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Never Again, Never Forget

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  • Never Again, Never Forget

    NEVER AGAIN, NEVER FORGET
    By Jonathan Seeley

    Los Angeles Valley College
    Wednesday, April 28, 2010

    The Armenian Student Body and ASU commemorates 95th anniversary of
    Armenian Genocide in Monarch Hall

    The ceremony was a solemn and reverent affair; applause was not allowed
    out of respect for the dead, but occasional claps would escape after
    a speech or performance moved the crowd of close to 100 people. A
    folding table draped with a black tablecloth sat below Monarch Stage
    and held white tea candles arranged into the shape of a flickering
    Christian cross, while single red and white carnations lined the
    front of the stage. The haunting sounds of the duduk, a traditional
    Armenian wind instrument, played gently and sadly in the background.

    This was the annual commemoration service for the 95th anniversary
    of the Armenian Genocide presented by the Associated Student Union
    and the Armenian Student Body in Monarch Hall last week.

    "My ancestors have died from the Armenian Genocide, 1.5 million
    people," said Armenian Club Vice President Katya Harutyunyan.

    The candles, cross and carnations are symbolic of the Armenian
    Christians who were massacred and forced on death marches into the
    desert by the "Young Turk" and nationalist governments of Ottoman
    Turkey 95 years ago in present day Turkey. Other victims were sent to
    concentration camps, children were injected with typhoid and gassed
    in buildings.

    Throughout the world, commemorations occur on April 24 - the day
    that more than 200 Armenian intellectuals were arrested, deported
    and murdered; and 5,000 Armenians were butchered in Constantinople
    (present day Istanbul).

    April 24, 1915 is the day that the Armenian Genocide officially began,
    lasting until 1923.

    Valley students Harutyunyan and Marine Juharyan stated the goal of
    the commemoration was to pay respect to the victims of the Armenian
    Genocide.

    "They will live forever," said Juharyan, referring to the victims of
    genocide, "as long as there are people to remember them."

    Reverend Avetis of the Armenian Apostolic Church recited the Lord's
    Prayer and asked for mercy on the Armenian martyrs and victims of
    genocide everywhere.

    A slide show called "Never Again" portrayed genocides around the
    world. Two dancers performed, and three Armenian poems were read.

    The other goal of the commemoration was to call attention to Turkey's
    denial of the genocide.

    Shame on Obama, who pretended to fight for justice, promising millions
    of Armenians recognition of the genocide .," said Harutyunyan.

    Milena Malyan of the Unified Young Armenians spoke about a
    commemoration in Glendale on April 23 and another rally in Little
    Armenia on April 24 to protest the ongoing denial of the Turkish
    regime.

    ". (We) will remind President Obama that American leadership should
    not be caving in to the Turkish pressures," read a flyer from the
    Unified Young Armenians.

    ASU Commissioner Ani Kolangian presented a segment from CNN's "60
    Minutes" called "Battle Over History," an example of the controversy
    and politics behind Turkey's official stance against applying the
    term genocide to the events of 1915-1923.

    The "60 Minutes" segment opens by saying, "Wars are fought . rarely
    over history . but that's what Turkey and Armenia are still fighting
    over - what to label the mass deportation and subsequent massacre of
    more than a million Christian Armenians from Ottoman Turkey during
    the First World War."

    According to the segment, "Armenians and an overwhelming number of
    historians say that Turkey's rulers committed genocide . the Turks,
    meanwhile, say their ancestors never carried out such crimes ..."

    The deserts of Deir ez-Zoir contain the bones of an estimated 450,000
    Armenians.

    "The Turkish Empire tried to wipe out Armenians, but as we can see
    from this gathering, they failed," said Kolangian.
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