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Boston: Greenway Board Seeks Armenian Park Delay

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  • Boston: Greenway Board Seeks Armenian Park Delay

    GREENWAY BOARD SEEKS ARMENIAN PARK DELAY
    By Thomas C. Palmer Jr., Globe Staff | May 3, 2006

    Boston Globe, MA
    May 3 2006

    Members of the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway Conservancy board
    don't have the authority to reject a proposal to build a memorial
    park along the Greenway, but its chairman said yesterday it would
    exert influence to delay or relocate the park.

    "We have talked, on the conservancy board, about not having any
    memorials or statues on the Greenway for at least five years,"
    said Peter Meade, chairman of the conservancy's 10-member board,
    which includes Edwin Schlossberg, the husband of Caroline Kennedy
    Schlossberg, granddaughter of Greenway namesake Rose Kennedy.

    Yesterday the board was briefed for the first time on a proposal to
    build a park that would memorialize the Armenian genocide along the
    Greenway, a series of parks being created along the corridor of the old
    Central Artery. A state law, passed in 2000, directed the Massachusetts
    Turnpike Authority to study building an Armenian memorial.

    The conservancy, which was set up to endow, maintain, and organize
    events for the Greenway, has no direct authority over what is built
    there; the turnpike authority controls that. But, asked whether the
    board has a say in the matter, Meade said, "I think we do."

    Fred Yalouris, director of architecture for the Big Dig, said what
    goes on that location is "not part of the conservancy's area of
    purview." But he added, "Obviously, we will talk with them."

    Yalouris said the Armenian proposal "fit perfectly" on the space
    available, next to a planned history museum. Asked whether it was of
    concern to him that the proposal memorializes Armenians in particular
    more than other immigrant groups, Yalouris said, "Yes it is, but it's
    what they proposed."

    "This is like a public park at no expense to the taxpayer," he said.

    The proposed Armenian park would be the sole memorial along the
    Greenway. There is not even a plan for a bust or statue of Rose
    Kennedy. Throughout Boston, there are numerous memorials to ethnic
    groups and causes, such as the New England Holocaust Memorial, erected
    near Faneuil Hall in 1995. But many people involved in Greenway design
    during the last decade -- from neighbors to members of the Mayor's
    Central Artery Completion Task Force -- have said they wanted to
    steer clear of statues or monuments to causes.

    The memorial park's supporters emphasize that it is intended as a
    tribute to all immigrant groups, not just Armenians.

    When Erkut Gomulu, president of the Turkish American Cultural Society
    of New England, objected to the placement of an Armenian memorial
    on the Greenway at yesterday's board meeting, Meade said: "This is
    exactly what we're trying to avoid on the Greenway. There will be a
    number of groups coming to say, 'What about me?' 'What about us?' "

    The memorial has also drawn critics because the Armenian Heritage
    Tribute and Genocide Memorial Foundation, which proposed the park to
    the Greenway board yesterday, has not gone through a public process,
    as advocates of other projects have.

    Instead, the Armenian group got its chance because of a 33-word
    section of law passed in 2000 directing the turnpike authority to
    study building "a monument to the Armenian Genocide 1915-1922."

    State Representative Peter J. Koutoujian, a Waltham Democrat who
    is Armenian-American, supported the law, and has been involved in
    planning for the memorial. "We had some legislation passed directing
    the turnpike to look into the feasibility of siting a park,"
    Koutoujian said.

    The legislation did not specify a location, but the turnpike is
    formally proposing the design on a Greenway parcel of a little under
    a half acre between Cross Street and Surface Road near Faneuil Hall.

    Neighborhood groups have reacted favorably to the design itself,
    which would feature an elaborately designed sculpture, fountain and
    reflecting pool, and a labyrinth of pavement and grass.

    Turkish groups have long disagreed with Armenians over whether what
    happened starting in 1915 constituted a genocide of 1.5 million
    Armenians. Gomulu, the president of the Turkish American Cultural
    Society of New England, unsuccessfully opposed the legislation that
    paved the way for the current proposal.

    "This amendment represents an intolerable degree of ethnically oriented
    propaganda infiltrated to public spaces," wrote Gomulu to one state
    official when the 2000 law was being proposed.

    James M. Kalustian, president of the board of directors of the Armenian
    heritage foundation, said his group met privately with many public
    officials, including Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino, to inform them
    about the proposal.

    "The mayor was supportive in the meeting," Kalustian said. "I don't
    know what his official stance is."

    Menino declined to comment yesterday.
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