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The Armenian Mirror-Spectator - 05/07/2011

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  • The Armenian Mirror-Spectator - 05/07/2011

    The Armenian Mirror-Spectator
    755 Mount Auburn St.
    Watertown, MA 02472
    Tel: (617) 924-4420
    Fax: (617) 924-2887
    Web: http://www.mirrorspectator.com
    E-mail: [email protected]


    ************************************************** **********************
    1. Times Square Commemoration of 96th Genocide Anniversary Draws Thousands
    2. Banquet in New Jersey Honoring Mirror-Spectator Set for June 4
    3. Polarization Gives Way to Political Realism In Armenia

    ************************************************** **********************
    1. Times Square Commemoration of 96th Genocide Anniversary Draws Thousands

    NEWYORK - The gathering of several thousand Armenians in a public square
    in
    one of the most visible sites in the United States seems a fitting way to
    remember the past, and remind others who want to forget it.

    This year because Easter was celebrated on April 24, the Times Square
    commemoration of the 96th anniversary took place on the following Sunday,
    May 1. Organizers estimated at least 2,000 people were present, and hundreds
    of thousands more walked by, or watched it on television. Turkish state
    television, along with several Armenian television and radio stations,
    recorded the event.

    New Jersey lawyer Armen McOmber and Dr. Mary Papazian, provost and senior
    vice president for academic affairs at Lehmen College of the City University
    of New York, served as masters of ceremony. Vagharshak Ohanyan led the
    Arekag Children's Choir of the Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural
    Society of the Eastern United States in several songs as well as the
    performance of the American and Armenian national anthems. Pianist and
    composer Karén Hakobyan led the choir in a special premier performance of
    his piece, Independent Armenia. Five important American politicians gave
    rousing speeches, along with representatives of four co-sponsoring
    organizations - Natalie Gabrielian, associate director of education at the
    Armenian General Benevolent Union; Bryan Ardrouny, executive director of the
    Armenian Assembly; Doug Geogerian, Armenian National Committee Eastern
    Region director from 2004 to 2006, and representatives of the Armenian
    Democratic Liberal Party and the Armenian Rights Council of America.

    Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, Primate of the Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian
    Apostolic Church of America, and Fr. Vazken Karayan, pastor of Holy Cross
    Armenian Church of Union City, NJ and representing the Diocese of the
    Armenian Church of America (Eastern), offered invocations and closing
    benedictions. Their institutions were among the participating organizations,
    along with the Armenian Missionary Association of America, Armenian
    Presbyterian Church, the Armenian Evangelical Church of America, the
    Armenian Catholic Eparchy for the US and Canada, Tekeyan Cultural
    Association, Hamazkayin and numerous Armenian youth organizations. Buses
    brought Armenians from New York and New Jersey churches, as well as from the
    Knights of Vartan Boston Ararat Lodge and the Ardashad Lodge of
    Philadelphia. There were some attendees from as far away as California.

    Knights of Vartan Grand Commander Dennis Papazian and Daughters of Vartan
    Grand Matron Melene Ouzounian introduced members of their grand councils and
    other important officials who were present. Papazian, also founding director
    of the Armenian Research Center at the University of Michigan-Dearborn,
    revealed the theme of the commemoration, that Turkey is guilty of genocide,
    and denying genocide is a crime. He declared, `When a crime can be committed
    with impunity, criminals will act with impunity,' and noted that the
    Assyrian and Greek genocides were also being commemorated along with the
    Jewish Holocaust. Papazian challenged the Turkish government to allow their
    people to study their own history without fear of punishment. Ouzounian
    stressed the importance of educating the young about the great price paid by
    their ancestors for liberty and their faith. Later she introduced the
    winners of the Knights of Vartan Armenian Genocide Essay contest, who, in
    declining order of rank of awards, were Jeremy Majerovitz, Gerard Nelson,
    and Samuel Levine, three students from the elite public Stuyvesant High
    School in Manhattan, and honorable mention recipient Katrice Karanfilian,
    from Bergen County Academies in Oradell, NJ.

