Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenians Remember The Deaths, Celebrate The Survivors Of Genocide

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

  • Armenians Remember The Deaths, Celebrate The Survivors Of Genocide

    ARMENIANS REMEMBER THE DEATHS, CELEBRATE THE SURVIVORS OF GENOCIDE

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    March 12 2015

    By Susan Abram, Los Angeles Daily News

    The pieces of human bones have come to rest under glass and light
    inside a San Fernando Valley chapel, far from the sun-drenched Syrian
    desert where they were once found unburied and scattered.

    Little is known about them except that they belonged to Armenians,
    forced from their homes in villages in the Ottoman Empire and marched
    out to the Der Zor desert where they died.

    The remains carry a century-old story, not only of death, but also
    of survival, as well as the pain of denial and the yearning to be
    remembered.

    "Wherever you go in the Der Zor desert, you will find the bones of
    our people," said Maggie Mangassarian-Goschin, curator of the Ararat
    Eskijian Museum in Mission Hills. "It is still a wound for us that
    has never quite healed."

    The bones are often displayed inside the museum, which was opened in
    1996 near the Ararat Home of Los Angeles, a senior care facility where
    a special memorial service was held Thursday to observe the 100th
    anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. Armenians say 1.5 million of
    their people died from 1915 to 1923 as the Turks worked to establish
    their own country. Historians, scholars and human-rights activists
    call it the first genocide of the 20th century.

    Thursday's ceremony included a brief Mass held by archbishops and
    clergy from several local Armenian churches. They stood together
    and blessed the bones, which have been placed carefully inside the
    senior facility's chapel. Later, the clergy unveiled a tall, granite
    memorial dedicated to those who perished and those who survived the
    genocide. A mulberry tree also was planted nearby, to symbolize that
    the fruit of the Armenian nation will continue to grow.

    Many of those who attended the service were residents of the Ararat
    senior care facility such as 101-year-old Yevnige Salibian. Salibian
    was born just before the formal start of the genocide, but as a
    young child she remembers growing up under fear and threats. There
    are certain sounds and voices she can still hear.

    "My father had a friend named Mohammed who helped us stay in Turkey,"
    she said. "But when I used to look out of our door, I would hear
    people crying. I would hear mothers, fathers, children saying,
    'I'm hungry, I'm thirsty.'"

    And she remembers whips.

    "The Turkish general would crack his whip, and he would say, 'You!

    You! You! Get out of here!'"

    Salibian said her family left Turkey in 1921. They used two wagons led
    by horses to go to Syria. While on the road she and an older woman
    traded seats. The wagons overturned in an accident and the older
    woman died, while Salibian's right leg was caught by an iron bar in
    the wagon and she suffered a deep gash. The scar is still present.

    "My aunt said, that old woman gave her life for the little girl,"
    Salibian said.

    Armenians mark the date April 24, 1915, as the start of the genocide
    because it is when their nation's intellectuals were rounded up,
    arrested and later executed by the Turkish soldiers as part of a
    movement to "Turkify" the region.

    Today, the Turkish government maintains the deaths were a consequence
    of betrayal and civil unrest in what was then a collapsing
    Ottoman Empire. Armenians, however, say the killings involved the
    systematic cleansing of their collective existence from the region,
    where Assyrians and Pontic Greeks also were affected. Priests and
    intellectuals were beheaded. Women and children were terrorized as
    they were marched out of their homeland and into the Middle East.

    The issue remains politicized, with both the United States and Turkish
    governments refusing to call it a genocide. Armenian-American activists
    have said the U.S. government won't officially recognize the killings
    as genocide because it would hurt relations with Turkey, a NATO ally.

    Thursday's ceremony was one of several Armenian Genocide-related
    events to be held across Los Angeles in the next few weeks. The goal
    behind such memorials is to both remember those who died and celebrate
    the living, said Joseph Kanimian, chairman of the Ararat Home of Los
    Angeles Board of Trustees

    "If you forget the past then you tend to repeat history, and we don't
    want this to happen again, to any nation," Kanimian said. "But we also
    want to honor our people, to celebrate the living and the survivors.

    It's a day of resurrection for us."

    Most of those who attended the ceremony wore purple scarves or sweaters
    and a pin that features a forget-me-not flower, its petals symbolizing
    the past, present and future.

    But some continue to worry about the Armenian nation, particularly
    for those survivors of the genocide who stayed in Syria and whose
    families remained there. The Islamic State last year forced Armenians
    out of the area of Kessab. Churches were desecrated and homes were
    burned by IS. The extremists also recently destroyed 35 Assyrian
    villages and kidnapped more than 200 people. The group's intent to
    cleanse the area of Christians and other minorities parallels with
    the events that began in 1915, said Nancy Eskijian, whose father
    built the museum that houses historical maps, coins, crafts, medals,
    sketches, musical instruments and a library.

    If the Turkish government had been held accountable, if they had
    recognized what they did as a genocide, then future atrocities such as
    the Holocaust and massacres in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Rwanda and Darfur
    and those occurring now in Syria and Iraq could have been avoided,
    she and her brother, Martin Eskijian, said.

    "What's happening now (in Syria and Iraq) is about the same as 100
    years ago," Martin Eskijian added. "That's the tragedy of it."

    http://www.dailynews.com/general-news/20150312/armenians-remember-the-deaths-celebrate-the-survivors-of-genocide

Working...
X