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White House Visitor Center missed opportunity

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  • White House Visitor Center missed opportunity

    BurlingtonFreePress.com
    Dec 7 2014

    White House Visitor Center missed opportunity

    CHRIS BOHJALIAN 5 a.m. EST December 7, 2014


    You know your moral compass is a little off when you censor a story
    about a gift to a U.S. president from a group of orphans -- even though
    that story makes your grandparents and great-grandparents look like
    Mother Teresa.

    But this is essentially what the White House Visitor Center did for
    six days in November. After a year of congressional pressure and the
    pleas of Armenian-Americans, the White House pulled the Ghazir Orphan
    Rug from storage and allowed us to see it -- but swept under the rug an
    explanation for its origins.

    On the surface, it's hard to understand why it should have taken such
    a Herculean effort to allow the rug to see daylight in the first
    place. Here is the abridged story of the carpet. During the First
    World War, the Ottoman Empire systematically annihilated 1.5 million
    of its Armenian citizens, ethnically cleansing its Armenian minority
    from almost all of what today we call Turkey. Three out of every four
    Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire were killed. Americans were
    horrified by the slaughter as it was occurring, and a newly organized
    American group, Near East Relief, tried to save the survivors of the
    genocide -- including the children, scattered now across the Middle
    East. The group's accomplishments, especially the 135,000 orphans it
    cared for, were breathtaking.

    And among the thanks to America from those orphans was ... the rug. It
    was woven by a group of Armenian orphan girls from the orphanage in
    Ghazir, Syria (now Lebanon) and designed to be worthy of a world
    leader. It was. It's massive and beautiful. It was presented to
    President Coolidge on Dec. 4, 1925. A year later, two of the Armenian
    girls who helped weave the rug journeyed to Washington and met the
    Vermont-born president.

    Cut to the autumn of 2013. The Smithsonian Museum asked the White
    House for the rug so it could be displayed. Hagop Martin Deranian had
    written a book, "President Calvin Coolidge and the Armenian Orphan
    Rug," and there was talk of an event. The White House said no. They
    wouldn't release the rug. The event was "not viewed as commensurate
    with the rug's historical significance," said National Security
    Council spokeswoman Laura Lucas Magnuson at the time.

    The real reason was likely real politik: We did not want to antagonize
    Turkey, which, despite all historical evidence, continues to deny the
    reality of the Armenian Genocide. So even though the rug was a
    testimony to American ideals at their very best, it was better to let
    the thing sit and molder.

    In the last five months, however, Turkey hasn't played nice with the
    U.S. in the Middle Eastern sandbox and our relationship has been
    strained. So, how did we express our frustration with our ally? For
    six days in November we trotted out the Orphan Rug. We listened to the
    appeals of House Representatives -- and Armenian-Americans.

    But we didn't want to push this too far, so we put this extraordinary
    rug in a corner of the White House Visitor Center, rather than the
    Smithsonian Museum.

    And we certainly didn't use the word genocide in any of the materials
    explaining why the rug matters. The caption explains simply that it
    was made by girls "orphaned during World War I." It was given as an
    endorsement of "Golden Rule Sunday." There is no explanation of why
    the girls were orphaned. Could have been a factory fire. And there was
    obviously no mention of the 1.5 million dead.

    And so as I stood before the rug the other day at the Visitor Center,
    I was at once moved and enraged. I'm a descendant of survivors of the
    Armenian Genocide, and the rug's existence is a reminder of that
    cataclysmic period in my people's history when we were nearly erased
    from the globe. The rug in this regard will always hold totemic power
    for me. But I was frustrated by the censorship -- at the way the rug
    was made a pawn in power politics. I was saddened that the
    accomplishments of Near East Relief were not celebrated.

    Next April marks the centennial of the start of the Armenian Genocide.
    I hope the rug will be set free once again, and this time the story
    behind it authentically and accurately rendered. The orphans deserve
    better -- as do we.

    Write to Chris Bohjalian care of Free Press Media, 100 Bank Street,
    Suite 700, Burlington, VT 05401, or visit him on www.facebook.com or
    www.chrisbohjalian.com.

    http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/story/news/local/2014/12/07/white-house-visitor-center-missed-opportunity/20021595/

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