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Architect Says Armenian Genocide Memorial Will Be Ready For Saturday

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  • Architect Says Armenian Genocide Memorial Will Be Ready For Saturday

    ARCHITECT SAYS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MEMORIAL WILL BE READY FOR SATURDAY UNVEILING

    Pasadena Weekly, CA
    April 16 2015

    By Andre Coleman 04/16/2015

    An architect working on the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Pasadena's
    Memorial Park said the monument will be completed by Saturday's
    unveiling ceremony.

    "The structure itself is installed," Chris Allaire of the Pasadena
    architecture firm Moule & Polyzoides said Monday. "The benches are
    being set along with the stonework, engraving is almost complete
    and the fountain is being installed. I believe it will be completed
    on time."

    Council members, area dignitaries and local residents are expected
    to attend the ceremony set for 3 p.m. Saturday on the Walnut Street
    side of Memorial Park.

    This year marks the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide,
    which claimed the lives of as many as 1.5 million children, women and
    men between 1915 and 1923 at the hands of soldiers from the Turkish
    Ottoman Empire. The Turkish government still denies responsibility for
    what Pope Francis recently called the 20th century's first genocide.

    The circular design features a 16-foot-tall tripod at its center. From
    the apex of the three beams will fall a single drop of water every
    21 seconds, totaling 1.5 million drops -- symbolic tears -- each year
    for every victim of the atrocity.

    The design, created by 28-year-old Art Center student Catherine Menard,
    was chosen from 17 applicants reviewed by members of the Pasadena
    Genocide Memorial Committee (PASAGMC), which includes former Mayor
    Bill Paparian, former Pasadena Police Chief Bernard Melekian and
    former state Assemblyman Anthony Portantino of La CaƱada Flintridge.

    "The memorial represents the souls of the departed who cry out from
    the grave for justice and is symbolic of other tragedies of genocide
    from Darfur and Rwanda to the indigenous people of the Americas,"
    said Pasadena City Councilman John Kennedy.

    During his campaign in 2007, presidential candidate Barack Obama
    promised that he would acknowledge the genocide if elected president.

    However, despite urging from US Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank) the
    president has not followed through.

    Schiff will read the names of a small fraction of the 1.5 million
    people killed when Congress convenes April 22. Schiff is inviting the
    descendants of genocide victims from around the nation to submit the
    names of victims for inclusion in his speech and the congressional
    record.

    http://www.pasadenaweekly.com/cms/story/detail/none_too_soon/14375/


    From: Baghdasarian
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