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  • Starbucks' Armenian Faux Pas

    STARBUCKS' ARMENIAN FAUX PAS

    EurasiaNet.org
    Feb 20 2015

    February 20, 2015 - 10:33am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

    Amidst an angry backlash from Armenian-Americans, Starbucks has
    removed from cafes around Los Angeles artwork depicting women in
    Armenian national dress under Turkish flags.

    The coffee chain was apparently attempting to cater to LA's large
    ethnic Armenian community , but anyone with a smattering of an
    understanding of Armenian-Turkish relations -- or of Google searches
    -- could see how displaying such a poster could go awfully wrong;
    especially ahead of the centennial commemoration of the slaughter of
    over a million ethnic Armenians in Turkey.

    With the centennial planned for April 24, the century-old dispute
    about whether or not the killings amounted to genocide has reached
    a fever-pitch. Armenia already has withdrawn from a largely defunct
    reconciliation plan with Turkey.

    The Armenian National Committee for America, a Diaspora group,
    launched a social-media campaign at #boycottstarbucks deeming the art
    "Tasteless!" and calling for the coffee-colossus to remove the photos
    and apologize.

    The outpouring reportedly prompted the company to do just that. "We
    missed the mark here and we apologize for upsetting our customers
    and the community," Starbucks representative said in comments to an
    Armenian-American news service, Asbarez.

    In separate comments to RFE/RL, the company stated that it is working
    to make sure "this image is not in any other Starbucks locations."

    With the centennial approaching, more controversy is like to come.

    Although, this time, from a comic-book publisher.

    Devil's Due, a North American comic-book publisher that says it
    "embraces new, even risky concepts," announced a comic-strip project
    for April dedicated to the World-War-I-era Armenian tragedy. The
    plot is based on real events; namely, the 1921 assassination of
    controversial Turkish leader Talaat Pasha by an Armenian revolutionary,
    Soghomon Tehlirian.

    How Devil's Due decided on the idea is not clear, but PR was the goal
    for a pan-Armenian flash-mob slotted for April. The project calls
    on Armenians to film themselves, lit candle in hand, inviting other
    ethnic Armenians to travel to Armenia in April to light a candle
    together in memory of the events of 1915.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/72181



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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