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WORCESTER: Armenian Genocide Remembered

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  • WORCESTER: Armenian Genocide Remembered

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE REMEMBERED
    By Lisa D. Welsh

    Worcester Telegram
    http://www.telegram.com/article/20080421/ NEWS/804210600/1008/NEWS02
    April 21 2008
    MA

    Importance of repeating stories stressed

    Photo: During the Martyrs' Day commemoration at the Armenian Church of
    Our Saviour yesterday, 7-year-old Emilee Derkazarian of Holden lights
    a candle in memory of her relative Charles Derkazarian, who was killed
    during the Armenian genocide.

    Photo: Heghine Minassian, a survivor of the Armenian genocide, pauses
    as she relates her experiences.

    WORCESTER-- Three generations of Armenians -- a 99-year-old woman, a
    three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and a high school essayist
    -- spoke from differing perspectives but shared one message during
    the 93rd anniversary of the Armenian genocide recognition yesterday
    at the Armenian Church of Our Saviour: "Honor the truth of the past
    because denial makes it more likely that genocide will happen again."

    Heghine Minassian was 6 years old the day Turkish soldiers went house
    to house and emptied all the buildings in her village. She said most
    Armenians were marched into the desert, where they were left to starve
    to death; but some of the women, like her aunt, were kept as slaves.

    "My grandparents were in the attic hiding," Mrs. Minassian said in
    Armenian through an English interpreter, Van Aroian. "My grandmother's
    sister yelled, 'Don't open the door. Don't go out.' But the (soldiers)
    gave the order to come down and they came down."

    Within three years, Mrs. Minassian would be an orphan, the same age of
    many of the children in church who participated in a candle-lighting
    ceremony in honor of their family members who had died in the
    genocide. Looking out at the young faces in the front pews,
    Mrs. Minassian said, "Don't forget our struggle."

    Stephen A. Kurkjian, a reporter for the Boston Globe for 38 years,
    has written about many high-profile events. However, sharing the
    story of his father's family was not one of them.

    "I was not an appreciating Armenian until 1992, when I accompanied my
    83-year-old father to the village where he was born," Mr. Kurkjian
    said at the Martyrs' Day commemoration. "The sadness hit me like a
    sledgehammer. I started asking, 'How could this happen?' "

    "I came back and wrote an article called 'Roots of Sorrow.' But now
    I'd add to that title, 'Seeds of Hope.' "

    Mr. Kurkjian's father lost his father, brother and sister in the
    genocide of 1915; he survived after making the 300-mile trek to Syria
    with his mother, and later to America.

    "My father would say out of tragedy there was opportunity for liberty
    and religious freedom. There was education and economic opportunity
    in America. I would have never had the successes I've had. Instead
    I would have worked at a small weekly in a mountain village."

    "I asked my Der Hayr (priest), 'How this could happen?' " Mr. Kurkjian
    said. "He said, 'God would not have allowed the first Christian
    church to not have survived.' That's as good an answer as you are
    going to get."

    With the internal awakening about his heritage, Mr. Kurkjian has
    traveled to Turkey and watched pressure build on the Turkish government
    to reassess its position that downplays references to the genocide.

    Robin Garabedian, a junior at Doherty Memorial High School whose
    family has been with the Armenian Church of Our Saviour since her
    grandmother's family immigrated to Worcester, said she was 7 years
    old when her father told her about the genocide. In reading her
    award-winning essay, "Why Remembrance of the Genocide is Important,"
    she quoted Adolf Hitler as saying, "Who today remembers the
    extermination of the Armenians?" as rationalization for the Holocaust.

    "How does someone hate someone else so much?" Robin asked in
    anger. "If the world had stood up (against) the Armenian genocide,
    there wouldn't have been genocide of the Jews, or in Cambodia in the
    '70s, or in Darfur today."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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