Keeping The Memories Alive: The 100th Anniversary Of The Armenian Ge

KEEPING THE MEMORIES ALIVE: THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Daily Illini, Student Paper of the Univ. of Illinois
April 21 2015

By Sarah Foster | Assistant features editor The Daily Illini | 0 comments

They found her in the middle of the Syrian Desert.

She was 2 years old, lying abandoned on the side of the road, when
a group of French nuns first approached her. They were there to save
other stranded children just like her, hoping to bring them back to
French orphanages for safety. Without a family or a home, the girl
had nothing left to do. She had to go.

How did she get here? It was a question the girl often wondered.

She knew a series of abnormal roundups first began in Constantinople
on April 24, 1915, when the Ottoman Empire jailed, tortured and
killed politicians, teachers, writers and clergy. The men came
next; they were tied together with ropes, then shot or stabbed near
the countryside. The girl was in the next group, with other women,
children and the elderly. They were told to pack lightly and be ready
to leave and that they would be taken to safety. Instead, they led
them to this desert.

But there was an even more important question: Why was she here?

Several years later, after analysts and historians looked at the
historic event, she finally knew.

Because she was Armenian.

***

Ashley Megurdichian will always remember the story of her great
grandmother, Attia, who survived what is today known as the Armenian
Genocide.

Her great grandmother’s story contains tragedy and pain but inspires
her to make a difference. It has empowered her to become the president
of the University’s Armenian Student Association and urged her to
document her ancestors’ and relatives’ past.

“I think it is important to spread awareness so that massacres like
this do not happen again,” Megurdichian said. “Not many people are
aware that the Armenian Genocide happened.”

Megurdichian, however, will be able to further this goal throughout
the week, as her organization will sponsor a series of commemorative
events, in works with the Initiative in Holocaust, Genocide and Memory
Studies and the Future of Trauma and Memory Studies Reading Group.

The first commemorative event will be a reading of Armenian literature
in various languages and proses Tuesday at 6 p.m.

Helen Makhdoumian, graduate student in English and the event’s primary
organizer, said the event is meant to keep the culture alive. She
said the memories of the victims carry on through literature better
than a textbook or lecture.

“History books cannot give a perspective of the individual and
everyday experiences,” Makhdoumian said. “For some Armenian writers,
literature is a way to honor their elders’ wishes about telling the
story. … Literature becomes a medium through which individuals can
speak through the silences and meditate on these memories of trauma.”

To Makhdoumian, keeping the memories of the Armenians alive means
surviving her grandparents’ stories as well.

Makhdoumian’s grandfather, Krikor, was a child when the uprooting
first began. He lost his family and his brother during the
relocations. Krikor was rescued by a local Kurdish shepherd; he
was stripped of his identity and name but left him with a tattoo,
so he would not forget his true heritage, as both a Christian and an
Armenian. The shepherd protected Krikor for four years, forcing him
to hide in the hay when danger was near.

But even though these memories were painful for her relatives to
remember, Makhdoumian knows they have to be heard.

“Many survivors tasked their children and descendants with stories
to keep the memories alive and make their stories heard. I think many
feared that the world would forget,” Makhdoumian said.

A 2006 documentary by filmmaker Andrew Goldberg will be screened
Friday, the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, at 5 p.m.,
and is sponsored by The Future of Trauma and Memory Studies.

Jessica Young, graduate student in English, is the key organizer
behind the documentary showing.

“Trauma issues of genocide are a difficult subject,” Young said. “Not
everyone wants to study them or think about them, but it is necessary
to learn about the politics involved, read about them and make sure
that victims of genocide memories are not lost. We are hoping that
our film can raise that part of awareness.”

Makhdoumian’s passion inspired Young to begin working with the
commemorative events of the Armenian Genocide. But Young has always
known the tragedies of Genocide. Her grandparents were German Jews,
and in the 1930s, they fled their home country to the United States
to escape the impending danger and violence.

