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Columbia Students Host Distinguished Genocide Panel

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  • Columbia Students Host Distinguished Genocide Panel

    COLUMBIA STUDENTS HOST DISTINGUISHED GENOCIDE PANEL
    By Serouj Aprahamian

    www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle =41610_4/18/2009_1
    Friday, April 17, 2009

    In an effort to pay tribute to the memory of the 1.5 million victims of
    the Armenian Genocide and inspire vigilance against such atrocities,
    both past and present, the Armenian Student Association of Columbia
    University hosted a distinguished panel lecture this past Thursday,
    April 9.

    Over 200 students, faculty and local community members were in
    attendance for the event, which featured moderator Andrea Kannapell
    of the New York Times, renowned genocide scholar Taner Akcam, and
    famed Armenian-American attorney Mark Geragos. The official headline
    for the evening was "The Armenian Genocide and Its Relevance Today."

    "We were delighted to see the panel bring together the Columbia
    community to discuss the Armenian Genocide," said Nora Khanarian,
    a student at Columbia and a member of the organizing committee for
    the event. "We are optimistic that constructive dialogue about the
    important ramifications of our history is possible in the future."

    Khanarian's fellow organizer, William Bairamian, added, "It was
    imperative to have an Armenian Genocide remembrance and educational
    event at Columbia University, as it should be on every respected
    university campus in the world. Every Armenian-American student
    should feel that it is their duty to educate those who do not know
    about the Genocide."

    The evening began with the reading of a statement from the noted
    psychiatrist and genocide prevention scholar David Hamburg. Hamburg was
    scheduled to take part in the panel but was unable to make it due to
    last-minute health reasons. Nevertheless, he sent a condensed version
    of his talk which was read aloud for the audience by Ms. Kannapell.

    This was followed by Professor Akcam's presentation which focused
    on Armenian-Turkish relations over the past 30 years and what will
    be needed to move ahead in the future. He addressed such matters
    as developments within Turkish society, the talks between Turkey
    and Armenia, and the issue of the US position on the Armenian
    Genocide. At several points during his talk, Akcam insisted that,
    "Obama should use the word . . .genocide," and that, "by using this
    term, %u218genocide,' the United States can liberate Turks, Armenians,
    and everybody in this conflict."

    The next speaker to take the podium was Mark Geragos, who addressed
    the legal implications of the Genocide and focused explicitly on
    the need for reparations and restitution. After talking about his
    experiences as a lead attorney for the Genocide-era claims against
    insurance companies New York Life and AXA, Geragos expounded upon
    why he believes reparations are so important for the securing of
    justice. "You can never, as a victim, never be made whole until you
    have restitution," stated Geragos. "There is never going to be a
    resolution to the so-called Armenian question until we get back our
    land, until we get back the monies that were taken from us, and until
    we get back some kind of reparations."

    After such forthright and succinct presentations, there naturally
    was a great deal of issues ripe for discussion during the question
    and answer period. Audience members included many Turkish students
    who were not only hostile toward the facts of the Armenian Genocide,
    but were also taken aback by the insistence that reparations would
    be needed to right this wrong committed by their government.

    Some of the Turkish attendees expressed their disagreement through
    prolonged statements, at times refusing to sit down after being asked
    politely by the moderator to recite their question. Many others
    were more cordial and presented their questions to the panelists
    and received forthright answers in return. This lively back and
    forth continued as other audience members raised questions about how
    Armenians could get their family lands back, the past operations of
    ASALA and the Justice Commandos, and the legality of Turkey's present
    blockade of Armenia.

    Following the Q&A, Bairamian took to the floor to offer some closing
    remarks on behalf of the organizers. "We are here not only to remember
    those that needlessly perished in the Armenian Highlands and in the
    deserts of Der-Zor," he began, "but to make clear to any perpetrator
    of genocide that their crimes will never be forgotten--not so long as
    there is a sense of humanity and justice among the men and women of
    this otherwise beautiful world." Posing the question of whether we
    are doing enough to end the scourge of genocide, Bairamian posited,
    "We will know the answer to that question when our children learn of
    genocide not as a current event but as an aberration of the history
    of a time long passed."

    The event concluded with a nearby reception which continued in the
    spirit of the conference, as attendees congregated and discussed many
    of the issues raised by the thought-provoking panel. Professor Akcam,
    in particular, could be seen engaging with many of the Turkish students
    who proceeded to congregate around him.

    Reflecting upon the success of the evening, Arpine Kocharian,
    another of the main student organizers of the event, explained how her
    grandfather was a survivor of the Armenian Genocide from Mush. Orphaned
    at the age of 7, he went on to serve as a veteran of WWII and live
    an accomplished life. Nevertheless, he was never able to recover from
    the trauma of what happened to his family and an entire village back
    in Mush, says Kocharian.

    "I think my grandfather, would have been proud of me and my colleagues
    today because our panel was able to voice the relevance of the darkest
    page in our history."
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