The Wrath of Bogosian: The Actor-Turned-Historian Reflects on Retrib

New York Observer
April 16, 2015 Thursday

The Wrath of Bogosian: The Actor-Turned-Historian Reflects on Retribution

By David Wallis

On Ninth Avenue and 43rd Street is a narrow Turkish joint. Great lamb
gyros, but a chilling place to read Operation Nemesis: The
Assassination Plot that Avenged the Armenian Genocide. The gripping
book details how a small group of survivors of the Turks’ systematic
massacre turned into hit men, whacking several of the architects of
the crime against humanity. And the book’s author is Eric Bogosian.
Yes, that Eric Bogosian, the actor from Law and Order: Criminal Intent
and monologist extraordinaire, famous for creating bitterly funny
characters rather than exhaustively researched historical tomes with
pages of footnotes. Mr. Bogosian, arguably the most famous
Armenian-American, aside from a certain over-exposed family of reality
stars, recently chatted over coffee in his Tribeca apartment about his
shifting view of retribution, warm memories of his grandparents and
his deep ethnic pride.

From: Baghdasarian

London: Hundreds participate in Armenian Genocide centenary march

Citizenside, UK
April 19 2015

[Video] London: Hundreds participate in Armenian Genocide centenary march

Politics Not vetted story Vetted story Westerham, Great Britain – 18 April 2015

The Armenian community in London march to Trafalgar Square and St
Paul’s Cathedral on April 18, 2015 to commemorate the anniversary.

The 1915 Armenian Genocide took the lives of over 1.5 million people.
The event was organized by the Armenian Genocide centenary
commemoration committee and asked participants to carry flags of the
countries that have recognized the first genocide of the 20th century.

SHOT LIST:

London, UK – 18 April 2015

1. Pan of crowd
2. People chanting: ‘Recognize the Armenian Genocide’, and ‘Dirty
Turkey tries to hide’.
3. People chanting: ”We want justice’, and ‘Shame on Turkey’.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.citizenside.com/en/videos/politics/2015-04-18/111754/video-london-hundreds-participate-in-armenian.html

A tenth of Armenian manuscripts survive Armenian Genocide – Hrachya

A tenth of Armenian manuscripts survive Armenian Genocide – Hrachya Tamrazyan

12:49 * 19.04.15

According to rough estimates, only 1/10 of Armenian manuscripts were
saved during the Armenian Genocide, but thousands of manuscripts were
lost, Director of the Mesrop Mashtots Institute of Ancient Manuscripts
(Matenadaran) Hrachya Tamrazyan told Tert.am.

The available lists of manuscripts and papers are evidence that each
monastery had a collection of hundreds of manuscripts, and individual
churches each had at least ten manuscripts concerning religious
ceremonies.

“According to the calculations, 25 monasteries and churches were
ruined as a result of the Armenian Genocide. That is, we lost
thousands of manuscripts and only 1/10 of them were saved, which were
later replenished with other survivor-manuscripts,” Mr Tamrazyan said.

A few days ago, the Matenadaran opened a new exhibition,
“Survivor-manuscripts,” which displays unique manuscripts and archive
documents.

Asked if the Matenadaran plans to hold new exhibitions this year, Mr
Tamrazyan said that new exhibits will regularly be displayed.

“We also plan to organize academic conferences, books and monographs
have been released and will be released in the future.”

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/19/hrachya-tamrazyan/1650698

Voices: Looking back at the Armenian Genocide

LA Daily News
April 18 2015

Voices: Looking back at the Armenian Genocide

“My father had a friend named Mohammed who helped us stay in Turkey.
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.’ The Turkish general would crack his whip and he would say,
‘You! You! You! Get out of here!'”

— Yevnige Salibian, 101, survivor, resident of the Ararat Home in Mission Hills

“I will not eat for those who were tortured, raped, abused, sent on
death marches, dehumanized and killed. I will not eat to bring
awareness to a genocide that modern-day Turkey still refuses to
recognize as well as for the genocides still taking place today.”

— Agasi Vartanyan, local activist fasting in Burbank

“Genocide still occurs today. This is a disease that still keeps
occurring today. For us as Armenian Americans, as band members who
have had family who have gone through this, it’s important for us not
only to bring awareness but justice to this cause. (The Armenian
Genocide) is still with us, and the denial is a spit in the face of us
every year.”

— Serj Tankian, musician, System of a Down, a Los Angeles-based band

“There’s a growing society in Turkey that is expanding and maturing.
Since 2007 tens of thousands (of people) have poured into the streets
and started to commemorate the genocide. This shows there is a growing
interest in Turkey. Without coming to terms (with its past), Turkey
cannot build a democracy. The denial is cracking. Once the crack
starts, it will be hard, if not impossible, to stop it. We should
really pressure the U.S. government and stop supporting a denialist
regime.”

— Taner Akcam, Turkish scholar

“This is the year, the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
when we need to make sure our president and Congress do the right
thing. America must play its part to help close this wound.”

— U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Burbank

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.dailynews.com/general-news/20150418/voices-looking-back-at-the-armenian-genocide

Le CHP en colère contre les propos sur le génocide arménien d’une de

TURQUIE
Le CHP en colère contre les propos sur le génocide arménien d’une de
ses candidates

Une candidate dans la seconde circonscription d’Istanbul du principal
parti d’opposition le Parti républicain du peuple (CHP) Selina DoÄ?an,
a fait des remarques reconnaissant le génocide arménien et disant
qu’elle sera sur la place Taksim le 24 Avril.

Les remarques de Selina DoÄ?an ont provoqué des tensions au sein du
parti entre les membres du CHP.

« La victimisation continue. Tant que les politiciens continuent le
déni, cette victimisation ne prendra pas fin`, a déclaré Selina DoÄ?an,
qui est d’origine arménienne, dans une interview avec Al Jazeera.

Le vice-président du CHP Gürsel Tekin a commenté les propos de Dogan
dans une entrevue, disant qu’ils `n’acceptera jamais` les
revendications de génocide, indépendamment de la demande et du soutien
à leur candidat.

S’adressant au journal Sabah, Selima DoÄ?an a dit qu’elle prendra la
parole sur la question après les élections du 7 Juin.

