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Pasadena: Divided We Fall: City Manager Calls For Armenian Leaders T

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  • Pasadena: Divided We Fall: City Manager Calls For Armenian Leaders T

    DIVIDED WE FALL: CITY MANAGER CALLS FOR ARMENIAN LEADERS TO COME TOGETHER ON GENOCIDE MEMORIAL

    Pasadena Weekly
    Sept 5 2013

    In a strongly worded email, Pasadena City Manager Michael Beck warned
    leaders of two Armenian groups to stop bickering over memorial projects
    commemorating the Armenian Genocide.

    The Aug. 23 email addressed to former Mayor Bill Paparian and former
    District 4 City Council candidate Chris Chahinian urged the men to
    sit down and resolve their differences as they related to a memorial
    honoring the 1.5 million people who lost their lives during the
    genocide, which began in 1915 and ended in 1923.

    The Pasadena City Council is scheduled to vote Monday on a proposed
    design and potential location for the project submitted by the
    Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial Committee's (PASAGMC) project -
    Paparian's group. The other project is still in the planning stages.

    "I strongly encourage you to meet and come to an agreement with regard
    to the memorial," Beck wrote. "The City Council is already facing
    opposition from individuals that do not want to see the memorial
    in Memorial Park, so if the Armenian community is not united in
    their efforts, the City Council will be hard-pressed to support
    the initiative. I would encourage you to meet in a neutral location
    and possibly include someone mutually respected to facilitate the
    discussion. If I can be of any assistance, please let me know."

    Neither Paparian nor Chahinian returned phone calls seeking comment
    on the feud.

    Chahinian broke off from the PASAGMC and formed the Armenian Community
    Coalition (ACC). That project was designed by Vahram Hovagimyan, whose
    work was among the 16 others rejected in favor of that created by
    Catherine Menard, a student at Art Center College of Design. Paparian
    has called Chahinian's submission "a warmed-over reject."

    The ACC met in July with city officials to discuss the design,
    maintenance and upkeep of that memorial, which is also expected to
    be completed by 2015, the 100th anniversary of the start of what has
    come to be called "The Great Crime."

    The city's Parks and Recreation Commission has voted unanimously to
    recommend the city support the PASAGMC project designed by 26-year-old
    Menard, which members of the group hope to place in Memorial Park,
    located on the northeastern edge of Old Pasadena.

    The two sides have been pushing the idea for a memorial since 2011,
    when Chahinian began collecting signatures. However, that project
    has been slow in getting off the ground, while the PASAGMC project
    has been fast-tracked and appears to have wide city support.

    http://www.pasadenaweekly.com/cms/story/detail/divided_we_fall/12423/

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