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Armenians Honour Their Painful Past

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  • Armenians Honour Their Painful Past

    ARMENIANS HONOUR THEIR PAINFUL PAST
    Greg Mercer

    Waterloo Record
    http://news.therecord.com/News/Local/articl e/339708
    April 21 2008
    Canada

    It's been 93 years since millions of Armenians were systematically
    killed or dispersed by the soldiers of the Ottoman Empire.

    But the descendants of survivors who gathered at the Armenian Community
    Centre yesterday say they're still waiting for justice.

    They came together to mourn lives lost between 1915 and 1918, and to
    talk about the politics of genocide -- a term that is still contested
    today, including inside some of Ontario's school boards.

    Canada officially considers what happened to the Armenians as
    genocide. Turkey, the modern successor to the Ottoman Empire, does
    not. It argues that many of the estimated 1.5 million Armenians
    who died were killed by decidedly un-sinister causes, like disease
    or starvation.

    "What keeps the emotional and psychological wounds open is that the
    Turkish government still denies this happened," said Harout Manougian,
    a University of Waterloo engineering student. Manougian said his
    great-grandfather, an evangelical pastor, was tortured and killed by
    the Turks in 1915.

    Cambridge MP Gary Goodyear said Turkey continues to lobby within
    Canada in favour of its view of what happened to the Armenians so
    many years ago. Most recently, the Toronto public school board was
    pressured to drop references to the Armenian case in its course on
    the history of genocide, he said.

    "We cannot let our guard down on this issue," Goodyear told the crowd,
    to loud applause. "There remains a tremendous amount of resistance."

    Ontario became home to many survivors of the genocide. Georgetown
    was the site of a school for 109 orphaned Armenian boys, who in the
    1920s were trained as farm labourers.

    Many of the few hundred Armenian-Canadian families who live in Waterloo
    Region can trace their roots to victims of the genocide.

    Yesterday, those descendants were adamant their history will never
    be forgotten.

    They crowded into the hall to sing the Armenian national anthem,
    read poems and watch a documentary about the life of Turkey's "hidden
    Armenians." Those Armenians practise their Christianity in secret,
    fearing reprisals from the Muslim majority.

    On stage, the crowd laid flowers around a foam replica of a monument
    to the genocide that stands in Armenia.

    Outside, a choir stood beside a granite "mountain" marking the symbolic
    stand made by a group of Armenians against the Turks, and sang requiems
    for their "martyrs."

    "We will never stop talking about the genocide," said Saro Sarmazian,
    president of the local youth wing of Armenian national committee.

    "We will simply never forget."

    And they will fight efforts at every turn to rewrite historical texts,
    they said.

    "Let us remind the Turks that we will not sit idly by in Canada as they
    try to manipulate history," said local business person Greg Buzbuzian,
    master of ceremonies for the event.

    He said his grandmother was left an orphan by Turkish soldiers, who
    "annihilated" her family.

    History professor Isabel Kaprielian-Churchill, the guest speaker,
    told the crowd she grew up without grandparents, aunts or uncles. They
    were all killed in the genocide, she said.

    "The truth shall prevail," she said.

    The walls of the hall were decorated with photocopies of Canadian
    newspapers from the 1915, with stories reporting the Armenian
    massacres.

    But many here were wondering why it took so many years for the
    severity of those killings to be officially recognized, as Canada's
    Senate did in 2002 and House of Commons did in 2004.
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