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Student to speak on 20th century's 1st genocide

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  • Student to speak on 20th century's 1st genocide

    Stamford Advocate, CT
    April 26 2008


    Student to speak on 20th century's 1st genocide

    By Patrick McNamee
    Special Correspondent
    Article Launched: 04/26/2008 01:00:00 AM EDT


    History is full of events and tragedies that fade from the public's
    mind with passing time. Weston High School senior Anna Guller took
    action to ensure 1.5 million lives are not forgotten.

    Guller, 18, will read her essay about the Armenian genocide tomorrow
    afternoon at its 93rd anniversary commemoration in Times Square in New
    York.

    It is three days after the annual remembrance day; April 24, 1915, is
    considered the date the genocide began.

    Guller learned about the 20th century's first genocide while attending
    last year's event with her mother.

    "It really affected me when an Armenian woman came up to me and asked
    me if I was Armenian, and when I told her I wasn't . . . she seemed
    surprised," said Guller, who was chosen to read by the
    Armenian-American association Knights and Daughters of Vartan. "Right
    then, I saw it was because they've gone so long without people
    remembering what happened."

    The Young Turks, a political party within the Ottoman Empire, carried
    out the genocide during World War I in hopes of creating an
    exclusively Turkish population.

    It is estimated that 1.5 million Armenians living under Turkish rule
    died from 1915 to 1923. Turkey acknowledges that large numbers of
    Armenians died, but says the figure is inflated and that the deaths
    occurred in civil unrest during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

    During last year's commemoration, Guller took photos and spoke with
    survivors.

    "They told me their stories and what they witnessed; they were
    senseless, terrible acts and how they changed their lives. It was very
    similar to the Holocaust," Guller said. "Their emotion just brought
    the story to a whole new level." Guller was so moved by the
    experience that she chose the topic for her college entrance essay,
    and said she is thrilled to have the chance to present her essay this
    weekend.

    "I'm proud and honored that they were touched by what they read. It
    was a new experience being able to get first-hand knowledge and
    meeting them really changed me," said Guller, who will attend New York
    University in the fall.

    "I expect that it will be amazing. I want them to see that there are
    those who are not Armenian that care about what happened."



    http://www.stamfordadvocate.com /localnews/ci_9062097
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