledge a genocide in Darfur
    and not the Armenian genocide.

    "(The U.S. is) a greater country than that, and I think it's
    tremendously important that we lead by example and that we call
    genocide for what it is," said Schiff after his speech.

    A series of events last week, including Saturday's rally and
    a benefit concert held last night, have led up to a march to the
    Turkish Consulate this afternoon.

    Nareeneh Sohbatian, a fourth-year international development studies
    and political science student, is a member of Alpha Omega Alpha,
    the Armenian sorority at UCLA, which collected over a dozen sandwich
    boards from other campus groups and covered them with black paper
    and information about the genocide, placing them along Bruin Walk.

    "It's about continuing to educate the Armenian community and educating
    the community at large," Sohbatian said of the various events being
    held around the day of remembrance.

    The issue of recognition of the Armenian Genocide came to a head at
    UCLA in 1997, when the Turkish government offered $1 million to endow
    a Turkish studies chair.

    The offer came with multiple preconditions including that the chair
    would need to "maintain close and cordial relations with academic
    circles in Turkey," provisions which raised red flags among the
    Armenian students of UCLA.

    The current stance of the Turkish government and Turkish academics
    is that a genocide did not occur and that the deaths were the result
    of quelling civil unrest and fallout from World War I.

    Arbi Ohanian was a fourth-year at UCLA at the time, and took part
    in the campaign against the donation that resulted in a vote by the
    UCLA Department of History in which the money was turned down due to
    possible conflicts in academic integrity.

    "It's still a contemporary issue. It's not just something that happened
    91 years ago, as evidenced by the Turkish Study Chair (incident),"
    said Ohanian while attending the rally. "It's continued denial that's
    occurring."

    In years past, students have organized vigils on their campuses to
    remember the genocide, however, this year the main event was moved
    to Glendale.

    Coordinators also changed the event from a vigil to a rally, as it
    has evolved in placing more emphasis on politics and the democratic
    process than in previous years.

    "In recent years the vigil looked less like a vigil and more like a
    rally. This is more like a call to action," said Christopher Minassian,
    chairman of the Genocide Recognition Committee, of the evolution of
    the event.

    Hovesepian said the importance of events like the "Rally Against
    Denial" is that they help to keep the issues of the genocide in
    people's minds and in the public eye.

    "There are individuals out there who would like to see these types
    of issues dropped because they're inconvenient," Hovesepian said.

    "So when you have individuals such as ourselves become complacent,
    it gives these individuals the opportunity to erase these things like
    genocide from our collective conscience. It's not just our community
    but a lesson for other communities," he added.

    Many of the people in attendance Saturday night also felt that
    continued awareness was important for the Armenian community.

    "I don't think there's a difference between April 24 and any other
    day," said Maral Karagozian, a recent UCLA graduate and former member
    of the ASA.

    "It should always be in our minds that (the Armenian Genocide) is a
    part of us."
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