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Thousands Commemorate Genocide at Montebello Monument

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  • Thousands Commemorate Genocide at Montebello Monument

    Thousands Commemorate Genocide at Montebello Monument

    asbarez
    Friday, April 27th, 2012

    Children place flowers at Montebello Montument on April 24 (photo by
    Berj Djamdjaian)

    Thousands of community members visited the Armenian Genocide Martyrs
    Monument in Montebello on April 24 to commemorate the 97th anniversary
    of the Armenian Genocide.

    At 1:30 p.m. the official commemoration program organized by the
    United Armenian Council of Los Angeles, a grouping of all political
    parties, all denominations of Armenian churches, cultural and
    political organizations, as well as other associations.

    This year, the UACLA had invited Dr. Israel Charny, the foremost
    Genocide scholar in the world, to discuss the impact of Turkey's
    continued denial of the Genocide, as well as Israel's refusal to
    officially recognize the crime.

    Welcoming remarks were delivered by Tom Alexanian, following which
    scouts from the Homenetmen and AGBU led the flag ceremony.

    After the singing of the Armenian and US national anthems by Raffi
    Kerbabian, the program's master of ceremonies, Harut Sassounian
    announced that President Obama, once again, failed to honor his pledge
    to recognize the Genocide.

    Armenia's Consul General to Los Angeles, Grigor Hovannisyan spoke of
    Turkey's attempts to create schism within the Armenian community. He
    expressed that he was confident that those efforts will fail.

    Speaking on behalf of the Armenian Bar Association, Garo Ghazarian
    spoke of the legal components of the Armenian Cause, while LA City
    Councilman Paul Krekorian stressed the need to emphasize that the
    attempt to annihilate the Armenian race has failed.

    On behalf of the UACLA, Armenian National Committee of America-Western
    Region chairwoman delivered remarks in English (see below), while
    UACLA member Kevork Hallebian delivered remarks in Armenian.

    Rep. Adam Schiff, Assemblyman Mike Gatto, LA City Council member Paul
    Krekorian and Dennis P. Zine, LA City Attorney Carmen A. Trutanich, LA
    City Controller Wendy Greuel, Glendale School Board Member Greg
    Krikorian, Candidate for CA Assembly Adrin Nazarian, Montebello City
    Councilmembers Jack Hadjinian and William Molinari were among the
    political officials who attended the commemoration event.

    Before the conclusion of the official portion of the event, Arous
    Ghazarian read the names of the UACLA organizations, whose
    representatives, one-by-one placed wreaths at the monument.

    This ceremony was followed by a requiem Mass led by religious leaders.
    Western Primate Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Western Prelate
    Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Rev. Joe Matossian of the Armenian
    Evangelical Church, Father Krikor Shahinian of the Armenian Catholic
    church and Arch. Vache Hovsepian led the clergy representing all
    churches in the community in the requiem service.

    Droves of community members visited the Montebello monument on April
    24, with hundreds of Armenians continuing to arrive after the close of
    the event.


    Nora Hovsepian
    Our Time Has Come
    Speech by ANCA-WR Chairwoman Nora Hovsepian at Genocide Commemoration
    in Montebello

    Our time has come.

    Ninety-Seven years after my grandmother Vergine, then an innocent
    9-year-old little girl who instinctively clung to the branch of a
    weeping willow tree overhanging the raging river where her mother and
    siblings had drowned themselves to escape being raped by Turkish
    gendarmes who had just axed her father to death before their eyes;

    Ninety-Seven years after little Vergine and so many others, so many
    lone survivors of each of our families, rose from the ashes of
    destruction to create a new Diaspora far away from their homeland;

    Ninety-Seven years after nearly all of our precious survivors, having
    raised their children and grandchildren as torchbearers of their
    legacy, left this world without ever witnessing justice;

    Our time has come for ACTION.

    It is true that through four generations in the Diaspora, we have
    succeeded in keeping the issue alive. We have evolved from survival to
    activism, from despair to defiance, from grief to outrage. We have
    achieved an independent Armenia which, in partnership with the
    organized Diaspora produced from the Genocide, can now act as the
    legitimate and legal representative of the Armenian Nation in seeking
    justice for our People. But we have not yet succeeded in formulating a
    framework for a just conclusion. And we are not the only ones
    struggling with a dilemma.

    Ironically, just as we deal with the challenge of keeping our issue
    alive in the face of inevitable time and assimilation, so too must
    Turkey deal with its own dilemma of how to reconcile with its past in
    the face of mounting international pressure.

    Turkey deals with this dilemma by desecrating any remaining proof of a
    historical Armenian presence and by distracting the world with an
    artificial debate about whether the Genocide is a historical truth,
    but we must go beyond that by focusing attention on the real debate:

    The question after all is NOT whether a Genocide actually occurred.
    Everyone knows it did.

