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    ASBAREZ
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    The ARF: Building a Legacy of Service to the Nation

    BY ALLEN YEKIKAN

    Published in Asbarez.com on January 16, 2009
    http://www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle =38663_1/20/2009_1

    118 years ago, three young Armenians came together to plan a revolution.
    This was not merely a revolution of politics, but also of ideas. Until the
    late 19th century, the thought that Armenians could take charge of their own
    national fate seemed as distant as the last Armenian kingdom. Inspired by
    their times and the notion that the success of the nation lied not in the
    hands of one leader, but the voice of the organized masses, they changed the
    course of Armenian history forever.

    Over a 1,500 people gathered at Glendale High School's auditorium on Sunday,
    January 11th to recall the founding of that revolution, a political party
    called the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF). Over the last century
    the ARF has grown from its humble roots in both size and geography. Through
    its efforts it has earned the respect of the people and the right to
    represent them in the service of the Armenian nation.

    Founded in Tbilisi, Georgia in 1890, the ARF was "born from the need of the
    Armenian people to revolt against centuries of oppression," exclaimed Aram
    Kaloustian, a member of the ARF's Western US Central Committee. This
    oppression came from both within and outside of the community. It was the
    harsh rule of the Sulanate or the Tsarist regime and the antiquated Armenian
    societal constructs which discouraged the individual's ambition to take
    charge of his or her own civic life.

    Its founding ideals of self-determination and social justice reflected the
    romantic spirit of the European Enlightenment spreading throughout the
    Armenian world. While its founders, Christapor Mikaelian, Stepan Zorian, and
    Simon Zavarian were part of a generation of youth educated abroad in a time
    of national revival, dreaming of a brighter, freer future.

    This generation observed a people divided between empires, ravaged by wars
    and plagued by centuries of paralysis and despair. The bleak reality facing
    the nation, long ignored by those in the position to affect change had grown
    intolerable for them.

    The ARF Dashnaktsutyun, Kaloustian explained, was this generations attempt
    "to change that which had seemed unchangeable, to consider something new,
    something different, something better for the Armenian people."

    These ordinary people, no older than today's university graduate, were
    inspired by the literary titans of their day to became revolutionary heroes,
    fighting for the liberation of a people whose history had been derailed,
    relegated to the footnotes of dominating powers.

    At first the ARF was a confederation of smaller groups and organizations
    united by common concerns and principles. It soon became the standard bearer
    of the Armenian Cause, at the forefront of the struggle for civil rights in
    the Ottoman Empire, organizing self-defense units during the Armenian
    Genocide, as well as founding an independent democratic republic that would
    provide a distinct homeland to balance and compliment the Armenian people's
    worldwide dispersion.

    After the genocide and the collapse of the first Armenian Republic in 1921,
    The ARF turned its attention to national revival. It built an international
    infrastructure to support the development of Armenian communities in exile.
    As communities matured and evolved, new generations joined the ARF to serve
    the Armenian people with a vision to thrive in their adopted countries, not
    merely survive.

    An Armenian Red Cross

    The building blocks for this enormous project had been laid by the ARF in
    the early 1900s, in places like the United States, where Armenians had come
    at the turn of the century seeking refuge from Turkish massacres and
    repression.

    The Hamidian Massacres of the mid 1890s had left over a hundred thousand
    dead in the Armenian provinces, triggering a mass exodus of Armenian
    refugees to America. In 1910, Khachatour Maloumian (Stepan Agnouni), a
    member of the ARF's governing Bureau, set out to create a relief society in
    New York to help the growing refugee population cope with the realities of
    immigrant life in the United States.

    As the ARF's Red Cross, the Armenian Relief Society provided the nascent
    community with social support. That most of the newcomers were poor and
    working as unskilled factory and mill workers made the establishment of a
    social safety net for the community all the more essential.

    In 1915, the ARS opened its second chapter in Fresno, followed by another in
    Hollywood in 1918. After the Genocide, ARS chapters began to emerge wherever
    Armenians resettled, establishing orphanages and schools and providing
    social services to Armenian refugees in the Middle East, Iran, the Americas,
    and other communities where the ARF had an established presence.

    Today, the ARS has 223 chapters throughout the world with over 16,000
    members. The Western United States alone has 26 chapters, 16 Saturday
    schools, 5 social service offices, 2 after school Armenian academies and one
    Psychological Counseling Center.

