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220 Armenian Intellectuals Exiled In 1915 Commemorated

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  • 220 Armenian Intellectuals Exiled In 1915 Commemorated

    220 ARMENIAN INTELLECTUALS EXILED IN 1915 COMMEMORATED

    AZG Armenian Daily
    01/05/2009

    Armenian Genocide

    On 24 April 1915, over 200 Armenian intellectuals were exiled and
    then killed. The Human Rights Association commemorated this loss to
    Armenian, Ottoman and Turkish society.

    The Human Rights Association's (Ä°HD) Committee against Racism and
    Discrimination commemorated 24 April 1915, the day that Armenians
    worldwide recognize as the beginning of the forced exile of Armenians
    from the Ottoman Empire, with an event in the Tobacco Depot in
    Istanbul.

    On that day, 139 Armenian intellectuals were arrested in Istanbul and
    forcibly taken to Cankırı and AyaÅ~_ in central Anatolia. They were
    then killed.

    Lawyer Eren Keskin spoke at the event entitled "24 April 1915 and
    Armenian Intellectuals: They were arrested, they were evicted, they
    did not even get a grave stone."

    She said that the death of these intellectuals represented a loss not
    only for the Armenian language, culture, thought and science world,
    but also for the Ottoman society of the time and for "the world of
    all of us today."

    An exhibition displayed stories and pictures from a book entitled
    "Memory of 11 April", written by Teotig in 1919 and dealing with the
    deaths of the intellectuals.

    The commemorative event started with a concert of the KardeÅ~_
    Turkuler folk group which performed songs in Armenian, Kurdish,
    Suryani, Arabic and Turkish.

    The group members said that they had fulfilled a wish of murdered
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in December, when they had
    organised a tour in Armenia together with the Turkey-based Armenian
    choir Sayat Nova.

    "We saw that the Ararat mountain embraces Yerevan just as much as it
    does Agrı province."

    Keskin said, "We, who believed what we were told, and who stayed
    quiet even if we did not believe it...we are all guilty."

    Publisher Ragıp Zarakol and members of the Bosphorus Performance
    Arts Society (BGST) theatre department read life stories and poems of
    and by Rupen Sevag, Siamanto (Atom Yerjeyan), Taniel Varujan, Teotig
    (Teotoros Lapcinyan) and Krikor Zohrab, all of them killed in 1915.

    Around 100 people attended the event, among them Hrant Dink's widow
    Rakel Dink and his brother Orhan Dink, journalist Sarkis Saropyan,
    academic AyÅ~_e Gul Altınay and lawyer and IHD branch head Gulseren
    Yoleri.

    After Zarakol recounted the life of Armenian musician Gomidas, Keskin
    ended the commemoration with a quote from the musician:

    "It was spring, but here it was snowing." (BC/AG)
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