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Detroit Commemorates ARF's 119th Anniversary

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  • Detroit Commemorates ARF's 119th Anniversary

    DETROIT COMMEMORATES ARF'S 119TH ANNIVERSARY
    By Georgi-Ann Oshagan

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2009/12/02/ detroit-commemorates-arf%E2%80%99s-119th-anniversa ry/
    December 2, 2009

    DEARBORN, Mich.-The ARF Detroit "Azadamard" Gomideh observed the
    federation's 119th anniversary on Nov. 13-14 at the Armenian Community
    Center in Dearborn with ARF Archives Institute director Vatche Proodian
    speaking on both days.

    On Nov. 13, the AYF-YOARF Detroit "Kopernik Tandourjian" Senior
    Chapter joined the "Azadamard" Gomideh and its members for a joint
    membership meeting. The meeting was preceded by a pizza and salad
    supper and socializing. The Gomideh chairman, Narses Gedigian, and the
    AYF chapter president, Ani Hagopian, opened the meeting and introduced
    their respective executive boards.

    Gedigian gave a presentation on the ARF's position on the
    Armenia-Turkey protocols and provided information on the Gomideh's
    leadership role in organizing metro Detroit's April 2010 commemoration
    of the Armenian Genocide. AYF executive board member Nieri Avanessian
    outlined the impetus behind the ANCA's national "Countdown to Erdogan"
    Campaign and urged all AYF and ARF members to participate in the
    ANCA's daily directives to ensure the maximum support and impact of
    the grassroots campaign.

    A highlight of the evening was a presentation by AYF members Anoush
    Mardigian and Arakel and Jaclyn Chopjian on their AYF summer internship
    in Armenia this past summer. They answered many questions about their
    impressions of Armenia and Armenian society, Armenian youth attitudes,
    and the Armenian public's reaction to the protocols.

    Proodian presented a DVD on the establishment of the ARF Archives
    Institute at the Hairenik Building in Watertown, Mass. The video
    featured important and rare items from the archives, and Proodian
    provided additional details on the ARF's archive project and the back
    story to some of the items contained in the archives.

    The following day, on Nov. 14, members of the ARF's affiliated
    organizations gathered for dinner at the Armenian Community Center and
    listened to Proodian speak about the run-up to the protocols and the
    international political pressures that led Armenia into signing them.

    Proodian began by explaining that the government of Turkey has been
    focused on changing its international image by presenting itself
    as an important mediator in long-simmering political disputes and
    by favoring open dialogue to resolve political problems. Proodian
    noted that Turkey has embraced this new image not only to gain entry
    to the European Union but also to stifle recognition and reparations
    demands in connection with the Armenian Genocide.

    With the recent diminishment of Turkey's "Kurdish problem," he said,
    following the establishment of a "de facto Kurdistan" in northern Iraq,
    only Armenia presents a threat with its political and territorial
    demands.

    Proodian said that Turkey's leaders had become concerned of shifting
    pro-genocide recognition dynamics in the U.S. Congress earlier this
    year-particularly after Obama's April 2009 statement while in Turkey,
    that his personal position on the Armenian Genocide had not changed-and
    feared that those conditions could lead to U.S.

    recognition of the genocide in 2009.

    Thus, he said, Turkey's push for the protocols.

    Proodian enumerated the well-established problem points in the current
    protocols: the establishment of a body to investigate the Armenian
    Genocide's "historical dimension," waiver of Armenian territorial
    claims with recognition of the Kars Treaty-established border, and
    Armenia's recognition of her neighbors' "territorial integrity" so
    as to diminish the self-determination rights of Karabagh's Armenian
    population. He observed that the national interests and rights of the
    Armenian people would be "doomed" if the protocols were ratified by
    Turkey's and Armenia's parliaments in their current state.

    Proodian urged all audience members to participate in anti-protocol
    activities to derail the ratification process. "We are in a war that
    is possible to win," he concluded. "We must do everything."

    A lively question and answer period followed Proodian's remarks.
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