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Glendale: Singing Out Against Genocide

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  • Glendale: Singing Out Against Genocide

    SINGING OUT AGAINST GENOCIDE
    By Angela Hokanson

    Glendale News Press, CA
    April 22 2008

    Armenian clubs from throughout the school district put on a
    performance at

    Published: Last Updated Tuesday, April 22, 2008 11:33 PM PDT Armenian
    students celebrated their culture -- and remembered the tragedy of
    the Armenian Genocide -- through speeches, poems, music and dance
    during a genocide commemoration Tuesday night at Glendale High School.

    The program was one of several remembrance events taking place in
    Glendale this week to mark the 93rd anniversary of the Armenian
    Genocide, the killings of about 1.5 million Armenians that began in
    1915 in the then-Ottoman Empire.

    It was the eighth annual genocide commemoration event organized by
    student members of the Armenian clubs from high schools and middle
    schools within the Glendale Unified School District.

    "It just shows unity," Rubina Vartanians, 15, said about the various
    schools coming together to remember the genocide.

    In one performance, a group of girls from Glendale High, dressed in
    royal blue skirts and tops, performed a traditional Armenian dance.

    The slow, somber song is about an Armenian soldier who misses his
    homeland, said Christine Garibian, 15, one of the dancers.

    As the dance came to a close, the girls were joined on stage by
    three boys -- one pretending to be an Armenian soldier, the other
    two pretending to be Turkish soldiers. The teens acted out a scene
    in which the Armenian boy is beat up and carried off stage by the
    two Turks. A sound imitating a gunshot was heard as if from a distance.

    "It brings an element of tragedy to it," Christine said about the
    closing scene of the routine.

    Clark Magnet High School students Serli Nazarian, 14, and Meenely
    Nazarian, 15, played a piano duet of Aram Khachaturian's "Saber Dance,"
    and other students read poems and speeches.

    The show also featured a video filmed and edited by Crescenta Valley
    High student Edrick Sarkissian in which students and community members
    discussed what Armenians in Southern California could do to honor
    their past and respect the plight of their ancestors.

    Many of the participants said the event was as much about looking to
    the future -- and potentially altering the course of history still
    to come -- as it was about looking back.

    "If there is one genocide that is not recognized, there may be other
    genocides that are not recognized," said Vanui Barakezyan, 16.

    Vanui was participating in a skit that was expected to be performed
    later in the show about the importance of obtaining official
    recognition for the Armenian Genocide.

    "The message is we won't give up fighting for what we believe,"
    Vanui said about the skit.

    Several speakers, including school board President Joylene Wagner and
    Glendale schools Supt. Michael Escalante, affirmed the importance of
    recognizing historical events like genocides as a prerequisite for
    preventing similar events in the future.

    "Through the recognition process we begin the process of changing
    the future," Escalante said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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