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Armenian Genocide Museum To Nestle Close To White House

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  • Armenian Genocide Museum To Nestle Close To White House

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM TO NESTLE CLOSE TO WHITE HOUSE

    Top News
    http://www.topnews.in/armenian-genocide-museu m-nestle-close-white-house-2155579
    April 24 2009
    India

    Washington - The US Armenian community plans to open the Armenian
    Genocide Museum of America just a block and a half from the White
    House in less than two years.

    In the pecking order of specially themed museums in Washington,
    the building will be far closer to the seat of US executive power
    than those dedicated to the Jewish Holocaust, African Art or the
    American Indian.

    Whether that will bring Armenian-Americans any closer to presidential
    recognition of what they regard as genocide remains to be seen.

    The museum will document the killing of 1.5 million Armenians at the
    hands of Ottoman Turks from 1915-23.

    The community is hoping that US President Barack Obama will follow
    through on Friday - the 94th anniversary of the start of the killings
    - on his pledge during last year's election campaign to affirm the
    killings as genocide.

    Among Obama's predecessors, only the late president Ronald Reagan in
    1981 ever called the killings genocide while in office.

    Turkey refuses to acknowledge the mass killings as a genocide, places
    the death toll much lower - at about 600,000 - and attributes the
    deaths to consequences of World War I.

    Unlike the Holocaust Memorial Museum, which was built with federal as
    well as private money as part of the quasi-governmental Smithsonian
    complex, the Armenian genocide museum is being built with only
    private donations.

    In fact, the Armenian genocide gets only scant mention in the
    US Holocaust Memorial Museum, partly because of opposition from
    Turkey. Turkey used its leverage as an important US military ally
    to nix inclusion, according to Edward T Linenthal, who wrote a book
    about the museum's evolution, Preserving Memory.

    The planners of the Armenian genocide museum, who began working in
    1996, will be free of such pressures as a private enterprise.

    Museum planners are coordinating with the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial
    Complex in Yerevan, Armenia. The Washington project will be an
    "important educational" tool of testimony to the "facts of the
    Armenian genocide," said Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the
    Armenian Assembly of America.

    The museum will occupy the historic, long-vacant National Bank of
    Washington building, constructed in 1925 at the corner of 14th and
    G Streets. (dpa)
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