    After Armenia gained independence in 1991, the ARS set up offices throughout
    the homeland, running schools and orphanages throughout Armenia and
    Karabakh. The primary mission of the ARS now, just as it was a century ago,
    is the "preservation of our communal health and social welfare," according
    to Rima Poghosian who serves on the Western ARS's Central Executive. Through
    its social services, she explained, the ARS works to "ensure the needs of
    the community are met in order to provide the foundation for a strong and
    growing diaspora."

    "Elevate Yourself and Others With You"

    A similar vision inspired the creation of the Armenian General Athletic and
    Scouting Union, better known as Homenetmen in Constantinople. By the turn of
    the century the capital city of the Ottoman Empire had become a politicized
    hotbed of Armenian activity focused on national unity.

    In 1911, Shavarsh Krissian, a prominent coach and member of the ARF in
    Constantinople, wrote of the need to promote community unity through the
    cooperation of its athletics organizations. Though the Genocide cut
    Krissian's life short and halted his plans for unifying Armenian athletics,
    his dream lived on. At the end of World War I, a new group of Armenians set
    out to continue Krissian's work, establishing Homenetmen in 1918.

    With "strong mind, strong body" as its creed, Homenetmen set out to inspire
    the national spirit of a new generation of Armenian youth, scattered and
    scarred by the genocide. Since its establishment, it has played an essential
    role in shaping the discipline and leadership capabilities of generations of
    Armenian youth. Through its scouting, athletics and principles of
    sportsmanship, Homenetmen sought to instill in youth an awareness of
    national duty, fraternity, and patriotism.

    Today, Homenetmen has over 25,000 members internationally, with
    approximately 8,000 members in the Western U.S. alone. The organization
    "serves our community, serves everybody at every age level, whether you're
    seven years old or 90 years old, there's something for you in Homenetmen,"
    stressed its Western US Chairman Steve Artinian. "And everything that we do,
    all promotes one thing, becoming a better Armenian."

    Preserving the Soul of a Nation

    The essence of a people can be seen in its culture--such as its literature,
    art, and music. The Genocide put an abrupt and brutal end to an era of
    cultural revival for the Armenian people, while the collapse of the first
    Armenian Republic made refugees out of the Armenian people.

    In 1928 the ARF in Cairo set out to establish an organization that would
    work to undo the damage of the genocide and preserve the cultural existence
    of the Armenian people as they sought to reconstitute their world.

    The Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural Society was established on
    May 28 that year to "to preserve and grow the cultural wealth of the
    Armenian people in the Diaspora," according to Anita Hawatian, a member of
    the Hamazkayin Regional Executive in the Western US.

    In the years that followed, Hamazkayin chapters began to form throughout the
    Middle East, Europe, the United States, Canada, South America, Australia,
    and after 1991, the Republic of Armenia.

    For more than 80 years now the organization has given generations of
    Armenians in the Diaspora an opportunity to experience the rich heritage of
    Armenian culture. Its schools preserved and developed the Armenian literary
    tradition, while local dance groups refined and modernized the traditional
    dances of the Armenian villages.

    "Today, Hamazkayin has chapters worldwide in Canada, USA, Buenos Aires,
    England, France, Greece, Lebanon, Syria, Australia and Armenia," said
    Hawatian. This organization, founded by a generation of refugees, has over
    the decades "established schools (Jemarans) in Aleppo, Beirut, Marseilles,
    and Australia. It also has a college for Armenian studies still functioning
    in Aleppo. The graduates of which are writing our Armenian books and
    newspapers and teaching in Armenian schools throughout the Diaspora."

    In its formative years, Hamazkayin established the Kaspar Ipekian Theatrical
    group to perform Armenian theatrical pieces. Thirty years later it began
    publishing what is even today an internationally renowned monthly cultural
    magazine, called Pakin.

    "A generation saw the importance of reorganization and unity in order to
    survive in foreign lands with language and culture intact," she added.

    Fighting in the Halls of Congress

    While the ARF were rallying volunteers to hold off the advancing Turkish
    armies intent on completing the genocide of the Armenian people at
    Sardarabad, an Armenian lawyer was recruiting American public support for
    the Armenian cause, fighting for congressional support for the independence
    of Armenia. Working alongside Armenia's ambassador, Armen Garo, Vahan
    Cardashian rallied countless prominent American officials and public figures
    in support of the American Committee for the Independence of Armenia. The
    ACIA's efforts led to an official recognition of the Armenian Republic by
    the United States in 1919 and secured President Woodrow Wilson's support for
    a viable Armenian state as outlined in the Treaty of Sevres.