Lors d’une conférence de presse organisée pour annoncer la position du
CHP sur les revendications de génocide, le vice-président du CHP en
charge des relations extérieures, Murat Ã-zçelik, a déclaré : `Les
remarques de DoÄ?an reflètent sa propre opinion La déclaration que j’ai
lu de notre président lie notre parti. C’est la ligne du parti et elle
a besoin d’être suivi `.

Murat Ã-zçelik a ajouté que les Arméniens devez aussi réaliser ce que
les musulmans ont traversé, et qu’il devrait y avoir une relation
fondée sur la coopération et la compréhension mutuelle. `Si Selina
DoÄ?an ne sait pas que, elle devra également la comprendre et suivre
cette position,` a-t-il ajouté.

dimanche 19 avril 2015,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

From: Baghdasarian

A century old scar

A century old scar

APRIL 19TH, 2015 CYPRUS
CYPRUS
By Alexia Evripidou

Friday, April 24 marks the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide
by the Ottoman government. Up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed.
Thousands of survivors found their way to Cyprus after 1915 in search
of a new home that offered security from the atrocities they had
experienced. One such family was the Avakians.

84-year-old Verginia Avakian and her 80-year-old sister Takouhi
Avakian have led inseparable lives since they were born – unaware of
the persecution their kin had just lived through – in Aleppo, Syria.

When the sisters were seven and four they moved to Cyprus with their
parents Haygaz and Alice Avakian, grandmother Khatoun Agha Boghos and
great aunt Bartouhi Agha Boghos. The girls both married English
soldiers, gave birth to their first children within the ten days of
each other, raised their children together in the same house separated
into two homes, worked together in their father’s shirt shop and now
keep each other company in the same home their children grew up in.
Their secure existence was a far cry from the brutal realities of
their older relatives, yet not surprisingly the genocide was to
permeate and define their lives.

Takouhi and Verginia Avakian in the shop in Ledra St.

The sisters’ Armenian roots came from Ourfa, Turkey. Their mother’s
father Iskender Agha Boghos and his immediate family were forced into
exile in 1922 by the Turkish government, when all foreigners were
finally kicked out after seven years of persecution, witnessing death
and agonising loss.

And yet, the family had been the lucky ones.

“My nana was a seamstress. She was important because she made uniforms
for the Turkish army. My grandfather was a valued secretary to the
generals in the army,” said Verginia.

When the genocide began in 1915, the Turkish army gave strict
instructions that the Agha Boghos family be left unharmed. The sole
reason that their lives had been spared was due to their professions,
including Khatoun’s sewing skills which were invaluable to the troops.
Her skills helped feed the family throughout her long life and were
passed on to her son-in-law to help feed his.

The family had their lives, but for how long they didn’t know; they
lived in fear. However, Iskender’s parents, siblings and relatives,
were not so fortunate. They were led on death marches across Turkey
and into the Syrian desert where like so many they died or disappeared
for ever.

“In those times, no one knew what was going on. People were
disappearing, sometimes forced or voluntary exile, others with no
explanation. Many were never found, like my grandfather’s brothers,”
said Takouhi.

The sisters help jog each other’s memories as they recount the horror
stories they grew up with.

Verginia recounts a story their mother Alice told them of one of her
earliest memories when she was merely eight years old. “There was an
Armenian church opposite their house. One day my mother could hear
terrible screams and smell a putrid stench. The cries and screams were
coming from the church. She popped her head to the window where she
saw the church ablaze with people trapped and burning to death
inside.”

By 1922, the family’s time was up. The last remaining Armenians in the
country were ordered into exile. They could take absolutely nothing
with them, so with foresight Iskender swallowed several gold coins and
stuffed the soles of his shoes with as many more as he could, praying
that if they made it, they would have a little something to begin a
new life.

As a gesture of ‘goodwill’, the Turkish army gave the family a covered
cart filled with hay. This is where Khatoun, Alice and her three
younger brothers hid, with Iskender and his sister Bartouhi sitting in
the front. The caravan was escorted by some Turkish soldiers, until
other Turkish soldiers stopped them and violently assaulted Iskender.
They stabbed the hay with the swords searching for living people,
luckily missing the young family buried deep within it. After these
soldiers left, the escorting soldiers decided to take the cart,
leaving the family to make their own way to Syria by foot.

The family had no choice; risk dying on foot across the desert or get
killed by staying.

Iskender Agha Boghos and wife Khatoun Verginia

“They walked for days and days and saw the most awful things. Pregnant
women being killed, children raped and bodies scattered around them as
they pushed through the desert. It all happened in front of their
eyes,” said Verginia. She struggled to continue as the realities of
the sufferings came vividly to mind. They walked through the desert,
trying to avoid looking at the bodies mounting up along the way. They
had no food and no water, picking up and eating grass wherever they
could find it.

“God must’ve been looking out for my family; they were unharmed,” said
Verginia. Many of their Armenian friends lost entire families in the
treacherous desert crossing, never to be heard of again.

With so many orphans, American missionaries went to Syria and opened
orphanages in Aleppo, taking in all lost children, hoping one day some
one would come to claim them. Finally in Aleppo and grateful to be
alive, the family spent the next seven years living in a room in a
warehouse together. They also searched for missing family members via
the orphanage through which Iskender found two sisters.

In the early days, the family received packages of food from their old
Turkish friends and neighbours; boxes of rice, wheat and flour which,
along with the kindness shown by their old friends, helped sustain
them until they began to settle. Khatoun used her sewing skills again
to try and to build a life for her family in this foreign land, but
fear of the genocide and for their lives remained. Now a young woman,
Alice met and married Haygaz Avakian and had their two little girls,
Verginia and Takouhi in 1931 and 1934.

Haygaz’s family, who were originally from Karpout, had left Turkey in
1918. Only himself; a young boy of about five, and his three sisters
reached the safety of Aleppo. His parents and other siblings were lost
or murdered.

With their present and future still uncertain, the young father Haygaz
was informed by Armenian friends that the Cyprus government was
welcoming Armenians into the country. This opportunity shone like a
safe haven. Iskender had passed away and Haygaz stepped up to head of
the family. He went to Cyprus alone in 1935 to find work and put down
roots. In 1937, he brought over his wife, two daughters, mother-in-law
and great aunt.

