90th Anniversary of Armenian Genocide marked in Tbilisi

AZG Armenian Daily #074, 26/04/2005

Armenian Genocide

90TH ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MARKED IN TBILISI

Georgia together with all other countries of the world that have major
Armenian community commemorated April the 24th. The Georgian parliamentary
delegation headed by Beso Jugheli laid a wreath at the Tbilisi Pantheon of
Khojivank where eminent Armenian writers rest. Many Armenians of Tbilisi and
Armenian deputy Van Bayburtian took part in the ceremony. First time ever a
representative of the Georgian Orthodox Church, head of Borzhomi diocese
Archbishop Serafim honored the ceremony with his presence.

A commemorative ceremony took place at the Havlabar Armenian Surp
Etchmiadzin church with the participation of Armenian ambassador to Tbilisi
Georgi Khosroyev. Regnum agency informs that the Armenian community held a
protest rally before the Turkish embassy on April 24. Protesters demand both
Turkey and Georgia to recognize the genocide of 1915.

Genocide armenien – Non negociable

Génocide arménien. Editorial
Non négociable

Par Gérard DUPUY

lundi 25 avril 2005 (Liberation – 06:00)

La terre ne leur sera jamais légère. Le souvenir des victimes
arméniennes, massacrées il y a quatre-vingt-dix ans par familles et
par villages entiers, hantera encore longtemps la mémoire des
vivants. L’histoire avait connu bien des massacres auparavant, mais
jamais de cette ampleur et avec ce caractère délibéré, méthodique, qui
justifie l’emploi du mot de génocide. Le rappel de cet épisode noir
interfère certes avec la question européenne parce que cet
anniversaire coïncide avec la campagne référendaire, mais aussi
parceque la construction européenne est née d’une utopie d’une saine
simplicité :plus jamais ça ! Avant d’accuser la dénégation entêtée
des Turcs, il faut balayer devant sa porte. C’est ce qu’a fait, la
semaine dernière, le rapporteur d’un texte invitant le Bundestag à
stigmatiser ce génocide, après d’autres Parlements européens.

Il a suggéré que l’Allemagne, en tant qu’alliée des Turcs à l’époque,
reconnaisse une part de responsabilité, au moins indirecte, dans
celui-ci. Les alliées franco-britanniques devraient également admettre
quelque implication – non seulement à cause de la désastreuse équipée
de Gallipoli, dont on aaussi célébré ce week-end l’anniversaire, mais
pour la manière dont ils se sont longuement appliqués à dépecer
l’«homme malade» ottoman. De Mossoul à Pristina, de Chypre au Liban ou
en Palestine, les conséquences en courent encore.

L’UE couronne les efforts d’une entreprise commencée avec la fin de la
guerre civile européenne, ce qui est devenu encore plus vrai depuis
son élargissement. En y faisant acte de candidature, les Turcs doivent
admettre que certaines choses ne sont pas négociables, et notamment
cette déclaration de paix, prospective et rétrospective. L’Europe
s’est construite sur, et en partiecontre, elle-même. Demander aux
Turcs de faire à propos des Arméniens le même effort sur eux-mêmes,
c’est les soumettre au sort commun, comme ils le demandent.

Lebanese eye new era of self-reliance

Middle East Online, UK
April 25 2005

Lebanese eye new era of self-reliance

Bekaa Valley residents are looking ahead to new era of Lebanese
self-reliance as Syrian troops leave.

By Joseph Barrak – ANJAR, Lebanon

As the last Syrian soldiers trickle out of Lebanon after 29 years of
domination, residents of the Bekaa Valley are looking ahead to a new
era of Lebanese self-reliance and control of law and order.

After the Syrians with their dreaded intelligence services have gone,
they say they hope friendship and trade will replace domination and
fear.

“I cannot even find words to express our happiness, but it does not
mean that we do not want good relations with Syria,” said Ali Hamdan,
a trader in mobile telephones along the main highway leading to
Syria.

