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Remembering the Armenian Genocide: Obama's words rebuked

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  • Remembering the Armenian Genocide: Obama's words rebuked

    Glendale News Press, CA
    April 26 2009


    REMEMBERING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE:
    Obama's words rebuked


    Local Armenians are incensed that the president's statement Friday did
    not include the term `genocide.'

    By Zain Shauk
    Published: Last Updated Friday, April 24, 2009 10:03 PM PDT

    Speakers at the city's Armenian Genocide Commemoration event Friday
    blasted President Obama for betraying campaign pledges to acknowledge
    the Armenian Genocide, injecting a sense of anger into the somber
    ceremony.

    Obama issued a statement Friday, on the 94th anniversary of the
    genocide, acknowledging the mass killings of 1.5 million Armenians at
    the hands of Ottoman Turks as `atrocities' and used the Armenian
    phrase `Meds Yeghern,' which translates to `The Great Calamity' to
    describe the acts.

    But as a senator and presidential candidate, Obama frequently
    supported efforts to recognize the mass killings using the word
    `genocide,' famously stating in a speech on Jan. 19, 2008, that `the
    Armenian Genocide is not an allegation, a personal opinion, or a point
    of view, but rather a widely documented fact supported by an
    overwhelming body of historical evidence. The facts are undeniable
    .?.?. and as president, I will recognize the Armenian Genocide.'

    But in his statement, Obama danced around language that he has
    previously insisted should be attributed to the acts, said Zanku
    Armenian, president of the Armenian National Committee Glendale's
    board of directors.

    `He did not have the courage to use the word `genocide,'' said
    Armenian, who was in Washington to lobby support for a House of
    Representatives resolution calling for official recognition of the
    genocide.

    `The irony is he used Armenian words,' he continued, adding that
    Armenians would be disheartened by the president's avoidance of the
    term `genocide.'

    The use of `genocide' to describe the events has been of critical
    importance to the Armenian community because the size and scale of the
    mass killings should be recognized and remembered just as other
    genocides are, said speakers at the commemoration event, which was at
    the Alex Theatre.

    `President Obama, if you're listening, I can't tell you how
    disappointed the community is for betraying your promise,' said
    Councilman Ara Najarian, who was chairman of the event organizing
    committee.

    Rep. Adam Schiff, who sponsored the resolution for recognition of the
    genocide, received a standing ovation from the audience before he
    spoke about his `disappointment' that Obama, who is the first
    president to have been a champion of recognition for the events, fell
    short of describing it with the same force he had as a candidate and
    senator.

    As a candidate, Obama had argued that the United States deserved a
    president that would acknowledge the genocide for what it was, Schiff
    said.

    `He was right,' Schiff said. `But he was not that president today, and
    that was deeply disappointing.'

    Assemblyman Paul Krekorian also spoke at the event, saying he recently
    received questions about why he continues to push for genocide
    recognition.

    He asked the audience to remember the impact of the terrorist attacks
    on Sept. 11, 2001, and the emotions they felt upon seeing the World
    Trade Center towers fall in New York City, comparing those reactions
    to those that might have been felt on a daily basis in Armenia, where
    innocent people were systematically killed for a year and a half.

    Killings of that scale deserve to be remembered, he said.

    Several speakers, including Mayor Frank Quintero and journalist Mark
    Arax, took to the stage to commemorate the genocide, along with
    musical acts, including choir and band performances.

    A slew of officials and clergy filled the first rows of the theater,
    including Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca, who said he came to
    remember those who died in the genocide.

    `We have to keep the memory of this in our mind so that this never
    happens again,' he said.

    MAN ON THE STREET

    The Glendale News-Press asked visitors entering the city's Armenian
    Genocide Commemoration at the Alex Theatre what they thought of
    President Obama's reference to the mass killings as `atrocities'
    rather than calling it a `genocide,' which he had pledged to do as a
    candidate.

    `He's scared to use the `genocide' word. That's what I think. It's
    hurtful that he didn't use the `genocide' word and he used the
    [Armenian phrase meaning `The Great Calamity'] because it's
    Armenian. Americans don't understand what `Meds Yeghern' means.'

    HASMIK KARAPETYAN

    Glendale

    `It is still man's inhumanity to man, whatever the term is, and so
    hopefully in our future we will all realize that we are all
    one. Whatever you do to others you will do to yourself.'

    ZEN LOPEZ

    Glendale

    `He's always trying to walk that middle line, so based on that I
    wasn't expecting him to say anything else.'

    ARMEN TALVERDIAN

    Tujunga

    `As an Armenian, my own belief is that America's government will not
    accept the Armenian Genocide for the reason that they are allies with
    Turkey.'

    ANNIE BESEREKIAN

    Vancouver, Canada
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