“I grew up listening to stories about my family who perished in the
Holocaust,” Young said. “I have grown up with that, and it has made
me sensitive to other issues against police, genocide and trauma. It
was always in the background. They had to fill in the gaps about what
happened to their friends, that they died in a concentration camp or
on their way. When you go through that, there was a lot of fear. It
was not something that they often talked about.”

Young said she believes these commemorative events prevent the
perpetrators from winning.

“If you forget them, the perpetrators win,” Young said. “You have
to commemorate. Without that, it obliterates people, their culture,
their history – and that is what genocide is. You have to fight against
genocide. The sole survivors — remembering and learning about them —
is important to fight against the violence.”

***

Though the events of the Armenian Genocide occurred 100 years ago,
the world is still feeling its affects.

Nearly 1.5 million Armenians died after the events. The remaining
500,000 survivors were scattered across the globe. The Ottoman Empire
kept the acts a secret, as the only primary artifacts and studies
come from first-hand witnesses and journalists on the scene.

In the aftermath, however, Turkey prohibits any conversation about this
event in its history. They believe the events were not act of genocide.

Peter Fritzsche, University professor in history specializing in
topics about holocausts and genocide , said this is preventing the
world from making a difference and moving on.

“Genocides are now remembered by each other,” he said. “People
as nations remember the sorrows and victimization. … What is
unproductive is for Turkey to say, ‘It was not genocide, and you insult
our nation if you refer to it as genocide.’ It is not the requirement
to call it a genocide; the requirement is to discuss it, to put the
issue on the table and to explore it. If it is a slap in the face,
that is good. At least we are bringing the discussion to the table.”

To Megurdichian, the events on campus are the next step to fighting
Turkey’s refusal. It is a way of surviving her grandmother’s stories
and making sure her pain was worthwhile.

“I hope that people will learn about our history and who we are as a
people,” Megurdichian said. “But most importantly, I hope that they
learn about this genocide, so that even if the government cannot
officially recognize it, they will still know the truth.”

http://www.dailyillini.com/lifeandculture/article_05704822-e7ca-11e4-8ca8-9b31d58e9dae.html

Yerevan Prepares For The Armenian Genocide Centennial

YEREVAN PREPARES FOR THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CENTENNIAL

Global Voices
April 20 2015

Posted 20 April 2015

This Friday, April 24, is an important date to Armenians worldwide. It
will mark 100 years from the day when Ottoman authorities began
rounding up around 250 Armenian intellectuals and community leaders
in Constantinople, paving the way for the Armenian Genocide in which
an estimated 1 to 1.5 million Armenian citizens of the Ottoman Empires
were systematically exterminated between 1915 and 1918.

All around Yerevan, the purple colors of the aptly-named Forget-Me-Not
Flower can be seen everywhere. From schoolchildren carrying it in the
form of a pin on their chests to coffee-drinking university students
displaying it in the form of a sticker on their laptop. Everywhere,
streets, homes, hospitals, supermarkets, restaurants, shops and hotels
are all displaying the flower with a simple message: “I Remember
and Demand.”

Remembering the Genocide and demanding recognition from the Republic
of Turkey, the legal successor to the the Ottoman Empire, have
been part of virtually every Armenian’s life and identity for the
past century. Generation after generation, the survivors of the
Armenian Genocide and their descendants have been campaigning for
the international community to recognize the fact. To date, only 21
countries have fully recognized the Armenia Genocide including France,
Italy, Lebanon and Russia.

The Forget-Me-Not flower can be seen planted all around Yerevan. As
The Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church of America explained, the
Forget-Me-Not “expresses the theme of eternal remembrance, and is also
meant to symbolically evoke the past, present, and future experiences”.

https://globalvoicesonline.org/2015/04/20/yerevan-prepares-for-the-armenian-genocide-centennial/

Scholar: Ittihadists’ Goal Was Ottoman Society’s Transformation

SCHOLAR: ITTIHADISTS’ GOAL WAS OTTOMAN SOCIETY’S TRANSFORMATION

12:51, 22.04.2015
Region:World News, Armenia, Turkey
Theme: Politics

YEREVAN. – The objective of the Ittihadists in the Ottoman Empire
was not solely the extermination of the ethnic groups, but the
transformation of the Ottoman society in the absence of these groups.