Syrian troops were packing up and heading out of Lebanon on Monday,
restoring an air of independence to the tiny country which has been
in the military and political grip of Damascus for 29 years.

The last soldiers are due to leave Lebanon after a farewell ceremony
on Tuesday in Rayaq airbase in eastern Bekaa where Syria had recently
regrouped its troops ahead of the complete pullout requested by the
United Nations.

Lebanese troops took up positions in the main eastern cities of the
Bekaa Valley ahead of the final Syrian pullout and erected
checkpoints along the highway to Syria.

The Lebanese army has also deployed inside the border town of Anjar,
the notorious headquarters of the Syrian forces in Lebanon which was
declared a “military zone” Monday afternoon.

“We want our own army to protect us, we have had enough of foreign
armies. It is time for us to become really independent,” said Ali
Hassan, referring to the deployment of various foreign forces since
Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war.

“We have bad memories because the Syrians controlled the country
through the mukhabarat (intelligence services).

“We were constantly afraid, a lot of people went missing, some were
tortured, but we hope that this is all history now,” explained a
neighbor who asked not to be identified.

The man smiled as he added: “Once they leave, we can talk more
freely. We will tell you all about it. We waited for 29 years, we can
wait for a few more hours.”

Salim Nassar was ecstatic.

He finally recovered his house which had been occupied by Syrian
forces for over two decades on a hilltop overlooking the commercial
town of Shtaura.

“I had to rent an apartment in a nearby building and pay the rent for
20 years. Today, I took my son to see his ancestral home, which he
was never been able to approach,” he said.

Nazira, the manager of a clothing shop on the main highway, said that
“since Hariri’s assassination two months ago, we have not seen a lot
of tourists or Syrians because they are afraid to come here.”

“We hope that the Syrian withdrawal will be followed by stability and
that tourists, including Syrians will return,” she said.

“We want prosperity for the Syrians as much as for us. We want to
have good neighboring relations, based on trade and not intelligence
and security.”

Her friend, Samira, said: “We are extremely happy to see the Syrians
leave, and I suppose they are very happy too. I am sure they would
rather be home, with their own people.”

In Anjar, Syrian troops toured shops and restaurants to bid farewell
to their old neighbors for decades in this sleepy all-Armenian town.

“We are very happy because we will get back the tourists who have
been afraid to come here. We have great fish, good Arabic coffee and
beautiful Islamic archeological ruins,” said restaurant manager
Raffi.

In a shop in Anjar, Syrian soldiers shook hands with the owner, staff
and other curious bystanders.

“God be with you,” said the owner.

“Come back to buy from us,” said the employee, before adding in a low
voice to a journalist, “as a civilian, of course.”

Athens: Armenian genocide

Kathimerini, Greece
April 25 2005

Armenian genocide

Speaking at a remembrance ceremony yesterday marking 90 years since
some 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks, Interior
Minister Prokopis Pavlopoulos said a similar disaster could be
prevented through tolerance. `It is not certain we will not see a
similar phenomenon unless we decide to tolerate those who truly
caused it, since they have not assumed their responsibilities,’ said
Pavlopoulos.

Israel sets Holocaust damages at $240 billion

Israel sets Holocaust damages at $240 billion
New Feature

The Associated Press
Thursday, April 21, 2005

Thursday, April 21, 2005 INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE

JERUSALEM An Israeli government report that claims to be the first of
its kind has set material damage to the Jewish people during the
Holocaust at some $240 billion to $330 billion.

Although previous studies have estimated the value of looted Jewish
property, the Israeli government calculation includes lost income and
wages, as well as unpaid wages from forced Jewish labor.

The report estimates the value of plundered Jewish property at $125
billion, at current prices. It estimates the loss of income at $104
billion to $155 billion, and unpaid wages of forced laborers at $11
billion to $52 billion.

