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California Genocide Resolution Unanimously Passed By Assembly

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  • California Genocide Resolution Unanimously Passed By Assembly

    CALIFORNIA GENOCIDE RESOLUTION UNANIMOUSLY PASSED BY ASSEMBLY

    Asbarez
    www.asbarez.com/index.html?showa rticle=41807_4/23/2009_1
    Thursday, April 23, 2009

    Vote follows passionate speeches by both parties

    SACRAMENTO 's Assistant Majority Leader Paul Krekorian's resolution
    to commemorate the 94th anniversary of the Armenian genocide was
    unanimously passed by the Assembly today. The measure sailed through
    with broad, bipartisan support and featured impassioned pleas from
    multiple members of the Assembly, from both parties, who voted for
    the measure.

    "Today, we stood up for truth and justice; not just in memory of the
    Armenian genocide, but for all modern-day horrors that have blackened
    this earth since 1915," Assemblyman Paul Krekorian said. "This
    resolution gives all of us an opportunity to re-commit ourselves to
    building a society free of bigotry and inhumanity. And if we can do
    that, we will be able to say at long last, truthfully and finally,
    %u218Never again.'"

    AJR 14 will designate April 24, 2009, as a "California Day of
    Remembrance for the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923." Preceding the
    73-0 vote, a number of Democratic and Republican speakers called on
    the Assembly to pass the resolution, noting that supporting AJR 14
    was less a vote for Armenian genocide remembrance than a call for
    justice everywhere.

    Before that, the Very Reverend Father Baret Yeretzian of the Western
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America read the morning's
    prayer and a trio of musicians called "The Winds of Passion" played
    two stirring songs in tribute to the memory of 1.5 million Armenians
    who perished from 1915-23.

    Krekorian is also the author of the Justice for Genocide Victims Act,
    AB 961, which would require California companies to certify that they
    do not hold wrongfully obtained assets from a modern-day genocide
    victim and bars companies from doing business with California if they
    cannot submit that certification.
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