The Armenian diaspora was growing globally. With years of persecution
behind them, they’d learnt to survive by leaning on each other. The
Cypriots were accepting and of course a significant minority spoke
Turkish so communication was easier. And even more importantly, there
was an existing Cypriot Armenian community. With their assistance,
Haygaz built up his famous business, Avakian Shirts, which made shirts
for all Cypriot presidents until the Clerides presidency (when Haygaz
closed down shop).,

The girls readily made friends with Greek Cypriots and Turkish
Cypriots and were delighted to be accepted as one of them. “We were
very happy to be in Cyprus. We were very young when we actually
arrived in a place which we could call home, our own place; together
with other Cypriots. We are Cypriot Armenians,” says Takouhi.

But it wasn’t long before troubles threatened Armenians again, even in
Cyprus. When intercommunal strife broke out in 1963 and having already
suffered at the hands of Turkey, some Armenians began to leave Cyprus.
This happened again in 1974.

“There are only about 3000 left of us now,” says Takouhi.

However, the growing Avakian family remained committed to their new
home, building up the business, learning Greek, getting to know the
Cypriot culture and working hard to keep their own culture alive and
strong.

The Avakian shop in the 1970s after it moved to Eleftheria Square in Nicosia

So how did the sisters and so many other Diaspora Armenians manage to
begin healing these historical wounds and maintain a solid sense of
Armenian identity? “We have a very strong culture. Our church, school
and arts keep us alive,” says Verginia. The sisters believe that the
close knit community is due to Armenians spending time together and
celebrating their culture: singing, reading poetry, watching theatre,
recounting stories, laughing, reminiscing and very importantly
attending Armenian Church, and passing all this down to their
children.

“All Armenians that came to Cyprus only spoke Armenian at home with
their families. They also learnt Greek which helped them integrate
into society but at home, they worked at keeping their traditions,
culture and language alive. They created clubs were they could meet
and learn sport, singing,” explained Verginia.

Being Armenian Orthodox, the religion also sat well with the Greek
Orthodox Cypriots. Another governing factor was the Melkonian
Institute. Built in 1926 and run by two wealthy brothers it took in
boarders from nearly 40 countries.

“This helped not only Armenians in Cyprus, but Armenian children from
all around the world. There were so many orphans that came and
received education in the Melkonian,” said Verginia. “All those young
children grew up with Armenian culture and language solidly in them.”

The genocide had forced Armenians to stick together, holding on to
their roots, language and culture even stronger than before in fear of
losing it. And they did this whilst still assimilating into the host
country’s culture.

“We’re very proud to be in Cyprus, to be Armenian and are grateful to
the government and the people here for the respect they’ve shown us,”
said Verginia.

“It’s all about respect, respect for all people and cultures,” adds Takouhi.

Although the sisters did not live through the genocide, the collective
memory lives on. They’ve been handed down the wounds.

“In every Armenian, there is a scar and it never dies. We will take
that with us to our grave. We pray that it will never happen again to
anyone anywhere again,” said Verginia.

The Armenian Genocide

The Armenian Genocide was the Ottoman government’s systematic
extermination of its minority Armenian subjects inside their historic
homeland which lies within the territory constituting the present-day
Republic of Turkey. The total number of people killed as a result has
been estimated at between 1 and 1.5 million.

The starting date is conventionally held to be 24 April 1915, the day
Ottoman authorities rounded up and arrested some 250 Armenian
intellectuals and community leaders in Istanbul. The genocide was
carried out during and after World War I and implemented in two
phases: the wholesale killing of the able-bodied male population
through massacre and subjection of army conscripts to forced labour,
followed by the deportation of women, children, the elderly and infirm
on death marches leading to the Syrian desert. Driven forward by
military escorts, the deportees were deprived of food and water and
subjected to periodic robbery, rape, and massacre. The majority of
Armenian diaspora communities around the world came into being as a
direct result of the genocide.

The Armenian genocide is acknowledged to have been one of the first
modern genocides, because scholars point to the organised manner in
which the killings were carried out in order to eliminate the
Armenians, and it is the second most-studied case of genocide after
the Jewish one.

Turkey denies the word genocide is an accurate term for the mass
killings of Armenians that began under Ottoman rule in 1915. It has in
recent years been faced with repeated calls to recognise them as
genocide. To date, twenty-two countries have officially recognised the
mass killings as genocide, a view which is shared by most genocide
scholars and historians.

Armenian community in Cyprus

Armenians have had a continuous documented presence in Cyprus since 578 AD.

When Turkic tribes, led by Tamerlane, conquered Cilicia in the early
1400s, 30,000 Armenians left and settled in Cyprus, which continued to
be ruled by the Lusignan dynasty until 1489. During the very early
years of the Ottoman rule, which began in 1571, around 20,000
Armenians lived in Cyprus. By 1630, however, it is estimated that only
2,000 Armenians remained.

By the time the British arrived in 1878, the Armenian-Cypriot
community had dwindled to an estimated 150-250 persons, the majority
of whom lived in Nicosia, with smaller numbers living in Famagusta and
Larnaca.

In the years following the genocide, Cyprus became either the
temporary or permanent home for over 10,000 refugees.

In 1935 the Armenian Prelature recorded 3,819 Armenians in Cyprus: 102
were “native Cypriots” (mainly residing in Nicosia), 399 resided at
the Melkonian Educational Institute, while 3,318 were “refugees”,
namely genocide survivors and their descendants.

Currently, about 3,500 Armenians live in Cyprus.

From: Baghdasarian

http://cyprus-mail.com/2015/04/19/a-century-old-scar/

100 years later, Armenian genocide still not universally accepted

Fresno Bee, CA
April 18 2015

100 years later, Armenian genocide still not universally accepted

By Roy Gutman

YEREVAN, Armenia — * More than 1 million Armenians died starting in
1915 after an Ottoman Empire-ordered deportation.

* Turkey says history not clear and that in any case Armenians bear
some of the blame.

* Support beginning to mount for calling it a genocide.

In the swank shops and tidy cafés that line the new pedestrian zone in
Armenia’s capital, there’s barely a hint that nearly everyone here is
the descendent of a generation that escaped with their lives in a
harrowing flight from Ottoman Turkey in the midst of World War I.

On the eve of the centennial commemoration of what Armenians call Meds
Yeghern, or “the great calamity,” posters featuring a violet
forget-me-not and a slogan, “We remember and we demand,” dot Yerevan.