    New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, an influential Democrat who has for decades
    backed efforts at recognition of the Armenian Genocide, which he calls `one
    of the worst genocides in world history,' stirred the crowd with his words.
    He declared, `We are here today to tell future Hitlers that we do remember,
    that they cannot succeed, that they cannot brush history under the rug. We
    are lighting a candle for truth, not just for those who suffered in Armenia,
    not just for the Armenian people, but for the world, because in every
    generation, in every generation, there are those like the Turkish leaders
    during 1915 and 1916, there are those like the Hitlers, there are those like
    the Idi Amins, who seek to destroy people simply who they are. History tells
    us they always arise, but history tells us one other thing, that is, that
    truth may be temporarily dimmed, but the light of truth, the candle of
    truth, always burns through, and that's why we are here today. I say to you
    my friends, from the day I got into Congress, I was a staunch supporter of
    the Armenian quest, to remember the Armenian Genocide, the Armenian
    Holocaust, and I will continue to do that with every atom in my body, until
    the Turkish government admits the truth, makes reparations for what they
    have done, and until the Armenian community is vindicated. My friends, I
    stand with you in solidarity.'

    Schumer was followed by Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ), another fervent and
    influential supporter of US recognition of the Armenian Genocide, who said,
    `Now, as a member of the Senate Foreign Relations [committee], I have said
    that American diplomacy must avoid the euphemisms. To overlook human
    suffering is not who we are as a people. It is not what we stand for as a
    nation. We are better than that and our foreign policy should always reflect
    that goodness. And that is why it is imperative that the president of the
    United States, of my own party, recognize that this was a genocide and call
    it as such.' Menendez continued to great applause, `I promise you that
    for
    so long as I continue to be a United States senator, sitting on the Senate
    Foreign Relations Committee, that any nominee who comes before the committee
    having anything to do with Armenia, will have to answer the question, do you
    recognize the Armenian Genocide. And I will continue to push - as I have
    held up nominees in the past - I will continue to push the people who we
    have in place around the world to represent the United States, to recognize
    the horrific events of 1915 as a genocide, and I will continue to push to
    make sure that the United States reflects a deep sense of moral outrage with
    respect to the Armenian Genocide.'

    Rep. Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ), founder of the Congressional Caucus on
    Armenian Issues, and one of the most active initiators and sponsors of
    legislation favorable to Armenia and Armenians in Congress, stated that he
    was frequently asked why one should focus on the Genocide when contemporary
    Armenia and Karabagh have so many problems. Pallone's answer was that both
    were crucial and interconnected issues: `People don't seem to understand - I
    know that you do - that this is an ongoing effort, an ongoing effort to
    basically destroy the Armenian people.' The denialist rhetoric from Turks
    and Azerbaijanis has become more aggressive recently, Pallone said, `We will
    be here every day and will continue to agitate until the commemoration in
    Congress takes place. We do it for Armenia, we do it for Karabagh and we do
    it for those who suffer human rights violations anywhere on earth - I worry
    every day. The United States needs to be supportive of Armenia and Karabagh
    militarily, economically. We need to continue to provide humanitarian and
    military assistance to both countries.' He urged the Armenians and their
    sympathizers to be optimistic, concluding, `We will succeed, because we have
    right on our side.'

    Rounding out the group of supportive national politicians who have year
    after year participated in the Times Square commemoration, New York Rep.
    Anthony Weiner strode out and said, `I say to all Turkish Americans, to all
    residents of Turkey today: This is not intended to be an exercise in finger
    pointing, but this is an exercise in making sure that the pages of history
    are not defiled by blank spaces, black marks, Xs where there should be
    circles. The only way we can become a more perfect union in the United
    States, and a more perfect people of the globe, is by speaking truth even of
    the atrocities.' Weiner pointed out that there are people even today who
    deny the Holocaust ever took place, as well as the Armenian Genocide.
    Consequently, he said, `So as long as those people are allowed to crawl
    along the surface of the earth, to crawl out from their rocks every so
    often, none of us can be safe to make sure that those atrocities don't
    happen again. ..What we seek is the truth from the people who did the
    atrocities - My name is Anthony Weiner and I will never forget the Armenian
    Genocide.'

    New York City Comptroller John Liu, one of the city politicians who back the
    Armenian cause, stated, `Here we are at the crossroads of the world, Times
    Square, we celebrate our diversity, but the diversity that we have here is
    strong only in recognition of where we came from, our roots, our heritage,
    our culture and our history; and the history that has happened with the
    Armenian people is a history that is undeniable.' He added, `Keep up the
    fight - we won't let you down.'

