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  • Steps to a better world

    Loveland Herald Reporter, CO
    Aug. 25, 2006


    Steps to a better world
    Cross-country trek aims to focus attention on genocide in Darfur

    By Alicia Beard
    The Daily Reporter-Herald

    After the Rwandan genocide in which thousands of Tutsis were killed
    during a 1994 civil war, international leaders declared, "never
    again."
    But, 12 years later, it is happening again, says Hasmig Tatiossian.
    This time in Darfur, Africa.

    Tatiossian and fellow Journey for Humanity marchers are walking from
    Los Angeles to Washington, D.C., to raise awareness about genocide.

    This week, the group is making stops in Front Range cities, including
    a visit to Loveland Thursday.

    Herself a descendent of a survivor of the 1915 Armenian genocide,
    Tatiossian said she feels a personal duty to help end genocide.

    "That historical memory has been inscribed upon our identity," she
    said. "We feel we have a responsibility to carry the torch of
    awareness."

    The group, sponsored by the United Armenian Students, is joined
    during the Colorado leg of the four-month journey by the Colorado
    Coalition for Genocide Awareness and Action. Essie Garrett, the 1996
    Olympic torchbearer for Colorado, is also taking part in this portion
    of the march.

    At each of the Colorado stops, the coalition has set up its exhibit,
    "The Dead Weight of Complacency."

    The exhibit captures the common traits and history of genocide,
    starting in the 1400s with the Spanish Inquisition and ending with
    the present Darfur genocide in western Sudan.

    There, three years of militia violence has caused the death of about
    400,000 people and the displacement of 2.5 million others.

    Roz Duman, coalition founder, said participating in the march
    provided an opportunity to confront complacency and a lack of
    education.

    "Every year we say, 'never again,' and 'What lessons have we learned
    from the Holocaust?'" she said. "We felt we had to do something about
    this."

    Along the way, participants are holding rallies and meeting with
    lawmakers, Tatiossian said. By the time their millions of steps take
    them to Washington in October, she said she hopes a movement takes
    hold; that people begin to remember that we are all part of the human
    race.

    "Genocide is a crime against humanity, all humanity," she said. "It's
    a crime that affects everyone."
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