The symbol hasn’t caught on, even in government offices.

Yet Armenia, and the slaughter, is at the center of world attention as
the April 24 anniversary nears.

French tenor Charles Aznavour, widely hailed as France’s Sinatra, both
of whose parents were of Armenian descent, will be here, as will
French President Francois Hollande and Russian President Vladimir
Putin. Pope Francis, who many had hoped would attend, sent a message
assuring his “closeness” when the Armenian Apostolic Church on April
23 canonizes as a group the “martyrs” of 1915. Thousands of members of
the Armenian disapora are expected to travel here; Kim Kardashian,
arguably the most famous of American Armenians, already has come and
gone, with her husband, Kanye West.

It’s a heady time for this small, landlocked state in the south
Caucasus, one of the nations that emerged from the collapse of the
Soviet Union a generation ago and yet remains largely isolated.

Even the event for which it’s best remembered, the “immense and
senseless slaughter” that’s “widely considered the first genocide of
the 20th century,” in the recent words of Pope Francis, remains
controversial, its details contested, its origins and causes angrily
debated.

The pontiff’s words at a papal Mass in the Armenian rite to
commemorate the centennial of the atrocities, and his admonition to
modern-day Turkey not to deny the “evil,” provoked a sharp response
from Ankara, which recalled its ambassador from the Vatican.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan dismissed the pope’s statement
as “nonsense.” He pointed out that historians have yet to reach a
conclusion on what took place. “I would like to warn the honorable
pope not to make such a mistake again,” he said.

Such talk from Turkey has for years prevented broad acceptance that
what happened in 1915 was genocide. Only 20 countries have accepted
that definition for the Armenian events, and they don’t include the
U.S., Britain, Germany or Israel, though the tide may be turning: The
European Parliament approved a resolution recognizing genocide a few
days ago, but U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon recently called the
1915 events “an atrocity crime.”

Leaders of Armenia see the pope’s statement as a major victory.
“Calling things by their rightful name cannot but have a strong
impact,” said President Serzh Sargsyan. Added Foreign Minister Edward
Nalbandian, the pontiff’s words “show that Turkey and the
international community are talking in different languages.”

Lost in the noise was the pope’s call for Armenia and Turkey to take
up the path of reconciliation again. “Despite conflicts and tensions,
Armenians and Turks have lived long periods of peaceful coexistence in
the past, and even in the midst of violence, they have experienced
times of solidarity and mutual help,” he said.

Reconciliation seems unlikely in the short term, however, not least
because both nations have been unable to come to a common
understanding of what happened when Armenians were forcibly relocated
from what’s now Turkey during World War I. Indisputably, hundreds of
thousands died. Armenians claim that’s what the Ottoman Empire
intended. Turkey says that’s not clear and that in any case Armenians
bear some of the blame.

Today’s Armenia

In Armenia, nearly every family was affected by the deportations, and
many are convinced that the killings and deaths were premeditated.

At the ultra-modern hilltop campus of the American University of
Armenia, which is affiliated with the University of California, most
students in a course on genocide defended the government drive for
international genocide recognition.

“The genocide issue is what unites all Armenians in the world,” said
Areg Badalyan, 23, one of whose grandfathers was from Mus, in eastern
Turkey. He said Turkish recognition of Armenian genocide should be the
country’s first priority.

Marianna Javakhyan, 22, whose great-grandfather fled Kharpert, now
known as Elazig, agreed that demanding genocide recognition was “very
important for our national identity, for keeping the whole nation
together, for one’s dignity.”

Still, in underdeveloped Armenia, there are those who suggest the
country should move on. “If we did not have the recognition of
genocide as a priority for foreign policy, maybe we could direct our
resources in other directions,” said Armine Bageyan, 23, whose
great-grandfather was from Van, Turkey.

It sounds eminently practical, if culturally unsatisfying. Every gain
for Armenia on the genocide recognition front sets back its effort to
convince Turkey to open its border, and impoverished Armenia — at war
with one neighbor, Azerbaijan, and with poor transportation links to
Georgia and Iran — needs thriving Turkey for its economic development.

100 years ago

The story of the deportations and massacres is still two stories.

For Armenians, it followed decades of discrimination and mistreatment
as a Christian minority in the Muslim Ottoman Empire. There were
severe clashes in 1895 and 1896 that left tens of thousands dead.
Then, in the Armenian telling, under the cover of war, the Ottomans
developed and executed a plan to kill all Armenians.

For Turks, it’s the story of the Ottoman Empire in the throes of
collapse, with all the major European powers trying to seize
territory, among them Russia, which supported an armed Armenian revolt
in exchange for backing Russia’s territorial ambitions. Modern Turkish
counts understate the full extent of the deaths that took place when,
as the semiofficial Anadolu news agency described it Tuesday, “the
Ottoman Empire relocated Armenians in eastern Anatolia following the
revolts, and there were Armenian casualties during the relocation
process.”

It added that Turkey had “officially refuted” Armenian allegations on
the basis that “although Armenians died during the relocations, many
Turks also lost their lives in attacks carried out by Armenian gangs
in Anatolia.”

The vast understatement may be what Pope Francis had in mind when he
said “concealing or denying evil is like allowing a wound to keep
bleeding without bandaging it.”

April 24 was the day in 1915 when the Turkish government ordered the
arrests of hundreds of Armenian intellectuals, politicians,
journalists and leaders of anti-government groups in Istanbul and the
arrest of anyone connected with the two Armenian revolutionary
parties, the Dashnaks and Hunchaks.

Of the 250 or so arrested and sent to prisons in Konya, southern
Anatolia, about half survived, according to historian Ara Sarafian,
British-Armenian director of the Gomidas Institute in London, an
independent institute that focuses on Armenian history.

The first order to deport Armenians came a month later. Asserting that
Armenians had “made common cause with the enemy,” “attacked the
military forces within the country, the innocent population and the
Ottoman cities and towns, killing and plundering,” it ordered their
relocation from Anatolia to Aleppo in what’s now Syria and as far away
as Mosul, in what’s now Iraq.