The new document is an extrapolation of information drawn from more
than 100 sources and involves no original research, said Aharon Mor, a
Finance Ministry official who headed a committee that spent seven
years compiling the report.

Six million Jews were killed in the Holocaust, but the property of 9
million was looted or destroyed, the report said. The contents of
apartments and homes, real estate, bank accounts, businesses,
insurance policies, personal effects, gold, stocks and bonds, foreign
currency, jewelry and works of art were among the valuables plundered.

Some studies estimate that no more than 20 percent of the looted
Jewish assets, both private and communal, were restored to their
owners after the Holocaust. The restitution of private property, which
accounted for at least 95 percent of the total plundered assets, “is
the weakest link in the restitution process,” the report said. “A
great deal still needs to be done in this area.”

More than $8 billion of one-time payments to Jews and non-Jews were
negotiated in settlements between 1998 and 2001, and a substantial
part was paid and distributed, the report says.

But this represents just a small fraction of the Jewish material
damage during the Holocaust, and “there is much to be done in order to
achieve a measure of justice” for survivors and their heirs, the
report said.

“Restitution can successfully be dealt with only by exceptional legal
measures,” the report said. “In most countries, special, fast, and
simple legislation is badly needed.”

At the beginning of 2004, 1,092,000 Holocaust survivors were still
living worldwide, about half of them in Israel. About 10 percent of
survivors die each year, the report said.

“Any systematic delay in establishing settlement and disbursement
processes or resolving disputes is therefore not just another
bureaucratic hurdle, but the difference between a dignified closing to
a tragic period in their lives and unrequited sense of the permanent
denial of justice; between assistance for the needs of old age and
unabated suffering,” the report said.

The restitution process has been under way since 1948.

http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/04/20/news/holocaust.html

LA: Armenians want justice for 1915

Los Angeles Daily News
April 24 2005

Armenians want justice for 1915

Events mark anniversary of massacre

By Naush Boghossian, Staff Writer

GLENDALE — An Armenian writer once joked that all Armenians recite
two facts to non-Armenians upon introduction:
Armenia was the first nation to accept Christianity as its national
religion. And 1.5 million Armenians were massacred by the Turks in
1915.

Audiences would laugh heartily, recognizing a collective reflex to
teach others about one fact that is a source of pride for Armenians,
and another that is a deep, unhealed wound.

Sunday marks the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide — a
historical event that the Turkish government blames on civil war
rather than an orchestrated massacre.

But likely fueled by that denial, Armenian-Americans are mounting an
unprecedented 45 events — rallies, marches, lectures and protests —
throughout Los Angeles this year, designed to draw recognition.

And partly fueled by the knowledge that the number of survivors is
dwindling, there have been record levels of support from Congress and
the Senate.

Knar Kitabjian, 23, of Arleta decided to participate in a 215-mile
walk from Fresno to Sacramento — a tribute to the hundreds of
thousands of Armenians who perished in forced death marches.

“When I was walking, what made me want to continue was just the fact
that I felt my grandfather walking under the horrible circumstances,
and I kept on going because nobody knows what he had to go through,”
said Kitabjian, whose grandfather was just 7 when he was forced to
walk through the desert.

“It’s forgotten, and I feel it’s my responsibility to do whatever I
can so it can be recognized. We need closure and we need justice to
be served.”

One major step is for the U.S. government to formally recognize the
killings as a genocide, a goal that has eluded the Armenian-American
population despite repeated attempts to get a bill through Congress.

“It doesn’t jibe with the American dream,” said Arbi Nahabedian, 30,
of Glendale. “We’ve both reaped the benefits and contributed to the
American way of life, but there’s this moral or ethical dream that
our adopted country recognizes this event with us, not just for
Armenians, but for all genocides.”

Thirty-two members of the Senate and 178 members of the House
co-signed a letter urging President George W. Bush to formally
characterize the killings as genocide — the highest numbers ever.