    A proclamation from Mayor Michael Bloomberg was read, proclaiming May 1,
    2011 as Armenian Genocide Commemoration Day in the City of New York (see the
    accompanying sidebar to this article for its text). Rep. Scott Garrett
    (D-NJ) also sent a statement which in part read: `While it is painful to
    commemorate these terrible acts each year, we must remember and must learn
    from the past. The Armenian Genocide serves as a powerful example of what
    can occur when governments persecute citizens based on ethnicity or
    religious affiliation.'

    Keynote speaker Dr. Richard Hovannisian, holder of the Armenian Educational
    Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History and professor of Armenian and
    Near Eastern history at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) for
    several decades, has edited many volumes on the Armenian Genocide. He said
    that the trauma of genocide was passed on to the following generations,
    compounded by continuing Turkish denial. Armenians and others ask for
    reaffirmation of what originally was recognized and then deliberately
    forgotten.

    However, Armenians must now not only focus on the lost dead, as so many were
    killed in the 20th century, but stress the loss that Raffi Hovannisian,
    Richard's son, has focused on - hayrenazrgutiwn, or national dispossession.
    Richard Hovannisian felt `the loss of a civilization, the loss of a
    homeland, the loss of a way of life of 3,000 years is the major continuing
    traumatic aspect of 1915.' The Armenian Genocide in many ways is a prototype
    for later genocides. For this genocide to be remembered, Hovannisian said,
    it must be integrated into the history of mankind; otherwise it will be lost
    and truly forgotten. Gathering in Times Square is also part of the struggle
    for memory against forgetting. Dr. Joan Rivitz, associate director of the
    New Jersey Commission on Holocaust Education and chair of the New Jersey
    Commission on Civil Rights, a daughter of Holocaust survivors, said,
    `Armenians and Jews of the diaspora, survivors, second generation, third and
    fourth generations, and those yet to come, we must continue in solidarity to
    remember the true, undeniable facts of the dark parts of our parallel
    histories. "The world community simply stood by and watched".If Turkey had
    been held accountable for the Armenian Genocide, Hitler might not have been
    able to plan and execute the Holocaust. '

    Three survivors of the Armenian Genocide, 101-year-old Perouz Kaloustian,
    99-year-old Arshalouis Dadir, and 98-year-old Charlotte Kechejian, were
    wheeled out to receive the respect and applause of the audience, escorted by
    Aghavni `Aggie' Ellian, executive director of the New York Armenian Home in
    Flushing, NY.

    Olivia Katrandjian made a powerful appeal for registration with the Armenian
    Bone Marrow Donor Registry for the sake of her mother Irene, stricken with
    Non-Hodgkin's Peripheral T-Cell Lymphoma, as well as for other ill Armenians
    (see www.abmdr.am).

    Hirant Gulian was chairman of the organization committee for one of the
    largest events organized by the East Coast Armenian community, Papazian
    co-chairman in charge of academic affairs, with Tigran Sahakyan as
    vice-chairman. Taleen Babayan coordinated public relations and the essay
    contest. Members of the Armenian American Health Professionals Organization
    of New York and New Jersey under the chairmanship of Dr. Larry Najarian were
    present in Times Square to provide any necessary first aid.

    Those who missed it can see the recording at http://www.armenianradionj.com/.

    ************************************************** **********************
    2. Banquet in New Jersey Honoring Mirror-Spectator Set for June 4

    By Aram Arkun
    Mirror-Spectator Staff

    TEANECK, N.J. - The Tekeyan Cultural Association and the Friends of
    the Mirror-
    Spectator are hosting a banquet in anticipation of the 80th anniversary of
    the Armenian Mirror-Spectator on June 4.

    The idea for the first solely English-language Armenian paper in the United
    States was proposed in 1931, and realized in 1932. The Tekeyan Cultural
    Association has undertaken the effort to support the newspaper with a gala
    fundraising event because of its very close ties with the Mirror-Spectator.
    Vartan Ilanjian, one of the advisors in the Greater New York chapter of
    Tekeyan, noted that the efforts of three pillars of ongoing support of the
    newspaper in the area in its early period - Dr. Moses Housepian, Jack
    Antreassian and Armine Dikijian - would be commemorated at the event, and
    more information will be presented about them.

