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A Bitter Remembrance: Armenians Honor Lives Lost Long Ago

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  • A Bitter Remembrance: Armenians Honor Lives Lost Long Ago

    A BITTER REMEMBRANCE: ARMENIANS HONOR LIVES LOST LONG AGO
    By Niraj Warikoo

    Detroit Free Press, MI
    April 24 2008

    On a church lawn in Southfield just off Northwestern Highway, a sea
    of white crosses catches the eye.

    Planted last week, they're a striking reminder of the 1 million-plus
    Armenian Christians who died under the Ottoman Empire in the early
    20th Century.

    "Never Again!" reads a banner that flutters near the rows of crosses
    outside St. John Armenian Church.

    "If we don't remember, the world will forget," said the Rev. Garabed
    Kochakian, pastor of the church. "If we forget, the crimes of the
    past will be repeated."

    The church's youth group planted more than 1,000 crosses, each
    representing roughly 1,000 people who died under Turkish rule. The
    commemorations this year come just months after Congress failed to
    pass a nonbinding resolution that would have labeled the mass killings
    by the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

    Supported by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., the resolution
    passed a committee but was stalled after pressure from the Bush
    administration and lobbyists who argued that Turkey is an important
    Muslim ally and would be offended by the resolution. The Turkish
    government maintains the deaths were not genocide.

    And so it becomes even more important, say local Armenians, to remember
    the killings.

    "When Washington doesn't proceed to acknowledge what happened for
    political reasons, that motivates us further," said Harry Derderian of
    Farmington Hills, whose relatives were killed. At his church tonight
    in Dearborn, St. Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church, Armenians will
    walk around the church in a symbolic representation of the Armenians
    who wandered the desert after being forced from their homes.

    Marty Shoushanian, a member of St. John Armenian Church, said the
    crosses are a reminder to the general public, but also to young
    Armenians.

    "Our children will remember," he said. "It has not been forgotten."
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