“I think it’s a moral imperative for the country to recognize the
Armenian Genocide. If we’re not willing to recognize it as a
genocide, I think it undermines our credibility as a government,”
said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, who for years has been at the
forefront of that cause. “I am completely convinced that it’s only a
matter of time.”

But how has one event that took place 90 years ago had such a
powerful hold on a group of people, to become the unifying cause for
which they will all fight?

Much like the parents of a murdered child not being able to achieve
closure because the killer has not been brought to justice, Armenians
are unable to move through the grieving process.

“It’s a powerful instrument of identity, which has really stunted the
psychological and in some ways the intellectual growth of
post-genocidal generations. Recognition and justice would have a
tremendous positive impact on that psychological retardation,” said
Richard Dekmejian, professor of political science at USC and director
of the USC Institute of Armenian Studies.

“Armenians need recognition for the grievous loss they suffered in
order to move on.”

The younger generation, most of whom were born in the United States,
have joined the fight without missing a beat, but they have taken up
different ways of showing their support.

In recent years, it is not uncommon to see Armenian flags on cars in
the San Fernando Valley and Hollywood areas the week of April 24.

“It’s not to be outrageous. It’s more to show that they wanted to
take us down, but we’re still here and we’re still united,” said
Glendale resident Garni Arakelian, 18, who’s placed a small Armenian
flag in the back window of his Honda Accord.

“And it’s a way of showing respect to the older generation that we
remember.”

But both young and old have a sense that the fight for recognition
has become much larger than one event in history, as genocides
continue to take place throughout the world.

“You don’t forget the past so you don’t repeat it in the future. And
we’ve been repeating it. Rwanda, Darfur,” Dekmejian said. “This
pattern of human pathology has got to be stopped at some point if
we’re going to live together in this world.”

London, Ontario: Armenians remember Genocide’s losses

London Free Press, Ontario, Canada
April 23, 2005 Saturday
FINAL EDITION

ARMENIANS REMEMBER GENOCIDE’S LOSSES

BY CHRISTINE KHACHERIAN, LONDON FREELANCE WRITER

This month marks the 90th anniversary of the first genocide of the
20th century — the Armenian genocide of 1915. Launched by the words
of Ottoman Turkish leader Mehmed Talaat Pasha (1874-1921) to “kill
every Armenian woman, child and man without concern for anything,”
the annihilation of the Armenians by the Turkish government during
the First World War represents a major tragedy of the modern age.

Nearly an entire nation was destroyed. The Armenian people were
effectively eliminated from the homeland they had occupied for nearly
3,000 years. This annihilation was premeditated and planned to be
carried out under the cover of war.

On the night of April 24, 1915, the Turkish government placed under
arrest more than 200 Armenian community leaders in Constantinople.
Hundreds more were apprehended soon after. They were all sent to
prison in Anatolia, where most were summarily executed. In a single
year, 1915, the Armenians were robbed of their millennia-old
heritage. The desecration of churches, the burning of libraries, the
ruination of towns and villages — all erased an ancient
civilization.

With the disappearance of the Armenians from their homeland, most of
the symbols of their culture — schools, monasteries, artistic
monuments, and historical sites — were destroyed by the Ottoman
government. The Armenians saved only that which formed part of their
collective memory. Their language, their songs, their poetry, and now
their tragic destiny remained as part of their culture.

Beyond the terrible loss of life 1.5 million and the severing of the
connection between the Armenian people and their historic homeland,
the Armenian genocide also resulted in the dispersion of the
survivors. Disallowed from resettling in their former homes, as well
as stateless and penniless, Armenians moved to any country that
afforded refuge. Within a matter of a few decades Armenians were
dispersed to every continent on the globe.

Slightly more than a thousand Armenians were allowed to enter Canada
during the 1920s. The majority were young women who were brought in
often as brides for those earlier sojourners who were widowed by the
genocide. They formed new families and together bought houses and
began businesses. The Armenians showed their loyalty to their new
land by being hardworking and law-abiding Canadian citizens. While
acculturating to Canadian society, they were also determined to
preserve their heritage, which had almost been destroyed.

