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Glendale: City Gears Up For Genocide Commemorations

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  • Glendale: City Gears Up For Genocide Commemorations

    CITY GEARS UP FOR GENOCIDE COMMEMORATIONS
    By Jason Wells

    Glendale News Press
    April 18 2008
    CA

    Glendale's Week of Remembrance schedule addresses worldwide crimes
    against humanity.

    GLENDALE -- The proliferation of Armenian flags hanging off car windows
    and apartment balconies as the weekend wears on can only mean one thing
    -- the annual hearkening of Glendale's Week of Remembrance, culminating
    in the citywide commemoration of the Armenian Genocide on Thursday.

    In a city that is home to the largest Armenian community outside of
    Armenia, the event at the Alex Theatre Thursday commemorating the
    93rd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide is expected to be the week's
    biggest draw, city officials said.

    "It will be sold out and we're going to have a standby line," said
    Councilman Ara Najarian, who is chairman of the events committee.

    Attendees snatched up all 1,381 seats last year, and are expected to
    do the same, theater officials said.

    The city-sponsored event schedule kicks off Sunday with a blood
    drive at St. Mary's Armenian Apostolic Church and continues with
    public events addressing worldwide crimes against humanity throughout
    the week.

    This year's genocide commemoration comes at time when the Armenian
    community is working overtime to have the U.S. Congress recognize
    the killings of 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1918 in the
    former Ottoman Empire, as it has the Holocaust.

    A genocide resolution introduced by Rep. Adam Schiff, whose district
    includes Glendale, received an unprecedented amount of Congressional
    support last year when 235 House members signed on as co-sponsors. But
    lobbying from opponents, who say such a bill would soil crucial
    U.S. military relations with Turkey, whittled that down to 211,
    pushing it to the back burner.

    Turkey's government has refused to acknowledge the mass killings
    as genocide, instead arguing they were the result of an internal
    civil war, and has threatened to pull back from the United States
    diplomatically if the resolution is passed.

    Still, the political strength of the resolution is sure to lift spirits
    of those attending commemorative events this year, said Andrew Kzirian,
    executive director of Armenian National Committee Western Region.

    "Overall I think the mood is very positive, there's no shortage of
    energy," he said. "I think they're willing to channel that energy
    into the commemorations."

    While the Armenian Genocide certainly gets the lion's share of
    attention in a city in which Armenians make up 40% of the population,
    other crimes against humanity will also be recognized during the
    week's events.

    Speakers at the Central Library Auditorium on Monday evening will
    discuss other issues related to massive human suffering, past and
    present in a forum called "Man's Inhumanity to Man."

    The Rev. Berdj Djambazian will discuss the trips he's made to the
    Darfur region of Sudan, where the United Nations estimates 200,000
    people have died, mostly due to hunger and disease.

    Dennis Doyle, professor of English at Glendale Community College,
    will discuss the political and environmental underpinnings of The
    Great Famine in Ireland, which occurred between 1845 and 1852 and is
    estimated to have reduced the country's population between 20% to 25%.

    The mass killings of Native Americans, in which thousands of indigenous
    people died in the 1800s with the migration of settlers West across
    the plains, will be the topic of discussion for Roger Bowerman,
    professor of history at Glendale Community College.

    And Ramela Grigorian Abbamontian, assistant professor art history
    at Los Angeles Pierce College, will discuss how genocide affects the
    psyche of survivors and its manifestation in art.

    Admittance to all of the week's events are free, but the Armenian
    Genocide Commemoration event on Thursday, which will feature
    award-winning director and producer Carla Garapedian and several live
    performances, will require a ticket.

    Garapedian, who will deliver the keynote address, was the director and
    producer of the critically-acclaimed 2006 documentary "Screamers" of
    the band "System of a Down" that won the AFI Film Festival's Audience
    Award. She has worked to raise awareness about the current genocide
    in Darfur and on genocide prevention.

    Classical operatic singer Gegam Grigorian, together with the
    Mikael Avetisyan Chamber Orchestra, are among those scheduled to
    perform live. Jivan Gasparian Junior -- grandson and apprentice of
    the world-renowned Djivan Gasparian, a master of the traditional
    woodwind instrument used in traditional Armenian folk music -- will
    also perform.

    Those who want to attend that event can pick up their free tickets --
    four per person -- at the Alex Theatre box office in advance.

    UPCOMING EVENTS

    SUNDAY

    Commemorative Blood Drive takes place from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
    St. Mary's Armenian Apostolic Church, 500 S. Central Ave. For more
    information, call (818) 243-3444.

    MONDAY

    "Man's Inhumanity to Humanity" starts at 6 p.m., Central Library
    Auditorium, 222 E. Harvard. For more information, call (818) 548-4844.

    TUESDAY

    Glendale High School hosts a genocide remembrance program in its
    auditorium, 1440 Broadway, at 6:30 p.m. The program will feature guest
    singers, poetry readings, video presentations and traditional dances
    by students from the four Glendale Unified high schools.

    WEDNESDAY

    A joint genocide commemoration among Armenian and Episcopal churches
    takes place at St. Peter Armenian Church, 632 W. Stocker Ave., at
    7 p.m.

    THURSDAY

    Armenian Genocide Commemoration, starts at 6 p.m., Alex Theatre, 216
    N. Brand Blvd. Free Parking at Orange Street parking garage. Doors
    to theater open at 5 p.m. Tickets available at the box office.

    The Armenian Genocide United Commemorative Committee will host guest
    speakers and cultural performances at the Glendale Civic Auditorium,
    1401 N. Verdugo Road, at 8 p.m.
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