Transportation was not provided, and for the most part there were no
railroads. The Armenians, unarmed, would have to travel on foot — as
much as 360 miles in the hot summer sun. There were arrests and
massacres of the men in their villages, and along the way, attacks by
Kurdish or Circassian groups. Their villages were then destroyed. “We
can name 2,000 to 2,500 villages that ceased to exist,” Sarafian said.

French-Armenian historian Raymond Kevorkian estimated in his book “The
Armenian Genocide” that of the 1.9 million Armenians living in the
Ottoman Empire on the eve of World War I, based on records of the
Armenian church, Turkish authorities deported 1.69 million in 1915.
But only 880,000 arrived in Syria by that autumn, meaning that 800,000
were “liquidated” in the first wave of the deportations. Some 300,000
others were able to flee or weren’t deported.

But this wasn’t the end of the road, for a very high proportion of
those who made it to the Aleppo region were deported again in the
course of 1916 and 1917, to Deir el Zour in the east Syrian desert. In
1916, foreign consul reports described Deir el Zour as an Armenian
town; it’s now held by the Islamic State. By 1917, Talaat Pasha, the
minister of the interior who ordered the deportations, prepared a
report that showed only 6,800 had survived in the entire region.

Historians estimate that 300,000 to 500,000 of those who survived the
deportations to northern Syria died in the following year, Sarafian
said. Thus more than 1 million Armenians died in the deportation or in
massacres.

Although documents haven’t surfaced showing that the deaths were
ordered, there’s ample evidence that the central authorities monitored
the movements and location of the deportees and ordered them to keep
moving. Sarafian said he’d found in the Ottoman archives many
telegrams sent by Talaat Pasha asking for a head count of Armenians in
each location. The responses weren’t always available.

Sarafian said many massacres were organized at the local level. The
main ones in Diyarbakir, for example, were carried out by tribal
groups at the instigation of the governor. On one occasion, the
governor sent 600 deportees under armed guard to a tribal group, which
then executed them. Later, the governor executed the tribal leader.

Much of this history is now accessible in Turkey in books and
publications, and newspapers regularly carry articles about the debate
over genocide in 1915. But there’s a long way to go.

Turkey today

In a remarkable statement a year ago, then-Prime Minister Erdogan
deplored the “inhumane consequences” of the deportations and offered
“our condolences” to the grandchildren of the Armenians who lost their
lives. But he stopped short of accepting governmental responsibility.

Still, the United States welcomed the statement as “historic.”
President Barack Obama called for a “full, frank and just
acknowledgment” of the facts. But settling the facts seems an unlikely
prospect.

At issue, from a Turkish perspective, is not just the deaths but also
whether the Armenians had revolted in concert with Russia.

For example, Turkish histories note that Armenians in the eastern
Turkish city of Van staged an uprising starting in April 1915,
following Russia’s defeat of a Turkish force in the Caucasus. Armenian
revolutionaries expelled Muslims from the city, destroyed outlying
Muslim villages, killed thousands of civilians and burned government
buildings in Van. The Turkish histories say the uprising was
encouraged by Russia, and that in mid-May, Armenian rebels gave the
keys to the city to Russian commanders.

Vaher Ter Petrosian, a historian at the American University of
Armenia, called Van a rare case in which “self-organization” had
helped the lives of many Armenians. “All the great revolutionary
leaders of Armenia had their roots in Van,” he said.

Yehuda Bauer, an Israeli scholar of genocide who’s an advocate of
Armenian genocide recognition, said that when Turkish troops
reoccupied the town, they murdered every Armenian they could find.

Suren Manukyan, the deputy director of the Armenian Genocide Museum,
located on a hill in Yerevan, wouldn’t say how the museum would deal
with the story of Van when it reopens Friday after extensive
renovations. “How do museums deal with the Warsaw Ghetto uprising?” he
asked. For Armenians, Van “was a resistance. If someone tried to
exterminate your family, of course you would organize resistance. For
me Van is heroic self-defense.”

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.fresnobee.com/2015/04/18/4483927_100-years-later-world-debates.html?rh=1

Armenian’s Come Together From All Over Cleveland: Ink On Independenc

ARMENIAN’S COME TOGETHER FROM ALL OVER CLEVELAND: INK ON INDEPENDENCE

Cleveland Sun News, Ohio
April 16 2015

By Dale Guidroz, special to Sun News

INDEPENDENCE, Ohio — April 24th represents the 100th anniversary of
the Armenian Genocide.

Their diaspora (scattered population) effected not only the Middle
East and Europe, but many ended up across the Atlantic pond to cities
like Independence in the United States.

Intellectually, I was aware of this anniversary, but was gently
reminded by a considerate Parma Heights subscriber, who also happens
to be of Armenian heritage.

Maryann Baker is the first generation of her family to be born in
this country. Her late father was an Armenian from Istanbul, Turkey,
and her mother was born in the former Soviet Union.

What has surprised and disappointed me in my Armenian journey this
week, and a sentiment shared by Maryann in her email, is how so few
Clevelander’s have never heard of this atrocity, nor the Armenian
nationality.

Volumes of historical information has been released on other 20th
Century genocides, such as the Holocaust carried out by the German
Nazi’s, the Cambodian genocide carried out by the Khmer Rouge, the
Rwandan genocide consisting of the mass slaughter of Tutsi’s and
moderate Hutu’s; but where are the Armenian’s in this vast grave
of history?

Before we get into various theories of how the Armenian diaspora has
not been adequately addressed by politicians and governments, let’s
address the horrific events that took place only a hundred years ago.

Armenians had a strong population base in the Asia Minor. Their
population practiced a form of Christianity, which was in contrast
to Sunni Islam that predominated the region.

Armenians lived within The Ottoman Empire, which is sometimes referred
to as the Turkish Empire. It was founded in 1299, and had conquests
through the Balkans, North Africa, the Middle East, the Caucasus, and
into Eastern Europe. As a transcontinental empire, it proclaimed itself
a caliphate to the Muslim World as it claimed rights to both Mecca and
Medina. Due to actions by the League of Nations after World War I,
with the partitioning of lands within its empire to Western Europe,
it lost its caliphal power. Secular reforms and the exile of the
last royal family in 1924 from the newly formed Republic of Turkey,
secured its role in the newly drawn western world.