The after-four Armenian-language schools became a vital feature of
each community. One of the most important institutions that the
Armenians transplanted to the New World was their church. Currently,
about 60,000 Canadians of Armenian origin reside in Montreal and
Toronto. There are also about 3,000 Armenians in Southwestern
Ontario. A number of Armenian schools and churches operate to help
preserve unique culture and tradition, as well as to contribute to
the cultural diversity and richness of Canadian society.

There are about 30 families of Armenian origin in the London and St.
Thomas area. In the 1970s, there were about 10 times more Armenians
in London, but most of them left London to join larger Armenian
communities in Cambridge, Toronto or Montreal.

Let today be dedicated to the remembrance of victims of all
genocides. The Armenian community in the diaspora and homeland
commemorates the victims of April 24 and reminds the international
community of 90 years of denial. If you would like to be involved in
the Fight for Recognition, you can visit to
locate events that take place in your area.

LOCALLY . . .

What: A screening of the documentary film, My Son Shall Be Armenian,
which follows filmmaker Hagop Goudsouzian and five Montrealers of
Armenian descent as they return to the land of their ancestors in
search of survivors of the genocide. The film will be followed by a
discussion with the filmmaker. A reception featuring traditional
Armenian foods will conclude the evening.

When: Tuesday, April 26, 7 p.m.

Where: Wolf Performance Hall, London Public Library, central branch.

www.genocideevents.com

Marchers Seek Recognition of Armenian Genocide

Marchers Seek Recognition of Armenian Genocide

KXTV, CA
April 22 2005

Walkers concluded a 215-mile march from Fresno to the State Capitol
Thursday to bring attention to the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians,
a event that went mostly unrecognized when it occurred 90 years ago.

>>From 1915 to 1923, the Turkish Ottoman Empire was responsible for
the deaths of approximately 1.5 million Armenians. In a fervor of
nationalism, first the Young Turks political party and then the Turkish
Nationalists systematically exterminated or deported Armenians. When
the genocide began, 2.5 million Armenians were living within the
borders of the Ottoman Empire.

The “March for Humanity” began April 2 in Fresno, home to one of
the largest populations of Armenian-Americans in the United States.
Participants in the march and State Capitol rally said they wanted
to thank the California state legislature and 36 other states for
recognizing the atrocities that occurred. Thursday afternoon Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a proclamation designating April 24 as a
“Day of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide.” On April 24, 1915 some
200 Armenian community leaders were rounded up by Turkish forces and
sent to prison to be executed.

Descendants recounted the years of abduction, torture, and slaughter
of men, women and children. Many Armenians were sent to the desert
of Syria to starve to death. One of them was the relative of Father
Yeghia Hairabedian. “My Great Aunt was one of them,” he said. “When
she was two years old she died on the death march, starving and
begging for food.”

The genocide escaped world-wide attention and action in part because
most of the killing occurred during World War I. Turkey was allied with
Germany at the time. Some have accused the United States government
of ignoring the genocide because of close ties forged with Turkey
after World War I.

Armenian-Americans want the U.S. to formally recognize the genocide
of Armenians. Turkey has consistently refused to acknowledge its
responsibility for the mass killings.

An estimated one million plus Armenians live in the United States.
California is home to about half of them, with large populations
in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Glendale and Fresno. Many of them
arrived in California in the late 1800s and later to escape Turkish
domination and atrocities. The area around Fresno provided a climate
and landscape similar to that of their native land in Western Asia.

Students remember genocide

Daily Trojan Online, Univ. of Southern California
April 22 2005

Students remember genocide

Armenian Student Association holds event to remember tragedy, but
also urges students to be politically aware.
By Christina Huh

The Armenian Student Association gathered at Tommy Trojan Thursday
to mark the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide and to spread
awareness of other genocides.

