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  • Memories of genocide dim

    Times Ledger, NY
    March 23 2013

    Memories of genocide dim


    Within the walls of the New York Armenian Home for the Aged in
    Flushing, the last accounts of a nearly century-old genocide are
    fading away.

    The home, near the corner of 45th Avenue and Colden Street, is the
    only assisted-living facility on the East Coast that exclusively
    houses those from the Eurasian country.

    Each year, residents sit down and tell their personal accounts of
    living through the Armenian Genocide, which occurred between 1915 and
    1923 under the waning Ottoman Empire. Anywhere from 600,000 to 2
    million Armenian people were murdered, depending on various accounts,
    and some of those who lived through the bloody period following World
    War I found themselves scattered in diasporas across the world,
    including in New York.

    At its peak, the quaint Flushing building housed 71 Armenians, 21 of
    whom were genocide survivors. Now there are 34 residents and only four
    are survivors.

    `It's about culture, tradition and trying to keep those who suffered
    through the genocide together,' said Aggie Ellian, executive director
    of the house.

    But that is proving harder to do as the residents age.

    Perouze Kalousdian was born in 1909 and recently celebrated her 103rd
    birthday. On Tuesday, she was wheeled into the front room of the Home
    for the Aged.

    Although Kalousdian is still spry and articulate, she was only 6 when
    the genocide began. By last Tuesday she had lived 37,682 days, and
    understandably had some trouble sifting through all those memories.

    She still recalls members of the Young Turks regime coming to her
    village, tying up the men and taking them away. Her mother cried, but
    would not say what was happening, Kalousdian said.

    `After that, I don't know what happened to us,' she said. `Time
    passed, and I forgot.'

    Recollections lost in the fog might actually provide some respite for
    Kalousdian, who said she hates thinking about the war.

    But Ellian and others active in the Armenian community know that
    preserving their stories is important.

    `These are the living survivors. Once they go, it will be the
    `alleged' genocide,' she said.

    The house, and the Armenian community in general, now faces the loss
    of living history.

    In years past, 100-year-old Charlotte Kechejian recalled marching
    through the desert with her mother to flee their village. This year
    she could not.

    The trials of Kalousdian and Kechejian are well-documented in news
    reports from previous events.

    Kalousdian and her mother were forced into servitude for a member of
    the Turkish government before fleeing to Aleppo, Syria, and later
    leaving for America. Kechejian eventually moved to New Jersey where
    she and her husband sent three children to college.

    But firsthand knowledge is hard to top, especially because the
    existence of the genocide remains a highly controversial issue. Both
    New York City and the state have formally recognized it, but the U.S.
    House of Representatives has not, although the Armenian community
    hopes that will change.

    On April 21, it will hold a 98th anniversary commemoration in
    Manhattan to keep pushing the subject.


    http://www.timesledger.com/stories/2013/12/armeniangenocide_all_2013_03_22_q.html

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