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Armenian Genocide RememberedMeredith Blake

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  • Armenian Genocide RememberedMeredith Blake

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE REMEMBEREDMEREDITH BLAKE

    Greenwich Time, CT
    April 24 2008

    When Hermon Hosvepian was forced by Ottoman Turkish soldiers to
    march through the Syrian desert without food or clothing with her
    two daughters, all she could do was focus on staying alive.

    Her husband had been taken from their home and killed. And during
    the grueling march across the desert, one of her daughters died and
    one night, while she slept, the other one was taken.

    Her daughter Catherine Papalian, who was born in the United States,
    recounted this story yesterday at a flag raising held outside town
    hall to memorialize the victims of the Armenian Genocide, when 1.5
    million to 2 million Armenians living under Turkish rule within the
    Ottoman Empire were killed or starved to death from 1915 to 1923.

    This morning more than 40 people, most of Armenian descent, gathered
    in front of Town Hall and shared stories about their parents and
    grandparents who survived.

    Sara Mushegian, who organized the event, said her grandparents were
    able to escape, spending years in the protective custody of American
    authorities in Constantinople. But others were not as fortunate. George
    Papailian's father's first wife killed herself, out of fear, knowing
    the fate that lay ahead, he said.

    "There are so many horror stories," said Harry Nakashian, who said
    his mother, at 11 or 12, remembered opening the door of her house,
    and saw five children dead in a street, who out of thirst, drank some
    kind of toxic fluid and died.

    Nakashian's father never could talk about the atrocities, he said.

    Mushegian said that organizing the flag raising, honoring the victims
    and survivors of the genocide is an important part of Armenian
    heritage.

    "I feel it's my duty," she said. "It's about raising awareness. People
    know a little, but they don't really know."

    During the event, First Selectmen Peter Tesei read a proclamation
    declaring April 24 Armenian Martyrs' Day. The flag, with the colors
    of red, blue and orange, was raised with the sounds of the Armenian
    national anthem.

    April 24, 1915, holds special significance since it was the day
    that the Turkish government placed under arrest over 200 Armenian
    community leaders in Constantinople. It is seen as the start of the
    government-ordered genocide.
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