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    THRU 22
    GAREN YEGPARIAN

    Asbarez
    www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle=41809_4/23 /2009_1
    Thursday, April 23, 2009

    In this, the first of my annual two or three part chronicle/commentary
    of April 24th events, there's virtually nothing but bad news, from
    near and far. Read on to the end and you'll see.

    First, let me list those events I knew or learned of but could not
    make. The reason for this is to parallel previous years reporting,
    and to have a compact, though unavoidably incomplete, chronicle of
    our commemorative activities.

    I missed the Burbank Armenian Club's event, since I was in the middle
    of an election campaign, and the Glendale blood drive and two lectures
    (one about the Genocide the other, its Adana antecedent- both looked
    interesting) at the Ararad Home, since I was recovering from the
    campaign in the mountains (more on this elsewhere). The Orange County
    Walk for Remembrance is another. I've never made this one, but it
    strikes me as a good idea, so I was saddened to hear participation
    in it is dwindling. The all-ASA event held at UCLA would've been
    interesting to compare to last year's held at CSUN's campus, but it
    conflicted with another event, and was harder to reach. An all-day
    carnation planting scheduled for the 23rd on the USC campus is another
    I won't make.

    Hye Geen had organized its annual conference on Saturday the 17th. This
    has been a good, informative event. But perhaps it ought to be done
    NOT in the thick of Genocide related activities. While I missed it
    for other conflicts, and I understand that people feel guiltier in
    April and are therefore more likely to attend such a seminar format,
    I do hope the organizers will consider changing the time frame.

    Moving on to something I actually attended, Friday night, the 17th was
    the event organized by the AYF Nigol Touman Chapter in Pasadena. While
    the turnout was lower, a bit over 150 vs. last year's 200, the program
    was compact and effective, partly for that reason. What I most liked
    was the modernized rendition of "Der Voghormia".

    Sunday was the ARF Shant/AYF Youth Rally. What a disaster! This
    has been a tremendous event with notable speakers attracting
    great attendance. This year, it was an anemic 100 people, with the
    program being acceptable, certainly Raffi Hamparian and California
    Assemblymember Portantino delivered good speeches, but no one was
    there to hear. What happened?

    Monday, on the USC campus was a screening of J. Michael Hagopian's
    film, The River Ran Red, the third in his series. A measly 75 people
    were in the small room. Again, the time of year and the history of
    this man's efforts led me to expect much better. What's going on?

    Tuesday night, I missed a joint Armenian-Jewish panel organized in
    a Pasadena synagogue. This is undoubtedly a good step, continuing
    in the spirit of what we've had in recent years in the San Fernando
    Valley. I hope someone details this event in our press. I was at a
    Holocaust remembrance in Burbank, organized annually by the Burbank
    Human Relations Council. Last year they had a very interesting
    speaker. This year, no less so, a Major General of the Army National
    Guard spoke about Jewish partisans fighting in the woods during
    WWII. We could probably learn something here. We should be bringing
    in varying aspects of the Genocide, not just the same-old "we got
    massacred" refrain. How about the self defense efforts, Oorfa Van,
    and others large and small? How about the Kemalists' killings and
    forced re-expatriation in 1922? You get the idea.

    Wednesday the 22nd was the eighth annual commemoration organized
    by the Armenian clubs of the Glendale unified School District's
    high schools. While this was once again a bit too heavy on the
    arts performances, with consequently a bit too long of a program,
    attendance seemed consistent with previous years, in the 400 range.

    But the bad news on the same day was the Armenia-Turkey announcement
    of a "roadmap". I guess U.S. State Department operatives can be
    pretty tone deaf, public relations wise. Can anyone tell me what good
    came of the Israel-Palestine "roadmap? This was no doubt at least
    partially forced on Armenia. But it is the height of insensitivity,
    tone-deafness, and perhaps even treachery, to time such an announcement
    on the eve of April 24th activities worldwide. This year, of course,
    it carries even more weight because of the much anticipated Obama
    statement on the Genocide. Is this the weaseling-out hatch that will
    be used to free him of the need to take a stance? As of this writing,
    we don't know, but it sure smells fishy. How much do you want to bet
    that as soon as this time passes, this roadmap will be found "lacking",
    incomplete", "in need of refinements", containing "oops, we didn't mean
    exactly that" clauses? Perhaps it is a good thing for our Republic's
    current leadership to learn the hard way, first hand, the extreme wile
    and guile of the half-millennium-old Turkish diplomatic establishment.

    The only good news is the trouble the two-faced Cong Harman finds
    herself in. She may have been trying to get leniency for some Israeli
    undercover operatives, and was recorded because of a wiretap. So at
    least we can now console ourselves. She doesn't just sell us and human
    rights out, but also her country, that which she's sworn to protect
    from enemies foreign and domestic! This story bears watching. It is
    very fresh. I can't help but wonder if this won't somehow end up
    being connected to Dennis Hastert's Turkish cash and the cover-up
    that Sibel Edmunds exposed but was muzzled.
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