The president of the International Association of Genocide Scholars
(IAGS), Daniel Feierstein, noted the aforementioned at the two-day
International Social and Political Global Forum against the Crime of
Genocide. This event is devoted to the Armenian Genocide Centennial,
and it got underway Wednesday in Armenia’s capital city of Yerevan.

In Feierstein’s words, this transformation was also the objective
of Nazi Germany, and terrorism was used as a tool to achieve this
objective.

The IAGS director stated that if we analyze the genocide from the
perspective of the Armenian community in the Ottoman Empire, we would
see that the Assyrians, Greeks and other nations have suffered to a
lesser degree.

“We need to challenge our thinking in terms of reconsideration of
the Armenian Genocide,” Daniel Feierstein added.

As reported earlier, about 600 participants from fifty countries are
taking part in the International Social and Political Global Forum
against the Crime of Genocide.

http://news.am/eng/news/263216.html

Iran Will Wait For Armenia After April 24

IRAN WILL WAIT FOR ARMENIA AFTER APRIL 24

Hakob Badalyan, Political Commentator
Comments – 22 April 2015, 11:48

The presidents of none of the four neighbors of Armenia will be in
Armenia on April 24. It is clear with Turkey and Azerbaijan. Neither
the presidents of Georgia and Iran, nor other high-level delegations
of these countries will arrive. Georgia’s deputy speaker will arrive
in Armenia, while the delegation of the Georgian minister of defense
will be leaving for Turkey.

Although, here the situation is quite clear too. Armenia is not at
a conflict with these countries but they have not recognized the
Armenian genocide, each has their interest. Georgia does not want
to earn problems with Turkey and Azerbaijan which make significant
investments in the Georgian economy.

Iran also has its goals and objectives, and though Turkey is a
competitor in regional aspirations, Tehran does not find it expedient
to cause tension with Ankara.

Besides, there are several other circumstances relating to the
regional setting, the Russian-Turkish influence on this setting, as
well as problems in the Near East, and in some of them the service
for tactical issues of the Iran-Turkey cooperation.

Many years ago, during Robert Kocharyan’s presidency, the Iranian
president Mahmud Ahmadinejad visiting Yerevan avoided the visit to
the Genocide memorial envisaged in the protocol of official visits.

Ahmadinejad returned home early to avoid this visit, which was
explained by some urgent problems in Iran.

In this respect, the positions of Georgia and Iran are clear, and
their absence on April 24 can be understood. At the same time, there
is an important circumstance – the roll call on April 24 cannot be
a measure of the foreign policy of Armenia, despite the temptation.

The Armenian Genocide, the Armenian issue is highly important as a
foreign political resource of Armenia, as a trump card for Armenia, as
an international subject which Armenia still needs to be able to manage
efficiently for a lasting and broad process. However, this resource
cannot be a starting point for building foreign relations because
it will place Armenia in front of restrictions, transforming from an
important resource of foreign policy to a national security threat.

Moreover, Georgia and Iran who will not be in Yerevan on April 24 are
more valuable for Armenia amid the current geopolitical tendencies
and environment than, for example, Russia represented in Yerevan
by its president, the Caucasian policy of which has been built
on the priorities of strategic development of Russian-Turkish and
Russian-Azerbaijani relations since the mid 2000s, entering into an
increasingly threatening controversy with the national interest and
security of Armenia and culminating in the past two years.

Georgia and Iran are important for Armenia, at least for the land roads
provided the blockade by Azerbaijan and Turkey as subjects which have
a big potential for forming a new valuable and prospective regional
vector in the economic, political and security aspects.

