Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Urging Recognition, Jerusalem Armenians Mark 100th Anniversary Of Ge

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Urging Recognition, Jerusalem Armenians Mark 100th Anniversary Of Ge

    URGING RECOGNITION, JERUSALEM ARMENIANS MARK 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF GENOCIDE

    14:43 23/04/2015 >> SOCIETY

    Thursday evening at 6:15 p.m., church bells will peal over the Old
    City of Jerusalem, echoing through its ancient stone alleyways. The
    bells from 18 churches will ring 100 times in succession, one toll
    for each year since the Armenian Genocide, which started on April 24,
    1915, the Times of Israel reports.

    Armenians around the world will be marking the centennial anniversary
    of the genocide, when the Ottomans killed 1.5 million Armenians
    during WWI. Israel's Armenian population has been planning events
    throughout the year to mark the centennial, including concerts,
    lectures, documentary screenings, and special religious masses.

    But the evening of April 23 through April 24 is the central day of
    mourning, with processions, candlelight vigils, and solemn ceremonies.

    On Thursday night after the bells go silent, thousands of Armenians
    will march with torches through the Old City, where Armenian Christians
    have lived since the 4th century.

    "We are fighting two wars in parallel," said Kevork Nalbandian,
    a lawyer and social worker in the Old City who is on the planning
    committee for the 100th anniversary in Jerusalem. "One war is to guard
    the memory of the Armenian genocide, to ensure that the memories of
    what happened are passed to our children and the younger generations.

    The second war is for the international awareness of this pain. We
    want the world to recognize this."

    This plea takes on outsized importance in Israel. "Israel is a country
    that was founded because so many of the citizens were survivors or
    connected [to the Holocaust]," said Father Koryoun Bahdasaryan, a
    priest originally from Armenia who has lived in Jerusalem for 20 years.

    "How can you expect other countries to recognize your Holocaust when
    you yourself refuse to recognize the first genocide [of the 20th
    century], the genocide of the Armenian people?" asked Nalbandian.

    In the domed living room of Nalbandian's stone apartment in the Old
    City, he keeps a framed picture of a quote he photographed at the
    Holocaust museum in Washington, DC. The quote is from August 22, 1939,
    a week before Hitler invaded Poland. "I have issued the command --
    and I'll have anybody who utters but one word of criticism executed
    by a firing squad -- that our war aim does not consist in reaching
    certain lines, but in the physical destruction of the enemy," Hitler
    said in a speech at Obersalzberg to his top officers, rationalizing his
    decision to begin an ethnic cleansing campaign against the Poles. "Who,
    after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

    "Twenty-two years after [the Armenian genocide] happened, the world
    forgot," Nalbandian said. "Hitler harnessed this power of the world
    forgetting, and he used it to build everything. He used the same tools
    and developed them further. Instead of taking them to the desert,
    he used gas chambers, but everything else was the same, like the
    death marches."

    "If you want to be the moral standard and want other countries to
    follow, that's fine," Nalbandian added. "But then when you take up
    that torch of morality and march forward, it's on you as well. There's
    no exemption."

    For the first time, Israel is sending a delegation of two MKs to the
    official memorial service in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia. MKs
    Nachman Shai (Zionist Union) and Anat Berko (Likud) will travel
    to Armenia after Israel was formally invited to send an official
    delegation.

    Both Nalbandian and Father Bahdasaryan are incensed when politicians
    utilize the threat of recognizing the Armenian Genocide as a diplomatic
    tool against Turkey.

    "This is all politics," said Bahdasaryan. "When they're politicians
    they say they will support [resolutions recognizing it as genocide]
    but once they're presidents they don't write their own speeches."

    http://www.timesofisrael.com/imploring-for-recognition-jerusalems-armenians-to-mark-100th-anniversary-of-genocide/

    http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2015/04/23/jerusalem-armenian-genocide/

Working...
X