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Recalling another reason to 'never forget'

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  • Recalling another reason to 'never forget'

    Quad-Cities Online, IL
    March 21 2015

    Recalling another reason to 'never forget'

    By Jonathan Turner, [email protected] qconline.com


    DAVENPORT -- Raelene Ohanesian-Pullen is proud to be Armenian and will
    share her family's history with the area in several events marking a
    somber anniversary.

    The Davenport native, who is development director for the Figge Art
    Museum, will play a key role in a documentary showing today at the
    Figge, an interfaith prayer service Tuesday at St. Ambrose University,
    and a talk Wednesday at Augustana College, all to mark the 100th
    anniversary of the start of the Armenian genocide during World War I.

    "The genocide defines Armenian people. Because we have such a rich
    culture and rich history, it would be a shame to say a people are
    defined by something that historically happened," Ms. Pullen said. "By
    the same token, there is some definition, there is some strength,
    there is some thing that causes us to have something different in our
    hearts. I think it's a gratefulness.

    The Armenian genocide began April 24, 1915, carried out by the Turkish
    government against the entire Armenian Christian population of the
    Ottoman Empire and killed more than 1.5 million Armenians from 1915 to
    1923, according to armenian-genocide.org. Armenians were subjected to
    deportation, abduction, torture, massacre and starvation.

    Two victims were Ms. Pullen's maternal great-grandparents. Her
    maternal grandparents came to this country as orphans, settling
    separately in Chicago. She didn't know her father's parents (also
    Armenians) well, partly since her paternal grandfather died before she
    was born, and her parents divorced.

    "We have suffered a lot, as a Christian nation in a heavily Muslim
    part of the world," Ms. Pullen said. "Things that have happened to our
    people happened because of our faith. It's really a miracle for us to
    be here today."

    Through the help of an older Armenian woman at Ellis Island, her
    grandmother and another Armenian girl were brought to Chicago, and
    raised as sisters. Ms. Pullen still is close to that other family.

    "One of the things about Armenian people, once you find another
    Armenian, they become a member of your family," she said. "The reason
    for that is because we've lost so much of our family, and we feel
    close to other people."

    Her grandparents had an arranged marriage in 1920 and her mother was
    born in 1930. Ms. Pullen's grandparents were married for 77 years. She
    visited them often in Chicago.

    "My grandmother was the most amazing woman I have ever known," she
    said. "She took such pleasure in having events that were fun for
    everyone and meaningful. Every Sunday at her house. She was an amazing
    cook."

    After church, they had big dinners, and people would perform music and
    recite poetry. "One of the things I learned most from her as a child,
    they really believed in celebrating life," Ms. Pullen said.

    "They felt very fortunate to be alive. They felt a lot of guilt
    because they had seen a lot of people die around them. They had so
    much tragedy in their life. For my grandmother, it made her such a
    strong Christian, because she felt our faith is what gets us through."

    An Armenian priest from the Chicago she attended is speaking at the
    Tuesday and Wednesday events. Because there's no Armenian church in
    the Quad-Cities, Ms. Pullen and her husband, Scott, attend Trinity
    Episcopal Church in Davenport.

    For a social hour before the interfaith prayer service (including
    representatives of Islam and Judaism), she's preparing Armenian food
    such as pahklava, a sweet pastry, and cheese boereg, a kind of pie.
    There also will be Armenian music.

    Armenia was a Soviet republic from 1920 until it became independent in
    1991. There are 11 million Armenians worldwide, including about
    483,000 in the U.S. Los Angeles has the biggest Armenian-American
    population.

    Ms. Pullen, who has visited Armenia several times, hopes the public
    will learn about its rich culture and history, and need to prevent
    further genocide around the world.

    "It's embarrassing we have genocide to this day, in Darfur," she said.
    "To think that what happened to the Armenian people had to happen, and
    as a world we're not any smarter for it. The Holocaust happened after
    that, and it continues to happen."

    Ms. Pullen serves on a 12-member Armenian Genocide Remembrance
    Committee of the Quad Cities, which formed last fall as an offshoot of
    the area's Holocaust Education Committee.

    Group chairman Maxine Russman said Adolf Hitler used the Armenian
    genocide as partial justification for his planned extermination of
    Jews in Europe.

    She said Hitler was quoted as saying, "Who still talks nowadays about
    the extermination of the Armenians? The world didn't do anything, and
    he was right," she said of the Armenian genocide.


    http://www.qconline.com/news/local/recalling-another-reason-to-never-forget/article_0507cc83-b1d6-53c9-819d-adc24c4341b7.html

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