Now this potential is actually scattered in three countries for
different reasons. In Armenia, for example, it is the lack of
sovereignty and Russian dominance for which the Iran-Armenia-Georgia
pole is seen as a threat while this pole is an opportunity for Armenia
to break through the Turkish-Azerbaijani policy of blockade.

At the same time, there are problems in Tbilisi. Tbilisi prefers
dealing with Ankara and Baku because it has more economic benefits
provided that the Iran-Armenia direction is closed, and the
political-military aspect is more reliable for Georgia, considering
Russia’s aggressive stance towards Georgia’s orientation to the EU
and NATO.

Tbilisi fears that Russia may use its influence to make Armenia or the
factor of the Armenian community in Georgia a tool for its aggression.

The core of the problem is again the ability of Armenia to conduct
an independent and sovereign foreign policy which will help overcome
Georgia’s lack of confidence, at the same time facilitating Tbilisi’s
awareness of the essential strategic issue.

Even though the Turkish-Azerbaijani direction is reliable and
economically beneficial for Georgia, in strategic terms this direction
is no less a threat to Georgia. And if Tbilisi has the smallest
inclination for the idea of the Georgian state, the Russian-Turkish
direction cannot be superior to the political- military cooperation
with Armenia. Therefore, it is important for Armenia to rid of Russia’s
strategic counterinfluence.

Iran which is facing the strategic process of normalization with
the West is waiting for this. Recently Iran has been making hints to
Armenia on starting a more strategic and comprehensive relationship
but Yerevan has not responded. In this respect, Yerevan’s refusal to
initiate negotiations on import of cheap gas from Iran despite the
Iranian ambassador’s straightforward statements is indicative.

The Iran-Armenia-Georgia direction can be one of the roads of the
West-Iran relationship which still has to overcome a lot of tactical
reefs and be a lasting process.

Unfortunately, despite the delineating prospects, due to the Russian
imperial influence Yerevan is actually a tactical reef for both Iran
and the West.

Hence, the problem is not the presence or absence in Armenia on April
24 but the presence or absence of Armenia in the region as a sovereign
political subject.

http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/comments/view/33966

Vigil Service At Holy Etchmiadzin In Preparation For The Canonizatio

VIGIL SERVICE AT HOLY ETCHMIADZIN IN PREPARATION FOR THE CANONIZATION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE VICTIMS

20:30, 22 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

On April 22 at 21: 30, in the Mother Cathedral of Holy Etchmiadzin, His
Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians;
will offer a Vigil Service, in preparation for the Canonization of
the martyrs of the Armenian Genocide. Participating in the service
are the Armenian clergy, and the leaders and official delegations of
the Christian Churches in Armenia for the 100th Anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide.

On April 23 at 10:00 am, Divine Liturgy will be celebrated in the
Mother Cathedral of Holy Etchmiadzin.

On April 23, starting at 17:15, at the St. Trdat Open Air Altar at
the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, the Canonization Service for the
Martyrs of the Armenian Genocide will be offered.

The Armenian Church invites its faithful children to bring their
prayerful participation to the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin for
this historic event.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/22/vigil-service-at-holy-etchmiadzin-in-preparation-for-the-canonization-of-armenian-genocide-victims/

Republika Srpska President To Visit Armenia For April 24 Events

REPUBLIKA SRPSKA PRESIDENT TO VISIT ARMENIA FOR APRIL 24 EVENTS

12:57, 22.04.2015
Region:World News, Armenia
Theme: Politics

YEREVAN. – President of the Republika Srpska – one of two entities
in Bosnia and Herzegovina – will arrive in Yerevan on Wednesday for
the commemoration events on the Armenian Genocide Centennial.

Earlier Milorad Dodik submitted the text of a statement to recognize
the Armenian Genocide perpetrated in 1915-1917.

http://news.am/eng/news/263224.html

Turkey Too Powerful A State To Recognize Genocide – US-Armenian Jour

TURKEY TOO POWERFUL A STATE TO RECOGNIZE GENOCIDE – US-ARMENIAN JOURNALIST

17:21 * 22.04.15

Turkey, as a state far more powerful than Armenia, will be too
much influenced by pressures to ever dare to recognize the Armenian
Genocide, according to Harut Sassounian, a columnist for The California
Courrier.

