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Rochester Couple's Efforts Add Armenia To Exhibit About Genocide

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  • Rochester Couple's Efforts Add Armenia To Exhibit About Genocide

    ROCHESTER COUPLE'S EFFORTS ADD ARMENIA TO EXHIBIT ABOUT GENOCIDE

    Post-Bulletin, MN
    April 24 2013

    Christina Killion Valdez

    While generations of U.S. children who didn't want to eat their
    vegetables were told to "think of the starving Armenians," the warnings
    Zara Bezhanyan, of Rochester, heard growing up in Armenia were worse.

    Visits with her grandmother were filled with accounts of the suffering
    of her fellow countrymen who faced death, starvation and permanent
    exile during World War I, she said. Nonetheless, Bezhanyan said,
    she didn't believe things were as bad as her grandmother described
    until she began researching what happened.

    "The stories were word-for-word what the researchers and scholars
    have written," she said.

    Bezhanyan's research has come to fruition with the creation of a tent
    representing Armenia for Tents of Witness: Genocide and Conflict,
    a traveling exhibit created by World Without Genocide, a human rights
    organization at William Mitchell College of Law in St. Paul.

    The Armenian tent will be exhibited for the first time when Tents of
    Witness opens Tuesday in Rochester.

    Based on the canvas tents used in refugee camps, each tent in the
    exhibit tells a story through photos and information about a culture
    and conflict. In addition to Armenia, the tents represent American
    Indians, Bosnia, Cambodia, Congo, Darfur, the Holocaust, North Korea
    and Rwanda.

    "One of the most important outcomes," said Carolyn Franzone, who
    teaches English as a second language in Rochester and spearheaded
    the effort to bring the exhibit here, "may be fostering a greater
    understanding of the cultures and experiences of our Rochester
    neighbors who have been impacted by genocide."

    For Bezhanyan, who is a Spanish teacher at Lanesboro Public School,
    the topic is deeply personal and painful to discuss.

    An estimated 1.5 million of the 2 million Armenians living in the
    Ottoman Empire died between 1915 and 1923.

    Bezhanyan's family was fortunate to escape.

    In 1915, a neighbor warned her great-grandfather, a traveling merchant
    in Armenia, that he and his family would be deported, she said. Her
    grandmother was only 5 years old when the family fled to Imperial
    Russia, she said.

    When her great grandfather went back to Armenia for their things, he
    was pulled off his horse and beaten by Ottoman Turks, but survived,
    she said.

    The Turkish government is steadfast in its denial that what took
    place was genocide, instead attributing the deaths to depredations
    of the war, Bezhanyan said.

    "When you are told what happened to you did not happen or did not
    happen the way you remember, you do not heal," she said.

    Finding out that Armenia wasn't initially represented in the Tents
    of Witness exhibit, which began traveling around the state last year,
    was also a blow, she said. Yet Bezhanyan and her husband, Paul Tronnes,
    also an ESL teacher in Rochester, were encouraged to create one.

    The couple, who met in 1992 when he traveled to Armenia to teach
    English with the Peace Corps, worked with the Armenian Cultural
    Association of Minnesota in St. Paul to sponsor and design the tent
    that will be permanent addition to the traveling exhibit.

    The idea isn't that people view this and take on the guilt, Tronnes
    said, but "to be aware so we can heal and move on."

    http://www.postbulletin.com/life/lifestyles/rochester-couple-s-efforts-add-armenia-to-exhibit-about-genocide/article_ac83e6e0-639a-5b1e-b1c8-a08c5f18e51b.html




    From: A. Papazian
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