A coalition of activists calling themselves the “Young Turks” began a
mission of propaganda by instilling a mantra of “all things Turkish” in
1908 in response to the waning power of The Ottoman Empire. The loss of
Eastern Europe in the Battle of the Balkans, and Russian support from
many Armenian’s in the Battle of Sarikemish in the Caucasus, solidified
the branding of Armenian’s to many Turks as a security threat.

These events, and likely a policy of directed blame, led to a program
of extermination beginning as early as 1895 with the slaughter of
over 350,000 Armenians, to its height in 1915 with the massacre of
over 1.5 million people.

This massacre was accomplished through death marches, mass graves,
concentration camps, and exposure and starvation in the neighboring
desert.

April 24, 1915 is considered the anniversary date of the genocide,
as that is the official date of arrests and executions of Armenian
intellectuals. Survivors claimed that these executions began as early
as 1894 and extended well into the 1920s.

Takes some of the “roar” out of the “Roaring 20’s”, a decade considered
full of fun and opulence.

One hundred years later, the Armenians and the Turks are still at
odds over acceptance, forgiveness, and oddly, word choice.

“History, despite its retching pain, can not be unlived; but faced
with courage, it need not be lived again” – Maya Angelou

Turkey does not accept the word “genocide” when confronted with
the Armenian issue. Its official stance is that over 1.5 million
Armenian’s died as a result of events in World War I and internal
conflicts between Armenian Christians and Islam.

In reality, they just don’t want the same historical distinction as
Hitler, Stalin, and Pol Pot.

On Friday night at the St. Gregory of Narek Armenian Church in Richmond
Heights, Armenian’s from all over Cleveland attended a presentation
by Dr. Ani Kalayjian entitled “A Century of Genocides: Healing
Generational Transmission through Forgiveness and Peaceful Activism”.

Dr. Kalayjian is an internationally recognized expert on the
psychological effects of trauma in disaster victims, either man made
or natural, and the author of a handbook “Disaster & Mass Trauma:
Global Perspectives in Post Disaster Mental Health Management”.

She is also an Armenian.

Dr. Kalayjian’s parents were survivors of the 1915 genocide and
she grew up experiencing the trauma her parents and grandparents
experienced.

Their trauma became her trauma, but she didn’t understand why.

Through her research, she discovered the common denominator of those
who have been tortured or displaced is a reluctance to discuss their
experiences and their feelings. This silence then will manifest itself
in their children and grandchildren with secondary traumatization as
the result of traumatized parents.

Often silence results in a culture of repression within the home,
where the children and grandchildren react to a hidden mystery from
the traumatized adults. She noted that “pain is not transformed,
it is transferred”.

So despite all of the pain, the best method is to somehow forgive.

Her website notes “A sense of meaning, peace,
and justice, although unique to each individual, is achieved through
a transformative journey that integrates knowledge and experience
with a sense of responsibility and reflection”.

We are blessed to live in country where we are removed from the horrors
witnessed on television. Millions of victims exist around the globe
suffering, displaced, hungry, and traumatized. There likely haven’t
been this many displaced people since World War II.

Dr. Kalyjian’s vision is that by teaching and utilizing peaceful
resolution methods, man’s injustice to man can someday be prevented.

She travels the globe lecturing on the effects of trauma, as well as
conflict resolution and peace education.

I only wish more were listening.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.cleveland.com/independence/index.ssf/2015/04/armenians_come_together_from_a.html
www.meaningfulworld.com

We Armenians Shouldn’t Let Genocide Define Us

WE ARMENIANS SHOULDN’T LET GENOCIDE DEFINE US

New York Times
April 17 2015

By MELINE TOUMANI
APRIL 17, 2015

ON April 9, Armenia’s prime minister, Hovik Abrahamyan, welcomed an
unusual visitor to his office. His guest might have blended in with
the locals were it not for the film crew and bodyguards around her.

But she was not just any Armenian, she was the world’s most famous
person of Armenian origin: Kim Kardashian.

Ms. Kardashian, the reality-television star, flanked by her sister
Khloe and two cousins, managed to look demure and even deferential,
peering up at the prime minister and his colleagues across a conference
table. Afterward, Mr. Abrahamyan hailed the Kardashian family’s
contribution to international recognition of the Armenian genocide
of 1915, a tragedy in which two-thirds of the Armenian population of
Ottoman Turkey was deported or massacred by the Ottoman government.

The head of the Armenian lobby in Washington, Aram Hamparian,
approvingly told Yahoo that the Kardashians “were welcomed home as
heroes.” The head of Armenia’s Parliament, Galust Sahakyan, told
reporters, “We should be proud.”

The Kardashian grand tour, which will be featured in a coming episode
of “Keeping Up With the Kardashians,” came just two weeks before with
the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, which is commemorated
on April 24, the date in 1915 when the ethnic cleansing began.

The visit has already gotten Armenia more attention in the
international press than it has had in many years. But the Kardashians
were not always so beloved by their compatriots; when they first
entered the public eye, Armenians around the world expressed feelings
ranging from shame to horror. Armenian culture is deeply conservative,
even prudish, so there could be no less likely hero for this tiny
nation and its diaspora than a woman who is perhaps best known for her
outlandish personal life and erotically charged public image. But now,
with the genocide centennial approaching, as an Armenian friend of mine
succinctly explained it on Facebook this week, “Nothing else matters.”

I am an Armenian-American born in Iran. Watching the dubious
intersection of celebrity worship and genocide commemoration, I
couldn’t help but reflect on some of the less obvious things Armenians
have lost since 1915: not just people and property, but a kind of
existential confidence. The genocide recognition campaign itself,
in the name of restoring Armenia’s losses, has been so all-consuming
as to stand in the way of other kinds of development — in Armenia
and in the diaspora.

Continue reading the main story

Growing up in New Jersey, I learned from a young age that the Turks
were our enemies, that a chunk of Eastern Turkey was ours to take back,
and that convincing governments (especially America’s) to label 1915
as a genocide (as opposed to a massacre, a catastrophe or a crime
against humanity) was our highest calling.

I recently published a memoir about how, as an adult, I came to
question those orthodoxies, which came from the Armenian summer
camps, youth groups and other community activities I was immersed
in. I described how such views sometimes seemed inextricable from
racism against Turks; and that when it came to intellectual life,
we had lost the freedom to ask questions and pursue ideas that were
not framed by the political project of genocide recognition.

