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Lafayette College: Armenian Genocide Remembered

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  • Lafayette College: Armenian Genocide Remembered

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE REMEMBERED

    The Lafayette: Lafayette College
    April 10, 2015 Friday

    Last Wednesday, the college held a Divine Liturgy of the Armenian
    Church in commemoration of 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
    at Colton Chapel.

    The church service, sponsored by the Acopian family and the Office
    of Religious and Spiritual Life was led by His Eminence Archbishop
    Vicken Aykazian, Legate of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church
    with Rev. Fr. Hakob Gevorgyan and members of the choir of Holy Trinity
    Armenian Church.

    When asked about the choice to have liturgy as a commemoration,
    Assistant Professor of History Rachel Goshgarian said, "I thought that
    introducing the community, or giving the community an opportunity...to
    observe [an] Armenian church service would be really interesting for
    some students, because it's unique and it's a really old service."

    Despite extensive documents about the atrocities inflicted on Armenian
    population in Turkey, the Turkish government and those allied with
    them, such as the United States, still refuses the acknowledge the
    genocide.

    "The Armenian Genocide for a 100 years now have been vehemently denied
    by Turkey," member of the Acopian family Alex Karapetian '04 said.

    "United States until this day still doesn't recognize it as
    the Armenian genocide because Turkey puts so much pressure on
    US. They'll call it everything that is synonym of the word genocide
    like massacre and atrocities, but the word genocide is not used,
    which is unfortunate."

    "The political debate about whether or not the word genocide should
    be used to describe what happened, the massacre and deportations
    that befell the Armenian populations living in Ottoman Empire is a
    political debate that has been going on for a really long time,"
    Goshgarian said. "When a state makes a huge decision like this,
    they decide that it's not genocide, it's very hard to switch back."

    There were several student attendees at the commemoration.

    "I think it's amazing that Lafayette offered this and put it together,"
    Gabby Minassian '17 said."I'm a little disappointed, because it
    was shortened liturgy.There was a lot that everyone didn't get to
    experience, but the students that came did get a handful of what it
    is like."

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