    Ilanjian declared: `The role of the Mirror-Spectator has been great in
    the
    United States, though its reach has been global. It has played a vital role
    in maintaining and perpetuating cultural values and ideology. Though some
    ask why we need newspapers while there is the Internet, as an information
    technology professional I would tell you this: Over the years there have
    been numerous changes in media. The value of technology can be tremendous if
    and only if you can retrieve information from it. The only media that so far
    has withstood the test of time has been printed media. So we need to keep
    the printed newspapers.'

    The banquet will commence at 7 p.m. with a cocktail reception, and dinner
    will be at 8 o'clock. Dr. Raffy Hovanessian will serve as the master of
    ceremonies. There will be classical music performed by cellist Elizabeth
    Kalfayan during cocktails, while singer Datevik Hovanesian will provide jazz
    entertainment for guests later in the program.

    Hovanessian, born in Jerusalem, graduated rom the American University of
    Beirut. After medical school, he did post-graduate study at Johns Hopkins
    University. He is board certified in internal medicine and gastroenterology.
    He served one year as a major in the US army and then began private practice
    in Merrillville, Ind. He was chairman of medicine and president of the
    medical staff at both St. Mary Mercy Hospital and Methodist Hospital for
    many years. After retirement in 2005, he eventually moved to Englewood, NJ.

    Hovanessian continues to be extremely active in Armenian circles. He has
    been vice chairman of the Diocesan Council of the Diocese of the Armenian
    Church of America (Eastern) since 2004, and serves on the boards of the
    American University of Armenia, the Armenian General Benevolent Union
    (AGBU), St. Nercess Seminary, and the Armenian American Health Professional
    Organization. From 1976 to 1996 he served as the delegate of Sts. Joachim
    and Anne Armenian Church of Palos Heights, Illinois to the Diocesan
    Assembly, and was a member of the board of the Armenian Assembly of America
    in 1980.

    His medals and titles include the St. Gregory the Illuminator Medal from
    Catholicos Karekin I of Holy Echmiadzin in 1998; Prince of Cilicia from the
    Catholicosate of Cilicia in Antelias in 1982; the Ellis Island Medal of
    Honor in 2000; and a gold medal from the Mkhitar Heratsi Yerevan State
    Medical University, as well as benefactor of the AGBU, the Contemporary
    Museum of Art (Chicago), and the National Association for the Advancement of
    Colored People (NAACP) of Indiana.

    Elizabeth Kalfayan is director of the New Horizons Symphony Orchestra. She
    performs as soloist and principal cellist with numerous symphony orchestras
    and chamber music ensembles throughout the United States and
    internationally, and holds a master's degree in Performance from the
    Manhattan School of Music. Kalfayan is especially known for her performance
    lectures that present the works and genius of great composers for the
    violoncello, such as Schumann, Rachmaninov, Beethoven and Shostakovich.

    Kalfayan has directed orchestra and chamber programs for the New Jersey
    public schools. She is founder and director of the Merritt Chamber Music
    Workshops and has coached chamber music at the Puffin Foundation and the New
    Jersey Youth Symphony. Her work is featured on a number of CDs.

    Datevik, born to a family of musicians in Armenia, is the daughter of folk
    singer Ophelia Hambartsumian and kamancha player Norair Hovanesian. She made
    her first recording at the age of 11, and embarked on a life of musical
    performance and education. She toured Europe, the United States, Asia and
    Africa, giving solo performances in prominent jazz festivals, and even
    performed in movies. By 1979 she earned the title of `First Lady of Jazz' in
    the Soviet Union, which she maintained for nine consecutive years. It was
    during that time that her solo albums - `Day Dream,' `Concerto For Voice and
    Orchestra,' and `Doors' - were recorded. Leaving everything behind, Datevik
    relocated to the United States.