Continue reading the main story

Although there is no shortage of artistic production by Armenians,
much of it has at its core a drive to guarantee that the audience,
in the end, understands that those people suffered a genocide; that
Turkey’s version of the story is untrue. Beneath this limiting agenda
is something even simpler and more banal: the desire to prove, as the
poet Paruyr Sevak wrote in a line Armenians cling to like a pep-rally
cry, “We exist and we shall live on.”

Eventually, I moved to Turkey — both to challenge the dehumanized
view of Turks I knew I held within me and also to understand how Turks
could cling so relentlessly to a false version of history. I was fed
up with the intractable dynamics of the conflict. In addition to its
psychological and emotional consequences, it had real geopolitical
stakes for the Republic of Armenia, whose border with Turkey remains
closed — depriving it of much-needed trade opportunities.

But even before my book was published, the attacks against it — and
me — began. Surprisingly, those attacks came not from Turks but from
Armenians. Two of the largest Armenian diaspora newspapers, Asbarez
and The Armenian Weekly, published hatchet jobs. One columnist called
for a boycott of my book, while proudly declaring that he had not read
a page of it. In comment threads, people questioned who had funded my
two-year stay in Turkey: Was it the Turkish government? Maybe Israel?

The central theme was that I was a self-hating Armenian.

The accusation of self-hatred has long been used by Jews against
other Jews; those critical of Israel’s policies are often branded
with the label. And Armenians and Jews have much in common: small
nations with long memories of past glory; centuries of living as
minorities among Muslims; modern-day homelands that serve as beacons
for dispersed peoples. The poet Osip Mandelstam once called Armenians
“the younger sister to the Jewish nation.” But the tendency to accuse
their own members of self-hatred is a toxic habit that both groups
would do well to let go of altogether.

The self-hating label has been deployed by blacks, Mexicans, Indians
and Asians too. The idea is that you are embarrassed by your true
nature — your ethnic nature — and so you mock it or speak out
against it. The label is used not to engage in meaningful criticism,
but to dismiss such criticism by chalking it up to shame. And yet the
behavior labeled self-hating often reflects the opposite of shame;
it reflects confidence.

This is a kind of confidence that, sadly, dispersed nations and
minority groups generally have in short supply. Diasporas are, by
definition, unstable, even when they seem like tight-knit, cohesive
groups. Over time, their members intermarry, their children stop
speaking the ancestral language, and eventually the markers of a
distinct identity fade.

Those who take up the cause of keeping that identity alive tend to do
so by insisting on a unity of purpose. For Jews, this has been Israel.

For the Armenians, it has been genocide recognition. The common phrase,
“Is it good for the Jews?” is implicitly present, too, for Armenians:
but what does it mean to be “good” for the Armenians, if survival means
blocking out uncomfortable ideas and clinging to simplistic symbols?

Continue reading the main story Continue reading the main story
Continue reading the main story

A Russian Jewish writer, Vasily Grossman, pondered this question in
1962, when he spent two months living in Soviet Armenia. He wrote
about Armenian intellectuals “who insisted on the absolute superiority
of Armenians in every realm of human creativity, be it architecture,
science or poetry.”

“What is sadly apparent from these claims,” he argued, “is that poetry,
architecture, science and history no longer mean anything to these
people. They matter only insofar as they testify to the superiority of
the Armenian nation. Poetry itself does not matter; all that matters
is to prove that Armenia’s national poet is greater than, say, the
French or the Russian national poet.” Mr. Grossman acknowledged that
“this excessive sense of self-importance” could be blamed largely on
those who “had trampled on Armenian dignity” and “the Turkish murderers
who had shed innocent Armenian blood.” Still, he concluded, “Without
realizing it, these people are impoverishing their hearts and souls by
ceasing to take any real enjoyment in poetry, architecture and science,
seeing in them only a way of establishing their national supremacy.”

For Armenians, the centennial of the genocide is an occasion filled
with anxiety and enormous expectations. It marks the culmination of
decades of efforts to convince governments, universities, newspapers
and other institutions to use the word genocide. One hundred years
after the start of the Ottoman government’s annihilation of its
Armenian population, the Turkish government needs to make a full,
public reckoning with that crime — for the sake of both Armenians
and Turks. This will require an overhaul of Turkey’s policies
toward minorities and freedom of expression, its school curriculum
and museums.

But even as Turkey must be the true agent of change in this conflict,
the Armenians have much to

But even as Turkey must be the true agent of change in this conflict,
the Armenians have much to gain by embracing change themselves. Too
much of the last century was spent countering Turkey’s elaborate
machinery of denial. “Whether” was the dominant question; “what now?”

got scant attention.

The next century ought to be one of harder, riskier questions — not
about whether the events of 1915 fit the legal and political definition
of genocide, for that question has been answered many times over. But
the question of what healing looks like beyond the use of a single
word; of how children can be taught about their histories in a way
that does not leave them hating the descendants of their ancestors’
killers. Of how a country can grow in meaningful ways so that there
won’t be a Kardashian-size gap in its national confidence.

Taking positions that don’t track with your ethnic group’s orthodoxies,
or indeed living your life in a way that is not defined by clan
commitment, are not signs of self-hatred but rather an indication of
learning to value oneself. And this is at the heart of what it means
to be not erased but fully alive.

Meline Toumani is the author of “There Was and There Was Not: A
Journey Through Hate and Possibility in Turkey, Armenia, and Beyond.”

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/18/opinion/sunday/armenians-shouldnt-let-genocide-define-us.html

Denial Of The Armenian Genocide Is Brutalizing The World

DENIAL OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IS BRUTALIZING THE WORLD

Huffington Post
April 17 2015

Posted: 04/17/2015 11:11 am EDT
Stefan Ihrig , Polonsky Fellow, Van Leer Jerusalem Institute

JERUSALEM — I have this imaginary Armenian kid sister. Well,
actually, she is your kid sister, too — in the same way we all have
this imaginary 8-year-old in Syria who has been afraid for her life
for the past few years. We are all humans after all.

My imaginary Armenian kid sister is 4 and a 1/2; talks too much;
is easily distracted; for reasons beyond me, does not like raisin
cookies; and, for reasons even further beyond me, died in early 1916.