Speaking at the anti-Genocide forum in Yerevan, the journalist said
he feels that the country is more likely to pursue its own interests
rather than stand up for a universal cause for justice. According to
him, Turkey will not dare to acknowledge the tragedy even if all the
world countries do so.

“We are not, of course, a powerful state and do not have a powerful
army; otherwise the Turks would have recognized [the Genocide] and
offered reparation. Turkey is powerful, but we are not. So truth and
justice have no value in the world when your army is weak. They will
if you have a strong army,” he noted.

Commenting on Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu’s recent
condolence address, Sassounian said he finds the move part of Turkey’s
foul tricks aimed at cheating the world.

“They express sorrow to both the Turks and the Armenians who died
during the First World War. But they died because of them, standing
up against powerful states. Yet, we aren’t victims of war; we are
innocent victims of Genocide,” he said, noting regretfully that the
world is still very often misguided by Turkish lies.

As for the Turkish authorities’ plan to celebrate the Gallipoli
Campaign centennial on the April 24 Genocide Remembrance Day,
Sassounian said he is sure that the country has intentionally sought
such a coincidence. “Turkey did that deliberately, scheduling it for
the wrong day. The purpose is one: to disrupt the April 24 events in
Armenia,” he added.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/22/sasounian/1654550

Toronto Star Editorial – Turkey should acknowledge Armenian genocide

Opinion / Editorials

‘After 100 years, Turkey should acknowledge Armenian genocide: Editorial*The
Turkish people today are not responsible for the Armenian genocide. They
should be able to come to terms with the past.*
[image: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses media in
Bucharest, Romania, April 1.]

VADIM GHIRDA / AP

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses media in Bucharest,
Romania, April 1.
Published on Mon Apr 20 2015

After 100 years, it is now widely accepted as the first genocide of the
modern era. The killing of as many as 1.5 million Armenians in Ottoman
Turkey that began in April, 1915, was a stain on the conscience of
humanity, the first such horror in a century that would sadly see many more.

Here in Canada, Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s government recognizes the
genocide ,
and Parliament passed resolutions more than a decade ago condemning it as a
crime against humanity.

As Armenians the world over mark the 100th anniversary on Friday of the
beginning of the `great catastrophe,’ they know that the mass slaughter and
expulsion that their community suffered as the First World War raged has
gained iconic status as a crime of monstrous proportions. Nazi leader
Adolph Hitler may have believed that few would remember the Armenian
tragedy, but history has proved him wrong.

Just this past week Pope Francis used his powerful pulpit to urge world
leaders to recognize the genocide
,
saying that `concealing or denying evil is like allowing a wound to keep
bleeding without bandaging it.’ The Pope alluded, as well, to the current
persecution of Christians by Islamic State jihadists and other radicals in
places such as Syria, Iraq and Nigeria. Even so, his remarks predictably
infuriated Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government. It
recalled
its envoy to the Vatican and accused the Pope of fanning hatred with
baseless claims.

As the Star’s Olivia Ward wrote on Saturday, the Turkish government has
always maintained the claim that the Armenian `tragedy,’ while terrible,
has been exaggerated, and was a byproduct of an ugly civil war as the
Ottoman Empire disintegrated. But diplomats at the time were shocked by the
sheer scale of the suffering of two million Christian Armenians in what is
now eastern Turkey. They faced mass deportation, death marches, starvation,
executions, torture and rape. To one American diplomat it looked like a
systematic bid to crush the Armenian race.

The Armenian tragedy proved to be just the first of several in a 20th
century drenched in the blood of two world wars and state-sanctioned mass
slaughter.

