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President Reagan To Be Honored At ANC-WR Banquet

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  • President Reagan To Be Honored At ANC-WR Banquet

    PRESIDENT REAGAN TO BE HONORED AT ANC-WR BANQUET

    armradio.am
    10.09.2008 10:49

    The Armenian National Committee-Western Region (ANC-WR) will be
    honoring President Ronald Reagan with the Woodrow Wilson Presidential
    Award at the organization's annual banquet on October 12, 2008 at
    the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California.

    "President Ronald Reagan was the last President to refer to the
    Armenian Genocide properly," stated ANC-WR Annual Banquet Chairwoman
    Aida Dimejian.

    "This year's banquet will honor those words and the statement President
    Reagan made. As a community we shall look with an eager eye to the
    future where Turkish intimidation and threats will not bully American
    leaders," she added.

    Ronald Reagan began his years in politics as a close friend and
    supporter of the Armenian American community. As California Governor
    from 1966 through 1974, Reagan reached out to Armenian Americans and
    joined in their annual commemorations of the Armenian Genocide. Most
    notably, in 1969, Reagan joined His Holiness Khoren I, Catholicos
    of the Great House of Cilicia, a host of state and local dignitaries
    and over 10,000 Armenian Americans at the Armenian Genocide Memorial
    in Montebello, where he gave a rousing 15-minute speech honoring the
    victims of that crime against humanity. "I am proud and appreciate this
    opportunity to participate in this event," said Gov. Reagan. "Today,
    I humbly bow in memory of the Armenian m artyrs, who died in the name
    of freedom at the hands of Turkish perpetrators of Genocide."

    Following his election to the presidency in 1980, Reagan distinguished
    himself as the last U.S. President to properly acknowledge the Armenian
    Genocide as "genocide." In Proclamation 4838, issued on April 22,
    1981, to proclaim April 26-May 3 as "Days of Remembrance of Victims of
    Holocaust," Reagan stated, "Like the genocide of the Armenians before
    it, and the genocide of the Cambodians which followed it and like too
    many other such persecutions of too many other peoples--the lessons
    of the Holocaust must never be forgotten." Later in his first term,
    the Reagan Administration, at the urging of Secretary of State George
    Schultz and Defense Secretary Casper Weinberger, retreated from this
    stand and opposed successive Armenian Genocide Resolutions in 1985
    and 1987.

    In the last days of his second term, President Reagan led a U.S. effort
    to help the victims of the devastating December 7th, 1988 earthquake in
    Armenia. Reversing a 40-year standing policy that lasted throughout the
    Cold War, President Reagan airlifted several planeloads of humanitarian
    assistance to Soviet Armenia within weeks of the tragedy. In his
    December 25th radio address to the American people, Reagan stated
    that, in the time of tragedy, "the real differences that divide us
    and will continue to divide us fall away." He went on to note the
    tremendous outpouring of U.S. assistance in light of the earthquake
    in Armenia. "From the United States the response has been staggering,"
    he said.
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