Nobody put a pistol to her head and executed her. Her parents were
killed, and she simply had no food, no care and no proper shelter. She
just wasted away. I cannot get over her death and her suffering, even
though I want to, and I need to. I need to remember her and honor
her memory, her life and her death. And I also have that Syrian kid
to worry about — or to purposely ignore.

The problem is, I don’t really get to the point where I can mourn her
because my Armenian kid sister just keeps dying over and over again.

We — us and our Armenian sister — are all stuck in 1915-1916.

Turkish denialism (and its international helpers) will not let her or
us come to rest. (Just take a look at the Turkish Foreign Ministry’s
website on the topic). Turkish denialism says, “She probably did not
die. Well, perhaps she did but it was really her own fault because
the Armenians were in open rebellion against the state.”

It must have been an interesting kind of war in which 4-year-olds and
the elderly threatened the very existence of a once powerful empire to
the extent that it seemed okay to kill them, in “self-defense.” And
here already we have the futility of engaging with denialist
discourse. This is not the contemporary military excuse of “collateral
damage.” No, my Armenian sister, along with all the other sisters,
brothers, granddads and grandmothers, were all rounded up and deported
so that they could die. I keep seeing her in the famous pictures that
Armin T. Wegner, a German writer and former field medic in the Ottoman
Empire, left us — today’s iconic images of the Armenian Genocide. And
I keep hearing these unsettling voices that tell me it is perfectly
okay to kill my Armenian kid sister. . .

As a historian working on the coverage of and the debates on the
Armenian Genocide during World War I and in the 1920s, I am still
absolutely baffled that the debates, one hundred years later, have
progressed so little — in fact, they have regularly taken steps
backward. Clear proof of this was provided this week by an unlikely
pair jumping forward together: Pope Francis and Kim Kardashian. That
the acknowledgment of the genocide by the pope and Kim Kardashian’s
trip to Armenia were so newsworthy and were hailed as such a great
“PR disaster for Turkey” shows that something went terribly wrong
over the course of the last century.

Instead of merely celebrating it as a victory for acceptance, one
needs to ask why it took the Vatican so long, why it had given in
to denialism for so many decades and why it, too, in this respect,
had abandoned the world and the Armenians. And on the other hand,
one needs to point out that Kim Kardashian has promoted awareness
of the Armenian Genocide already before — scoring moral points way
ahead of the Vatican. We — the Kardashians, my Armenian sister, the
world and the denialists — have been playing this perverse game of
acceptance and denial for a long time already; far too long.

“The Armenian Genocide is a piece of history that is not allowed to
be history. It continually seeps into the present and cannot find
its own historical finality.”

Take, for example, Germany in the early 1920s, where there was, for
a moment, a broad acceptance of the allegation of the “murder of a
nation” carried out by the Ottoman leadership during World War I.

Parts of Germany’s diplomatic documents on the Armenian Genocide were
published as early as 1919. In expanded form, they have been published
again and can today be easily bought in English translation or read
online. These documents alone, stemming from the Ottomans’ prime ally
during World War I, make it impossible not to use the “g” word.

Back to the 1920s and Germany: these diplomatic documents were
discussed widely. Many experts wrote their own accounts for
newspapers, and after some resistance from former military men and
rightist commentators, awareness and acceptance of the charge —
“murder of a nation” — solidified. But then, the former (German)
denialists launched another counterattack, and the whole debate
ended with essays justifying genocide (per se). Later came Hitler,
another world war and an even greater crime against humanity.

The Armenian Genocide is a piece of history that is not allowed to
be history. It continually seeps into the present and cannot find its
own historical finality. Turkish denialism perpetually prevents all of
them — the events of World War I in the Ottoman Empire, the victims
and the perpetrators, their descendants, their successor states and
their diasporas — from getting some peace. Not only the Armenians
and the Turks today, but also the first great genocide of the 20th
century — an integral part of our world history — is still being
held hostage by a perverse fight over establishing the most basic
facts that have long since been established over and over again.

Some scholars allege that genocide denialism is the last stage of
genocide. But in the Armenian case, it was part and parcel of the
unfolding process. Since 1915, the world has been exposed to a morbid
battle over “truth,” which in fact is a battle over the right to
commit genocide as Turkish denialism dramatically overshoots its goal.

It is different from other genocide denialisms because it mainly
advances justifications for whatever had happened. For one hundred
years — periodically in the press of all major nations around the
globe whenever somebody important uttered the “g” word, generations of
humans have been exposed to reasons why the first major genocide of the
20th century was not worth remembering, simply had to be committed and
why the victims were responsible for their own fate. The guilt of the
perpetrators of 1915-1916 is clear; the guilt of those perpetuating
genocide justification on humanity is beyond comprehension.

After the Armenian horrors of 1894-1896 under Abdul Hamid II (sultan
of the Ottoman Empire at the time), Martin Rade, a prominent German
Protestant pro-Armenian activist, reflected on the way the German
press had excused and justified the violence against the Armenians.

Others had even used the German equivalent of “genocide” in this
context, many years before Raphael Lemkin coined his term. Rade was
worried about the impact the continuous advancing of justifications
for mass murder in the public sphere would have on ordinary Germans,
who had been exposed to them for years in the German press. He wrote:

It is impossible to appreciate what kind of impression the way in
which society and the press are discussing the Armenian Horrors will
make on the generation of men growing up [today]. They are learning to
worship an idol of opportunism and realpolitik, which, if it becomes
dominant, will cleanse away all noble dispositions.*

Almost 120 years after Rade’s warning, we have to pause for a moment
and think about what prolonged exposure to genocide denialism
and genocide justification have done to all the generations of
humans growing up in the meantime. It has been part of the constant
background noise of the bloody 20th century, whispering into our ears,
that genocide can be gotten away with, that it can even be okay to
commit it.

Every time somebody of importance in the world uses the “g” word,
Turkish denialism responds, and my Armenian kid sister has to die
again. For a century stuck in this genocidal circle of hell, it is time
for us all to use the “g” word and break the spell once and for all.

*Footnote: Martin Rade in the Christliche Welt (1896) as quoted
in Axel Meissner, “Martin Rades ‘Christliche Welt’ und Armenien”
(Berlin, 2010), p. 80.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/stefan-ihrig/armenian-genocide-denial_b_7079384.html