“The purpose is to educate people about (the genocide) and to spread
awareness about genocide in general,” said Nerses Ohanyan, a junior
majoring in mathematics and aerospace engineering.

The theme of the event was “raising awareness of genocide through
recognition,” said Barouir Yeretzian, a freshman majoring in business
administration and a member of ASA who helped organize the event.

Among those who spoke at the event was Father Vasken, a priest involved
with ASA, who emphasized the need to recognize the Armenian genocide
to prevent future genocides.

“Basically the first step in stopping genocide is recognizing the
first genocide of the 21st century,” Yeretzian said.

Armenian folk dancers and musical performances of Armenian folk songs
and featured compositions by Armenian composer Komitsa.

Bracelets with “Justice 1915” printed on them were passed out to
students, and T-shirts that said, “1.5 million killed, zero held
accountable” were sold.

“I remember one student was appalled with what I was telling her,”
Yeretzian said. “As I was putting the bracelet on her, she was like
‘how can I not know about this?'”

The student response to the event was positive, Yeretzian said.

“It was good to see people know what’s going on and care about it,”
he said.

ASA president Ani Avetisyan read a letter from Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger affirming California’s recognition of the genocide.
Last year, in an executive proclamation, Schwarzenegger declared
April 24 as a “Day of Remembrance for the Armenian Genocide.”

Although the U.S. government has not recognized the genocide, former
California Gov. Pete Wilson officially recognized the genocide in a
1994 executive proclamation, making California the only state to do so.

The House of Representatives passed legislation establishing trade
relations with Armenia, which was seen as a move toward recognition.
But in order for the U.S. government to officially recognize the
genocide, the Senate also has to recognize it.

Ohanyan hopes students from different states who attended the event
“pressure their senators into recognizing the genocide.”

The Armenian genocide, which began in 1915, was the systematic
elimination of Armenians through starvation and death marches by the
Turkish government. It began April 24 with the killing of Armenian
leaders.

The Turkish government has not recognized the genocide.

“By ignoring past genocides, we’re allowing other genocides to occur,”
Ohanyan said, referencing a quote by Adolf Hitler before Germany
invaded Poland: “Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of
the Armenians?”

Members of ASA will join other members of the Armenian community at
an annual protest at the Turkish Embassy.

Armenia not yet sending resolution to UN to condemn 1915 genocide

Armenia not yet sending resolution to UN to condemn 1915 genocide
By Tigran Liloyan

-TASS News Agency
TASS
April 21, 2005 Thursday 11:57 AM Eastern Time

YEREVAN, April 21 — Armenia does not yet intend to submit to the
United Nations a draft resolution condemning the 1915 genocide of
Armenians in the Ottoman empire, Vartan Oskanyan, the Armenian foreign
minister, said on Thursday upon the conclusion of the international
conference “Ultimate Crime. Ultimate Challenge. Human Rights and
Genocide”. “The time is not yet ripe for this,” the minister said. The
forum was devoted to the 90th anniversary of the events that took
the toll of 1.5 million.

The minister spoke highly of the participation in the Yerevan
forum of Juan Mendez, the special adviser to the United Nations
secretary-general on the prevention of genocide, as well as of
historians, jurists and public figures from twenty countries. The
United Nations has not yet adopted the resolution on the genocide
of Armenians, but the tragic events at the beginning of last century
were mentioned in the report presented in the 80s, the minister said.

“Armenia is ready for normal relations with Turkey without any
preliminary conditions, and all the outstanding questions can be
discussed in this framework,” the minister said. He believes, “The
time has come to normalize relations” between the two neighbour
countries. The territorial issue, the problem of the return to
Armenia of its historic territories seized by Turkey in the early
20th century, “is not on the agenda of the republic’s foreign policy,”
the minister said.

The Armenian foreign minister has no doubt that the conference in
Yerevan will be of importance for the international recognition of
the genocide of Armenians. “There is a need for consistent work,
bit-by-bit,” Oskanyan said.