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USC: Students Disrupt Genocide Memorial

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  • USC: Students Disrupt Genocide Memorial

    STUDENTS DISRUPT GENOCIDE MEMORIAL
    by Melody Chiu

    Daily Trojan Online, CA
    University of Southern California
    April 24 2008

    Students trample flowers and signs erected in honor of the Armenian
    genocide.

    A peaceful demonstration was disrupted Wednesday when two students
    stepped on flowers and knocked down signs at a memorial service
    honoring those who died in the Armenian genocide between 1915 and 1923.

    The memorial was organized by several Armenian student organizations,
    including the Armenian Graduate Student Association and the Armenian
    Student Association, and consisted of 1,500 carnations in honor of
    the estimated 1.5 million victims of the genocide.

    Members of the organizations began planting the flowers in McCarthy
    Quad at 4 a.m., and fact sheets were put up with information about
    the Armenian genocide along the perimeters of the walkways.

    "We were trying to have a very silent and powerful way to
    raise awareness of the Armenian genocide on campus," said
    Kanakara Navasartian, president of the Armenian Graduate Student
    Association. "Everyone has a right to honor their past, and this
    wasn't just about the Armenian genocide. This was about crime against
    humanity, period."

    Navasartian said two students approached the display and began knocking
    down the fact sheets.

    The Ottoman Empire has been accused of deliberately and systematically
    destroying the Armenian population during World War I, starting in
    Istanbul in 1915.

    Turkey does not recognize the term genocide as an appropriate
    description of the events.

    Last year, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger proclaimed the week of April
    22 through April 29 as "Days of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide."

    Helen Kuiumdjian, president of the Armenian Student Association,
    said another member of the organization called her to tell her two
    students were disrupting the memorial.

    "She said the girl and her boyfriend were yelling and stomping on
    all the signs and flowers," Kuiumdjian said. "I was notified by [the
    Department of Public Safety] and they said they were looking for the
    girl and that they had found her."

    DPS officials declined to comment.

    Kuiumdjian said the students damaged the groups' display, but they
    were able to rebuild it.

    "They broke our signs and our plants were hanging," she said. "It
    was a wreck, but a bunch of members worked and fixed it back up in
    about 20 minutes."

    Kuiumdjian said students passing by the memorial also helped fix
    the display.

    Students said the disruptive behavior was inappropriate.

    "I don't have any definite examples of what else they could've done,
    but something more peaceful," said Daniel Bay, a sophomore majoring
    in business administration.

    "You can hate someone as much as you want, but they shouldn't have
    the right to do that," he said. "They have their own beliefs and they
    shouldn't have acted out so negatively."
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