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  • Protesting The Protocols

    PROTESTING THE PROTOCOLS
    By Melanie Hicken

    Glendale News Press
    October 7, 2009 7:21 PM PDT

    Stop The Protocols supporters chained themselves together and placed
    tape on their mouths during hunger strike across the street from the
    Armenian Consulate on Glenoaks Blvd. at Central Ave. in Glendale on
    Wednesday. The group of about 32 protestors began their vigil Monday
    night and will be there until Friday night. (Raul Roa/News-Press)
    Activists want Turkey to recognize the 1915 genocide before signing
    papers.

    GLENDALE -- As lunchtime neared Wednesday, 17-year-old Vana Aprahamian
    hadn't consumed anything but water for 35 hours. Her fast would
    continue until Friday at midnight.

    "I think the first day was the most difficult day," she said, speaking
    barely above a whisper to save energy. "You don't feel hungry any
    more. You just feel weak."

    Aprahamian is one of 32 protesters taking part in a 96-hour hunger
    strike on Glenoaks Boulevard across from the Armenian Consulate to
    protest protocols for new official talks between Armenia and Turkey.

    The talks are a part of a "road map" agreed upon last spring for
    normalizing diplomatic relations between Turkey and Armenia and
    opening their shared border. The proposed deal still must receive
    Parliamentary approval from both countries.

    The two countries have long clashed over the mass killings of
    Armenians in 1915 at the hands of the Ottoman Empire. Turkey refuses
    to categorize the deaths as genocide and has strongly fought against
    any formal recognition of the massacres.

    The Armenian Youth Federation and members of the Stop the Protocols
    campaign organized the strike to send a message to the leadership of
    Armenia to not take part in the talks. In recent weeks, thousands
    of Armenians have gathered in massive rallies, including one in
    Pelanconi Park.

    Protesters said they were most enraged about the proposed formation
    of a historical commission to look into the validity of the Armenian
    Genocide.

    "If the protocols get signe e Armenian Genocide into question," said
    24-year-old Berj Parseghian, a co-organizer of the strike. "And that
    is not acceptable."

    While the mass killings occurred in 1915, Parseghian said the youngest
    generation of Armenians still feel personally affected by the genocide.

    "We've seen our grandparents' pain," he said.

    Close to noon Wednesday, many of the hunger strikers huddled together
    on a bright blue tarp covered in blankets. The hunger, they said,
    left them exhausted and not wanting to move. Many clutched water
    bottles in compliance with a doctor's recommendation that all strikers
    consume two liters of water a day.

    "Everyone is really in slow motion right now," Parseghian said.

    When not resting, the strikers assembled at various corners of the
    intersection of Glenoaks Boulevard and Central Avenue standing in
    front of large banners that read "hunger strike" as Armenian flags
    waved to honking cars.

    Every two hours they assembled in various demonstrations for passing
    cars and pedestrians. They chained themselves together and donned
    red tape on their mouths for a silent demonstration.

    Co-organizer Patil Aslanian, 21, said the outpouring of support from
    the community had kept them going.

    Hundreds of people came out Tuesday night for a rally, and so
    far dozens of people have stopped by at various times to provide
    encouragement, she said. And other young people have joined the strike
    as part-time strikers who will fast for at least 48 hours.

    "The numbers keep growing and growing," she said. "The community is
    really heated about the issue."
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