    And the question is NOT whether the Genocide should be recognized by
    foreign governments. They have their own political calculations which
    unfortunately drive their cowardice.

    Rather, the question is this:

    HOW CAN TURKEY ATONE FOR ITS CRIMES?

    Certainly, there is no atonement when the Turkish Government
    criminalizes the mention of Genocide or when it blockades Armenia and
    uses its surrogate, Azerbaijan, to try to destroy the people of
    Artsakh.

    There is no atonement when Turkish operatives are now bold enough to
    try a new tactic of infiltrating our communities, attempting to
    convince unsuspecting Armenians, that reconciliation can come through
    individual efforts to sit down and talk about our differences, to talk
    about how the Turks were traumatized by the fall of the Ottoman
    Empire, to talk about how Armenians were just casualties of war, and
    how we should forget the past, move on, and all just get along.

    There is no atonement when the Turkish Government manipulates
    well-meaning international mediators and a terribly vulnerable
    Armenian Government into believing that this issue can be resolved by
    protocols which start with the question of whether the Genocide
    occurred rather than the question of how Turkey will begin the process
    of accountability.

    And there is certainly no atonement when Turkish and Azeri agents and
    lobbyists lay siege to the truth by spending millions of dollars each
    year to engage in massive disinformation campaigns decrying their
    false innocence and blatantly bullying foreign governments, including
    our own United States Government, into surrendering their moral
    authority.

    And does anyone ask why?

    Why does modern Turkey, which seeks to separate itself from its
    Ottoman predecessor, go to such great lengths to silence us even now,
    97 years after the crime?

    The answer lies in a glance at any world map. The same pan-Turkic plan
    that drove the Young Turks to try to exterminate the Christian
    Armenian nation which stood in its way still exists today. The same
    pan-Turkic plan is behind the current blockades of Armenia and
    Artsakh, still trying to choke our nation out of existence with
    impunity.

    And the answer also lies in the inevitable consequences. After all,
    Turkey's acknowledgement of its crime is only the beginning of the
    discussion, not the end. With recognition come reparations and
    restitution.

    Even President Obama, who continues to fail to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide, said in his speech yesterday at the Holocaust Museum:
    `Remembrance without resolve is a hollow gesture. Awareness without
    action changes nothing. In this sense, `never again' is a challenge to
    us all.' What a fitting sentiment for our own issue of Genocide
    recognition and reparations.

    So this is why we, as a Nation, must continue our move to the next
    level. We don't need anyone to affirm to us that the Genocide
    occurred. Any presidential or congressional proclamation stating the
    fact is really just symbolic at best, and at worst, is meaningless lip
    service. What we do need is accountability for the crime, as required
    by any criminal justice system here and internationally.

    The United Armenian Council with its member organizations, including
    the Armenian National Committee of America, is at the forefront of
    waging this war. We have developed multiple fronts in this battle,
    from introducing and passing Return of Churches resolutions through
    our political friends and supporters, to working with legal scholars
    to seek redress through the Court system for Genocide-era claims, to
    initiating Hye Votes, a massive voter registration drive to ensure
    that our community's collective voice is heard, to supporting
    Armenian-American candidates who seek elected office, and to
    advocating for Hye Tad in every possible arena.

    But we cannot do it alone. We are the conduit for you, for our
    Grassroots, for our People.

    Every single one of us owes a heavy debt to little Vergine and all the
    other heroic survivors of the Genocide to prove that their efforts to
    keep our national identity alive after unspeakable attempts at
    destruction were not in vain.

    If you continue to believe in the probability of our success,
    especially after witnessing the improbable rise of an independent
    Armenia in our lifetime, then think of how we can each account to
    ourselves as to what we can do to advance our Cause.

    So continue to attend community events such as this one where we mourn
    our martyrs, pray for their souls, and pay our respects with monuments
    and gatherings and speeches. But also recognize that our obligations
    to them do not stop there. Our obligations do not stop because we now
    have an independent Republic or because 97 long years have passed
    since the crime against our Nation.

    No, our obligations began the day the Genocide to exterminate us
    failed, and they will continue until justice is achieved.

    So pay your debt to our Nation with your time, your commitment, your
    money, your dedication, your sacrifice, anything you can. Spread the
    word to anyone who will listen. Guide the youth to carry the banner of
    our struggle. Lobby your elected representatives to lift Turkey's gag
    rule over our government. Register to vote, then actually go out and
    vote. Support our supporters. Fight for justice, fight for recognition
    and reparations, and above all, do whatever you can, whenever you can,
    to fight for our Noble Cause.

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