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Armenian Roots Run Deep In St. Peters Official

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  • Armenian Roots Run Deep In St. Peters Official

    ARMENIAN ROOTS RUN DEEP IN ST. PETERS OFFICIAL
    By Latreecia Wade

    St. Louis Post-Dispatch
    http://suburbanjournals.stltoday.com /articles/2009/07/29/stcharles/news/doc4a704f83639 49941206880.txt
    July 29 2009
    Missouri

    In the last several decades, Holocaust survivors have been speaking
    out to community groups and schools to make sure that genocide is
    not forgotten.

    But there was another genocide in Europe a few decades earlier,
    one that few people in St. Charles County may have heard about.

    It was the Armenian genocide of 1915, during World War I.

    And the family of St. Peters community relations director Lisa Bedian
    lived through it.

    The genocide, which was ordered by the Turkish government and killed
    about 1.5 million Armenians, forced Bedian's grandparents from Turkey.

    Bedian, who does public and community relations for the city, remembers
    what her grandparents have told her about the experience.

    The Turkish government used deportation tactics forcing Armenians to
    march through the wilderness and deserts under horrendous conditions,
    she said. Boys, some as young as 13, were forced into the military,
    Bedian said.

    "If they refused, the soldiers would take them out of the villages
    and kill them," she said.

    After he heard about Bedian's grandparents, Mayor Len Pagano earlier
    this year set aside an official day to honor Armenians affected by
    the genocide. The day is Apr. 24.

    In May, the Board of Aldermen passed a resolution in support of a
    national bill recognizing the Armenian genocide. About 20 St. Charles
    County residents of Armenian descent were there. Rev. Stepan Baljian
    of St. Gregory Armenian Church in Granite City, Ill., offered an
    invocation during the meeting.

    The Turkish government does not acknowledge the genocide.

    Bedian's grandfather, Asadour Bedian, and a cousin escaped from
    the Turkish town of Divrik at age 20 as word of the Ottoman Turkish
    atrocities spread across the country, Bedian said.

    Asadour Bedian, who was later called "Oscar," made three attempts to
    come into the United States. He traveled to the South American country
    of Bolivia before making it in through Cuba, Lisa Bedian said. Many
    in his family were killed.

    "He went out west to work on railroad construction with his cousin,"
    she said.

    Asadour Bedian later settled in Granite City, Ill., and worked in
    the steel mills there. His cousin settled in Lynn, Mass.

    "A lot of the immigrants went to work in East St. Louis and Granite
    City," Lisa Bedian said. "It was the only place a non-English speaking
    person could find a job."

    As a single man, he sought an Armenian girl to marry. With the
    help of a local woman, he sent a letter to an Armenian orphanage in
    Constantinople, Bedian said. The woman wrote the letter on behalf of
    Asadour Bedian and another man seeking Armenian wives.

    "The orphanage sent two photos for my grandfather to pick from,
    and he picked my grandmother's picture," Lisa Bedian said.

    Her name was Elizabeth Eghiassarian.

    The soon-to-be groom sent money to pay for Elizabeth's voyage by
    ship to America and some clothing. He met her as she docked in the
    at Ellis Island, Lisa Bedian said. They were married the next day at
    an Armenian Church in New York City.

    "She was 15 years old when she came here," Bedian said. "Can you
    imagine what that must have been like? So young and to marry someone
    you didn't even know."

    After their wedding in September 1921, they had three children, Arthur,
    who is Lisa Bedian's father, Caroline and Sue. Asadour Bedian died
    in June 1971 at age 80. Elizabeth passed away in May 1976. She was
    71. The couple were married nearly 52 years.
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