    Cardashian dedicated his life to the Armenian Cause. Although he was
    ultimately unable to prevent US collaboration with Kemalist Turkey, his
    sacrifices paved the way for the future efforts of Armenian advocacy in the
    United States.

    In the late 1960s, the ARF set out to build on Cardashian's legacy,
    establishing the Armenian National Committee of America to harness the
    budding influence of the maturing Armenian-American community. As a vital
    component of the ARF family, the ANCA relies on grassroots empowerment "to
    represent, defend and promote the interests of the Armenian American
    community in the United States," explained Antranig Kzirian, the Executive
    Director of the ANCA Western Region.

    Relying on the strength of local chapters, he added, the ANCA works today to
    "secure justice for the Armenian Genocide, insure the survival of the
    Republic of Armenia, protect the right to self-determination for Artsakh,
    and ensure that our Diaspora institutions--our schools, our community
    centers, our churches--all improve and grow as vital components of the
    Armenian nation."

    Today, the ANCA oversees a network of more than 50 chapters throughout the
    United States all working, individually and in coordination, to promote
    Armenian issues in local, state, and federal government. The ARF has also
    fostered the growth of an international network of ANC's throughout South
    America, Europe, and the Middle East. Each ANC works to consolidate the
    political capital of the diaspora in support of the small and currently
    landlocked Republic of Armenia.

    Meanwhile, the ARF works on the same goals inside Armenia. Participating in
    politics as an active political party to "strengthen Armenian statehood and
    establish a socially just and democratic system of government in the
    country," said Avedik Izmirlian, the chairman of the Western US Central
    Committee, commenting on the importance of being able to help Armenia from
    both within and without the country.

    A Youth Movement to Drive the Cause

    The ARF and the subsequent community organizations it established would not
    have come into being if it were not for the dedication of countless young
    Armenians determined to serve and work for the community's wellbeing. The
    significance of this fact was not lost on the ARF as it grappled with the
    looming threat of assimilation in the United States.

    Joining the collection of Armenian youth groups that had emerged in America
    by the early 1930s, the ARF sought to create a sustainable movement that
    could inspire, earn the respect, and recruit the next generation of its
    leaders. What was needed was an entity that could consistently organize
    young Armenians and educate them regarding the merits of the ARF ideology.

    It was from of this need that the ARF commissioned General Garegin Njdeh to
    tour the Armenian communities of the United States and create a national
    youth organization, the Armenian Youth Federation. By consolidating smaller
    groups and setting up new AYF chapters where none existed, Garegin Njdeh,
    ensured that Armenian-American youth would be able to learn tenants and
    apply the policies of the ARF throughout the community "at its forefront,
    leading it on many levels," said Vache Thomassian, the chairman of the
    Armenian Youth Federation's Western Region.

    Established in 1933, the AYF today boasts 31 chapters throughout the United
    States and dozens more spread throughout the world. "It organizes young
    people to develop and promote ARF policies through political activism,
    working for genocide recognition and restitution, and working within the
    channels of our federal, local and state government," Thomassian explained.

    "There are also many community building activities and programs run annually
    by the AYF," Thomassian said, noting, among others, a beautification
    campaign to clean up the streets of Little Armenia, and a summer camp where
    over 600 Armenian youth spend the week making life long friendships.

    As an educational organization, it organizes community lectures and
    discussions on a wide range of topics aimed at raising the awareness of not
    only the ARF and its approach to addressing the Armenian Cause, but also the
    greater human cause. It also publishes a quarterly magazine produced
    entirely by young Armenians.

    The AYF has also been active in Armenia. In the late 1980s and early 1990s,
    as Armenia fought for independence, the AYF raised money in the United
    States to supply much-needed funds to the people in Armenia and Karabakh.
    Many of its members even traveled to Karabakh to fight alongside the heroes
    of the liberation movement. In 1994, the AYF's Western Region set out to
    create a program that would build bridges between Armenians in the Diaspora
    and the homeland, sending youth to Armenia and Karabakh in the summers to
    help rebuild schools, camps, and churches, devastated by the war and
    difficult years after independence.

    "Youth Corps has provides a way for Diasporan Armenians to connect with our
    homeland, to work and see our country and live as actual residents,"
    Thomassian said. In 2008, the Youth Corps established a summer camp in the
    Gyumri earthquake recovery zone, where program participants served as
    counselors for underprivileged children.