    Her first CD in the United States, `Ballads from the Black Sea,' (1997) was
    the result of a collaboration with pianist Larry Willis and his quartet in
    the studio of Mapleshade Record Productions. It prompted the president of
    the latter company, Pierre Sprey, to comment: `A rich new jazz voice of
    superb musicianship, earthy and passionate and swinging, proves that soul
    and jazz know no boundaries.' Working with American-Armenian pianist and
    composer Armen Donelian also had a great impact on Datevik.

    Some of Datevik's greatest accomplishments in he career took place in the
    last 16 years when she introduced a new genre of music called ethnic jazz.
    She combined the Armenian folk music of Komitas, Sayat Nova and other
    sources with traditional jazz music. Consequently she has become a cultural
    ambassador of Armenia, introducing its heritage throughout the world. Thanks
    to her work, renowned Russian, American and Australian have adopted this
    music in their own compositions and concerts. `Listen to My Heart,' and
    `Stage to Stage' are her latest CDs.

    Legendary jazz producer George Avakian has called Datevik `the finest new
    voice I have heard in a quarter of a century,' while internationally known
    composer, arranger and pianist Michel Legrand urges, `Listen to the heart of
    Armenia, listen to Datevik.'

    Shoghig Chalian and Betty Salbashian are the chairs of the committee for the
    banquet, which will take place at the Teaneck Marriott at Glenpoint (100
    Frank W. Burr Boulevard). Donations at $125 per person are welcomed. For
    tickets, call Shoghig at 201-803-0240, Sirvart at 201-739-7775, or Shemavon
    at 718-344-7489. Information about the event's prominent keynote speaker
    and
    other aspects of the program will be presented in forthcoming articles.

    ************************************************** *****************
    3. Polarization Gives Way to Political Realism In Armenia

    By Edmond Y. Azadian

    Since March 1, 2008, Armenia's political atmosphere has been extremely
    polarized because of the unfair election and the confrontation between the
    police and the opposition forces, which claimed 10 casualties.

    The main opposition coalition, the Armenian National Congress (HAK), headed
    by former President Levon Ter- Petrosian, organized regular political
    rallies, with the participation of large masses. Many unemployed citizens,
    joined by former government officials, religiously attended these rallies;
    the starving populace was fed on Ter-Petrosian's rhetoric.

    No president, nor any public official thus far, has been able to upstage
    Ter-Petrosian's oratorical skills. The former president was able to
    captivate his audience through his articulate and carefully-crafted
    speeches, in which his demands were sky high. His common refrain was to
    `dismantle' the `kleptocracy' and force early parliamentary elections.

    Another former president, Robert Kocharian, had provided enough ammunition
    to the opposition to rally around. Emulating his master in Moscow, former
    President Vladimir Putin, who had elected his hand-picked successor to
    replace him at the end of the constitutionally-mandated term of absence,
    President Kocharian had decided to install a vulnerable lame duck
    administration to make his comeback possible.

    Between Serge Sargisian's election and his inauguration, Kocharian staged an
    armed confrontation with the opposition, which had camped in the Liberty
    Square, next to the opera, where most of the killings took place. Kocharian
    knew he should wait out the confrontation, to wear down the opposition and
    come to a peaceful outcome. But he opted for the violent solution, whose
    victims became a powerful weapon in the hands of the opposition.

    When President Sargisian was inaugurated, he did not distance himself from
    the actions of his predecessor and continued the repressive measures,
    jailing many opposition figures, which turned out to be cause celebres in
    Ter-Petrosian speeches.

    For a while, the opposition was able to paralyze the country's political
    system and invited the sanctions of international agencies. For example, the
    European Union issued critical reports on Armenia and threatened to ban
    Armenia's delegation from participating in the PACE's sessions.

    The most recent casualty was the US Millennium Challenge subsidies for
    Armenia's agricultural development.

    In all fairness, however, Ter-Petrosian calibrated down his rhetoric every
    time the administration was in sensitive negotiations with Turkey or
    Azerbaijan, in order not to be accused of stabbing the government in the
    back. Sometimes, he even put a moratorium on his rallies.

    Sargisian kept his cool and tried to consolidate his position domestically
    and internationally. He refused to give in to the opposition's demands to
    resign or hold early parliamentary elections.