The singular evil of the Shoah, the Holocaust, towers above the rest.
Hitler’s Nazi killing machine murdered 6 million Jews seeking to annihilate
an entire people. But millions of Ukrainians died in Joseph Stalin’s
man-made famines. In Cambodia the Khmer Rouge killed millions. And nearly a
million perished in Rwanda and Bosnia.

Modern Turkey is a democratic, advanced state and a valued ally of Canada
and the rest of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization alliance. The
Ottoman Empire is long gone and Turkish people today have no such blood on
their hands. With the hindsight of a century, they should be able to come
to terms with past events, however painful.

Yet, discouragingly, the Turkish government continues to attack any and all
who dare utter the word genocide. In Erdogan’s mind, `it is out of the
question for there to be a stain or a shadow called genocide on Turkey.’
That perversely casts Turkey in the role of victim. That simply doesn’t
stand serious scrutiny. Modern scholarship has documented a campaign by
Mehmed Talat Pasha and his regime against the Armenians, who were regarded
as pro-Russian enemies from within, at a time when Turkey was allied with
Germany against Russia.

Turkey’s current leadership, innocent of century-old crimes, should
recognize that their country’s international standing is suffering
by their
corrosive refusal to come to grips with the past. The European Parliament
has just made that very case
,
urging Turkey `to come to terms with its past, to recognize the Armenian
genocide and thus to pave the way for a genuine reconciliation between the
Turkish and Armenian peoples.’ That reconciliation is long overdue. It’s
time to look history squarely in the face, or be haunted by a terrible
wrong.

http://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorials/2015/04/20/after-100-years-turkey-should-acknowledge-armenian-genocide-editorial.html

Antelias: The ideology of Pan Turanism was the basis for the Armenia

PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Use – Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Tel: (+961- 4) 410001, 410003
Fax: (+961- 4) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:
PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

The ideology of Pan Turanism was the basis for the Armenian Genocide by
the Ottoman Empire,

Stated His Holiness Aram I

Following the Mass commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide at St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican, where Pope Francis
reaffirmed the Armenian Genocide, Catholicos Aram I was interviewed by
the Vatican Insider newspaper.

The interview covered the following issues: The statement of His
Holiness the Pope and Turkey’s reaction to the statement; the current
situation in the Middle East; and Christian presence in the region.

Responding to the question of genocide, Catholicos Aram I said,
`Historical research, including that of Turkish historians, affirm
that the genocide of the Armenians was planned and executed by the
Ottoman Empire because of Pan-Turanism, the nationalist ideology of the
political party in power at that time–the Committee of Union and
Progress, popularly known as the Young Turks. The Young Turks sought to
unify the people of Turkish origin, politically, culturally and
ethnically, not only in Turkey but also in the Middle East, Asia and
beyond. The presence of Armenians in Cilicia and Western Armenia was a
stumbling block to this ideology. In order to uproot them, the
government instituted a process of genocide. The authorities implemented
this program in three ways: First, they killed or imprisoned the
Armenian lay and spiritual leadership. Second, they organized massacres
in the regions densely inhabited by Armenians. Third, they deported the
others to the Deir Zor desert (Syria) to die of hunger and disease.’

His Holiness continued, ` Today Turkey is distorting the facts by
referring to our people’s demand for justice as religious incitement.
We condemn this manipulation of facts. Armenians are demanding justice
and the restitution of their rights. Our cause has nothing to do with
religion. We have been living with Islam, following the principles of
mutual respect and understanding, since the 7th Century and will
continue this way of living together’

His Holiness Aram I concluded his interview by thanking Pope Francis for
his courageous stand; he said, `The Church is the voice of justice and
represents the will of the people. It does not pursue political goals.’

###

Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia

Communication and Information Department
PO Box : 70 317 Antelias – LEBANON
Tel: (+961-4) 410 001 / 3
Fax: (+961-4) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]

Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
PO Box : 70 317 Antelias – LEBANON
Tel: (+961-4) 410 001 / 3
Fax: (+961-4) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/en/gallery
www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org