    The AYF also works with the ARF Student Associations to promote the ARF and
    provide Armenian student groups wherever they exist, with support through "a
    continuity of work through its experience, resources and leadership," he
    added.

    As the numbers of Armenians in the halls of higher education swelled with
    the survivors of the Armenian Genocide and their descendents, Armenian
    student groups began organizing throughout the United States. AYF members
    helped establish many of the nation's Armenian Student Associations (ASA).
    Today, the ARF Shant Student Association works in close collaboration with
    the ASAs to advance Armenian issues through America's university system,
    where the Turkish government has been waging a fierce battle to erase the
    history of the Armenian Genocide and win over a new generation of American
    leadership.

    "The young men and women, who once held guns to defend their land and
    people, are now a generation of educated students whose weapon of choice is
    knowledge. That generation is the ARF Shant Student Association (SSA),"
    exclaimed Caspar Jivalagian, one of its members. " The SSA works in close
    collaboration with the ASA's to address Armenian issues."

    Organizing leadership seminars, youth rallies, and forums on various topics,
    the SSA plays an integral role in equipping new young and educated
    generations of Armenians with the ARF perspective and the tools necessary to
    become activists for a better future within their campus communities, local
    communities, and Armenia.

    "23, 24, and 31. Those were the ages of the founders of the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation," Thomassian aptly noted.


    Truth Be Told: Dreams of Historic Men
    BY ANDRE ARZOO

    Published: Monday January 19, 2009 at www.asbarez.com
    http://www.asbarez.com/index.html? showarticle=38726_1/20/2009_1

    January 19: Today is a day for us to commemorate; we commemorate Martin
    Luther King Jr. who struggled throughout his life, ultimately sacrificing it
    as an advocate for equality and free speech within the segregated and
    tainted streets of America's past.

    Today, however, Armenians and Turks alike also commemorate this day for
    another figure of justice, equality, and truth. A figure who also gave his
    life in a struggle for human justice, not only of his own ethnic people but
    also for the citizens of a nation caught between their past and present
    history.

    Armenian Genocide Recognition: a controversial issue in many countries
    today, in many communities, and in many cities. A true act of terror
    committed in 1915 against millions of Armenians and other minorities living
    within the Ottoman Empire, today's Turkey. This is a topic that even when
    mentioned or referred to can cause great uproar and commotion, whether it be
    discussed among politicians or common men in Washington Yerevan, or Ankara.
    These past few years have seen the passion and tragedy this issue can
    genuinely stir up, passion that not only continues to take lives and ignite
    political battles but also continues to divide a nation.

    Hrant Dink, an Armenian news editor, intellectual, and political activist
    who was born and raised in Turkey and who stood as an advocate for
    individual rights in a country where not only Armenians are silenced by
    nationalist and government forces, but also the Turkish population itself.

    Dink was the editor and founder of the Armenian-Turkish newspaper Agos. He
    was an academic and political personality among other Turkish nationals such
    as Orhan Pamuk, who fell as legal victims to the infamous Turkish penal code
    (Article 301) that considers any statement in recognition of the genocide as
    illegal--an insult to "Turkey, the Turkish ethnicity, or Turkish government
    institutions." Article 301 is as a crime punishable by imprisonment. For
    Dink, it was punishable by death.

    When asked in a 2005 interview why he founded the controversial Agos
    newspaper in a country where such a step, especially as an Armenian, assured
    not only the danger of his reputation but also of his own life, Dink
    replied: "I was obliged to. I was obliged to because in Turkey the pressure
    against Armenians had reached its climax. Everywhere enmity against the
    Armenians in TV stations, in the press, in political life, academic life,
    everywhere the word %u218Armenian' had become a swearword."

    Dink was gunned down two years later on January 19, 2007 in front of his
    Agos newspaper headquarters by a 17-year-old Turkish ultra-nationalist, Ogun
    Samast, whom many suspect had links to "deep government and state forces."

    Just months prior to his assassination, during a visit in November of 2006
    to the largely Armenian populated city of Glendale, California, Dink
    predicted, in great foresight, the fate that was to fall upon him and as a
    result, the people of Turkey:

    "I get threats, of course. But I never asked for protection. And I will not
    ask the police, because I don't know whom to trust more. That is what I
    don't know; If something is going to happen, it's good to struggle on your
    feet, and die on your feet. And not in bed. That way is better."

    The immediate public backlash in Turkey and throughout the world was
    astonishing. Hundreds of thousands of Turks and Armenians alike gathered in
    the streets of Ankara chanting "We are all Hrants! We are all Armenians!"
    representing the true role Hrant played in this society as a Turkish citizen
    and not just as an ethnic-Armenian minority.