    In view of next year's elections, the opposing parties realized it was time
    to find a modus vivendi. Ter- Petrosian toned down his rhetoric;
    `kleptocracy' and `dismantling' were dropped from his lexicon. His 18
    demands were reduced to a manageable three. His maximalist demand that the
    only topic for negotiation between the authorities and the opposition had to
    focus on the modalities of the president's removal from office disappeared
    from his agenda.

    The demands which were left on the table were the following: a) a pledge by
    the authorities to investigate the March 1 killings; b) allowing Liberty
    Square to open for political rallies and, c) releasing the remaining
    political prisoners from jail.

    Ter-Petrosian pledged to begin negotiations with the government, after the
    latter meets the above conditions.

    President Sargisian seized the opportunity to make his major conciliatory
    move by pre-empting any extreme outcome which could develop on the April 28
    rally, which Ter-Petrosian had decided to make either the beginning of
    negotiation or a `watershed.'

    On April 27, on the eve of the opposition rally, the president released the
    following statement: `A very important tradition is shaping up in the
    parliament; the deliberations are held at their correct limits, although
    sometimes rough angles pop up. If the ruling coalition and the parliamentary
    opposition make joint efforts we can achieve some civilized benchmarks. I
    would also like to underline some positive developments in the opposition
    ranks outside the parliament. Rallies are being held, speeches are made,
    which do not intend to divide the people, nor do they intend to `crush' or
    `destroy,' rather they move the public to a political level. No one has been
    able to achieve anything through evil intent. Only strong people can dispel
    the evil. We have a strong government and an opposition, which keeps the
    government's toes to the fire. We can achieve great success through
    cooperation. We would like to be the first ones to take steps to defuse the
    situation. I have already given instructions to the minister of justice to
    come up with a proposal.'

    This last statement is interpreted as a pledge by the president to release
    the remaining political prisoners from jail by May 28. Thus, the president
    proved that he controlled the political agenda in the country.

    The next day, Ter-Petrosian was equally magnanimous in his speech. `If the
    door is not yet fully open it is at least half open,' he declared. `Two of
    our demands are already met (March 1 and Liberty Square.) The third one will
    be met with some delay.' And then he continued in a more conciliatory tone:
    `We can resolve our problems through the methods dictated by the situation.
    There are only two approaches: one is negotiation through the spirit of
    national unity and the other is through physical confrontation, which may
    bring disastrous results. We have decided to take the first option and we
    believe that the majority of the people will support that decision.'

    Ter-Petrosian's moderation caused some cracks in his opposition block. Some
    elements who were looking for a more radical confrontation were
    disenchanted, as were some others who were expecting issues of social order
    to be resolved. The present topics of discussion do not bring food on the
    table, yet.

    Therefore, the stage is set for next year's election and it is rumored that
    the negotiations are already being conducted behind the scenes. Also,
    political horse trading has already begun for the parliamentary seats
    between the competing powers. Rumors about apportioning the parliamentary
    seats coincide with the findings of political pollster Aharon Adibekyan.
    Thus, it is believed that the lion's share of parliamentary seats will go to
    the present ruling coalition. The combined seats of the Republican Party,
    Prosperous Armenia and the Country of Laws (Orinatz Yerkir) will constitute
    70 percent. Although the Republican and Prosperous Armenia parties have
    signed an official pact, recently some dissenting voices were heard that the
    latter may participate in the election on its own. But these statements are
    dismissed as pre-election posturing to grab the maximum numbers of
    ministerial portfolios after the election.

    The remaining 30 percent of the seats will be allocated to the opposition.
    Roughly 10 seats will be given to HAK. The ARF will have five to seven
    seats. Aram Karapetian (Karapetich), a vociferous media man, will get in
    with one seat. Although there seems to be a tendency to leave out Raffi
    Hovannisian's Heritage Party, its powerful sponsors may squeeze the party in
    the parliament at the expense of ARF and HAK.

    Certainly these are mere speculations of some observers. Unforeseen
    political developments may completely alter the situation, rendering these
    speculations baseless.

    Armenians are preparing for parliamentary elections a year ahead of time,
    and of course the outcome of these elections may determine the fate of the
    presidential election in 2013.

    In view of this horse trading, one of the journalists in Armenia has made
    the following sarcastic statement: `Although we cannot hold fair elections,
    at least we anticipate peaceful elections.'




    From: A. Papazian
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