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Area Armenians Mark Anniversary Of Genocide

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  • Area Armenians Mark Anniversary Of Genocide

    AREA ARMENIANS MARK ANNIVERSARY OF GENOCIDE
    by Johanna Weidner

    The Guelph Mercury (Ontario, Canada)
    April 23, 2012 Monday

    April 24 needs to be marked not only by Armenians but by all people
    who want to stand up against genocide in the past and future.

    On that day in 1915, Ottoman Turkish forces began the roundup and
    mass killings of Armenians. An estimated 1.5 million Armenians died
    in what is now widely viewed as the first genocide of the 20th century.

    "It happened to everyone and it has the potential to happen to anyone,"
    said J.P. Assadourian, chair of the Armenian National Committee's
    southwestern Ontario chapter.

    The local chapter commemorated the 97th anniversary of the genocide
    on Sunday at the Armenian Community Centre in Cambridge. A wreath in
    honour of the hundreds of thousands who died.

    April 24 is marked by Armenian communities around the world with
    ceremonies and peaceful demonstrations in a decades-long fight to
    get the Turkish government to acknowledge the killings.

    "We will never stop," Assadourian said.

    He said that dark chapter in history must be talked about openly for
    both the sake of Armenians and also the Turkish people, who have the
    right to know about the nation's past.

    "They have been denied the facts of what has happened in their
    history," Assadourian said.

    Holding nations accountable for genocide is also a warning to others
    that the systematic extermination of a people will not be overlooked
    or forgotten, he said.

    The Turkish government does not recognize the First World War-era
    genocide, saying the figure is inflated and the deaths occurred in
    the civil unrest during the Ottoman Empire's collapse.

    "The Armenian nation will never forget the genocide and the Turkish
    nation is reluctant to admit it happened," said keynote speaker Hayg
    Oshagan, a professor in the communication department at Wayne State
    University in Michigan.

    But he said it's essential for the neighbouring nations to come to
    an agreement about that time, regardless of how difficult it may be
    to make reparations for the immeasurable loss.

    "Nations are really reluctant to admit this sort of thing about their
    past," Oshagan said.

    Despite the denials by the Turkish government, he said, the truth is
    apparent through the eyewitness reports, photographs and records of
    assets seized from Armenians as they were forced out of Turkey and
    marched into the desert.

    "It's uncontested the genocide occurred," Oshagan said.

    "There's tons of documentation on what has happened."

    Canada's Parliament in 2004 backed a resolution condemning the actions
    of the Ottoman Turkish forces, calling it unequivocally a genocide
    and crime against humanity. The move was denounced by Turkey, accusing
    Canadian legislators for blindly following those with marginal views.

    Oshagan believes the Turks will eventually have to come to terms
    with what happened. Until then, he said the fight will continue
    among Armenians scattered around the globe even as almost 100 years
    have passed.

    "It's our duty to our ancestors and our nation."

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