    Today, the population in Turkey continues to live under constant censorship
    and oppression by the state, not just in terms of the genocide, but also in
    terms of free speech and individual expression. To the Turkish people, Hrant
    served as a leader and a hero who fought along side other compatriots to
    bring this oppression against individual rights and the Turkish people to an
    end.

    The genocide issue, however, has not only affected the citizens of Turkey or
    the Armenian nation independently. This is an issue that has affected
    Turkish-Armenian relations as well, both on the level of state diplomacy and
    more importantly between two historically divided peoples. Armenians in the
    United States and abroad have invested countless man-hours, political
    resources, and financial assets to assure the international recognition of
    the Armenian Genocide, an effort which the state of Turkey has invested
    overwhelmingly to prevent.

    In the same interview mentioned previously, the reporter comments on
    statements Dink made in the past about thousands and millions of Turkish
    citizens and youth who know virtually nothing about the genocide against
    Armenians that took place in their country almost a hundred years ago.

    "Yes, they don't," Dink acknowledged, noting how Turkish schoolchildren are
    taught that Armenians massacred Turks. "When a young man is bred on this,
    his identity has been mixed with this. This is very clear. That's why I say,
    %u218do you think the Turks know the truth and they deny it? Or no?'
    Whatever they know is what they defend."

    Hrant believed that Turkey would eventually come to recognize the truth
    about its past. He was an advocate of an approach to genocide recognition
    that avoided forcing or pressuring the State of Turkey and the Turkish
    people to acknowledge the past. The Turkish people, he said, could not be
    forced to acknowledge and accept that their ancestors had committed such a
    severe a crime against humanity as genocide.

    "This people [the Turkish people] needs neither to admit or deny. It needs
    to know, to know the truth. To learn the truth. For this you need free
    speech, free knowledge, free education. We must learn. This people has to
    learn. After learning the truth it will use its own conscience," Hrant said.


    And this is exactly what Hrant Dink stood for--what he saw as his
    responsibility, not just as an Armenian, but as a Turkish citizen and as a
    human being. When asked what it is that ties him to Turkey, Dink simply
    answered: "This is my country, it is the country of my grandparents, my
    roots are here. Why is the Diaspora [Armenians] always looking here? It is
    here that we have schools and churches."

    And when asked about the destruction of an Armenian church in the Turkish
    city of Diyarbekir, Dink replied with resolve, saying "they will destroy and
    we will rebuild."

    Since Hrant Dink's assassination, many events in Turkey and the Armenian
    Diaspora have come to fruition in regards to Turkish-Armenian relations and
    the genocide issue.

    In 2007, Armenian political organizations were successful in their campaign
    to garner support in the United States Congress to pass a resolution
    formally recognizing the Armenian Genocide in the U.S. Foreign Affairs
    Committee, however, the resolution was never brought to a vote by the full
    House of Representatives, as Turkey's lobby had effectively tied it with US
    security in Iraq.

    In 2008, Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian formerly invited Turkish
    President Abdullah Gul to Armenia for a World Cup qualifying soccer match
    between the two nations. Gul became the first Turkish President to step foot
    in independent Armenia.

    The most important event, however, which Hrant Dink himself would be proud
    to see was one that took place in Turkey and the Turkish parliament itself
    late last year. Turkish academics and intellectuals came together and
    established an internet-campaign to apologize to the Armenians.

    The campaign, titled "We apologize to Armenians," brought thousands of
    Turkish citizens to its website to sign a petition condemning what they
    called "the Great Catastrophe" of 1915. This apology was unprecedented in
    Turkey's history. The campaign sparked mass controversy in Turkey, to the
    point where the Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, publicly
    condemned the campaign as damaging to the State of Turkey and Turkish
    identity. The campaign also sparked a verbal bout in the Turkish Parliament
    between parliamentarians when a group of politicians demanded an apology by
    the government for the crime against humanity.

    The Turkish President has scheduled a meeting of parliament for April 13th
    to discuss "actions against the statements about the so-called Armenian
    Genocide."

    But with the Turkish government struggling harder than ever to keep a lid on
    the truth, it seems that Hrant Dink's efforts were not in vain and that
    justice for both the Armenian and Turkish people is within reach. Members of
    Turkey's government are now begining to question the state's version of
    history within the very institutions that have denied the Armenian Genocide
    for so many decades. This is an unprecedented development.
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