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Armenian Genocide Commemorations List and related articles


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#1461 Yervant1

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Posted 17 April 2017 - 08:58 AM

Rapper Marc 2Ray’s “1915” video depicts the Armenian Genocide

 

EINPresswire.com – Rising Washington Metropolitan Area rapper Marc 2Ray unleashes a visual for his gripping “1915” single, produced by Grammy Award-nominated producer, Godfather. With the video depicting Marc’s real-life connection to the Armenian Genocide, the powerful imagery and message of ending worldwide strife adds an especially resonant tone to the song.

The Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of the 20th Century, and Marc weaves a connection between that event and the Holocaust along with other global genocides of the past. Prior to the release of the video, “1915” has been used in multiple high school and college settings to educate those about the Armenian Genocide. For over a century, the Turkish government has sought to silence those who bring up the event but Marc 2Ray has found support in moving his vision of educating the masses of the tragedy forward.

“We are proud to support Marc’s innovative approach in spreading the word about the state-sponsored genocide that befell the Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian/Chaldean/Syriac people over a century ago in the Ottoman Turkish Empire,” said ANCA Eastern Region Board Member Armen Sahakyan.

”The release of the song is very timely in raising awareness not only about the three million innocent victims of the first modern case of genocide, but also of what is happening today to the Yezidi, Christian, and other minority groups in the Middle East at the hands of Daesh (the so-called Islamic State or IS). For humanity’s sake, it is crucial in stopping the ongoing vicious cycle of genocide, which begins with the truthful acknowledgment of facts and ends with the service of full justice.”

Marc is a grandson of a Genocide survivor and has spoken in area high schools and given a number of interviews describing his link to a nearly-forgotten page of history.

The video was directed by John Abarca.

https://youtu.be/9xBgT4a7q90

http://www.armradio.am/en/2017/04/17/rapper-marc-2rays-1915-video-depicts-the-armenian-genocide/

 



#1462 Yervant1

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Posted 17 April 2017 - 09:06 AM

Armenian Genocide ​and Holocaust ​​Recognized at R.I. State House

By Contributor on April 17, 2017 in HeadlineNew England // 0 Comments // email_famfamfam.png // printer_famfamfam.gif

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (A.W.)—A​n historic event took place at the Rhode Island State House on April 13​,​ as the Armenian Genocide and the Jewish Holocaust were recognized together in a resolution introduced by ​​State Representative Katherine Kazarian. ​State Representative J. Aaron Regunberg collaborated​with Rep. Kazarian to ​​introduce the joint resolution.

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Armenian, Jewish and South​e​ast Asian communities with both Armenian priests, Rep. Kazarian, Rep. Regunberg, and Rep. Garabedian.

Speaker of the House Nicholas Mattiello​ ​read the names of the representatives ​in support of the resolution and ​concluded with the following words, “​T​he resolution passes unanimously.​” This is the first time a resolution commemorating both devastating crimes against humanity has been introduced and passed in the R.I. State Legislature, and it coincides with the fact that both the Armenian Genocide and Jewish Holocaust are being remembered on the same date this year, April 24.

​Rev. Fr. Shnork Souin of St​s​. Sahag and Mesrob Armenian ​Apostolic ​Church opened the session with a prayer, thanking the State of Rhode Island for always doing the right thing ​in recognizing the horrific crime of genocide​. He was joined by ​Rev. Fr. Kapriel Nazarian of Sts. Vartanantz Armenian ​Apostolic ​Church​,​ as well as a large ​number​ of Armenians​,​ including Armenian National Committee of R.I. (ANC-R.I.) Chair​,​ Ani Haroian​,​ and the Honorable Aram Garabedian. ​Many members of the newly formed Holocaust and Genocide Education Committee were also in attendance.​

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The Armenian flag centered behind the dais with Speaker Mattiello at his chair.

The Providence Homenetmen Scouts served as flag bearers.

It was noted by the Speaker that both the Armenian and Jewish communities have contributed to the betterment of ​the State of Rhode Island in spite of such tragic histories.

The ​S​tate recently passed a ​law requiring that the schools in R.I. teach about the Holocaust and Genocide, includ​ing​ the Armenian Genocide.

http://armenianweekl...-i-state-house/



#1463 Yervant1

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Posted 19 April 2017 - 08:50 AM

California Senate commemorates Armenian Genocide, calls for return of historic church property

 

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Asbarez – On April 17, the California State Senate passed Senate Resolution 29 declaring April as a month of Armenian Genocide Recognition, commemorating the Armenian Genocide, calling for Turkey to return historic church properties to rightful congregations and requesting that the United States Government formally recognize the Armenian Genocide.

In his floor speech presenting SR 29, State Senator Anthony Portantino outlined the importance of the State Senate’s recognition of the Armenian Genocide for California residents and for the United States. He also shared details of the resilience of the Armenian people by reciting passages from William Saroyan in the Armenian language.

“It is an honor to represent the largest Armenian American community in the country and to be entrusted to appropriately commemorate the Genocide in the State Senate. It is our hope that California’s loud and clear voice once and for all gives Washington and the President the confidence to do the right thing and help people finally have the chance to heal from the horror perpetrated 102 years ago,” commented Portantino.

SR 29 was authored by Portantino and co-authored by the other members of the State Senate California, Armenian & Artsakh Select Committee: Pro Tem Kevin De Leon, Scott Wilk, Tony Mendoza and Josh Newman. Portantino is the Chair of the Select Committee.

In addition, members of the California Legislature on Monday commemorated the 102nd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, even as the United States of America continues to turn a blind eye to the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians.

“We commemorate the anniversary of the Armenian Genocide to remember the 1.5 million souls lost and to celebrate the Armenian’s contributions to California,” stated Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian. “Through vigilance and education we can banish genocide to our history books.”

“Armenian-Americans have not only survived, they have thrived and enriched the fabric of our communities. The genocide is about real people and real stories. For me it is about my wife Vanessa and her family, people I love and who are Armenian-Americans,” said Wilk. “By remembering the horror of the genocide we are taking steps to ensure it never happens again.”

https://youtu.be/XxuK-6d_Zx0

http://www.armradio....hurch-property/



#1464 Yervant1

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Posted 22 April 2017 - 08:20 AM

Event for the 10th Anniversary of the Law that Recognizes the Armenian Genocide in Argentina
 
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The tenth anniversary of the enactment of Argentine Law 26.199, the official recognition of the Armenian Genocide in Argentina, was celebrated on the morning of Wednesday 19 with an open talk in the Memory and Human Rights Space (former Higher School of Mechanics of the Navy - ESMA) with the participation of Jorge Taiana, Vice-President of Parlasur, Pedro Mouratian, consultant expert of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), Nicolas Sabuncuyan, director of the Armenian National Committee of Argentina, and President of Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo, Estela de Carlotto, along with human rights organizations of the country.

The Higher School of Mechanics of the Navy was the largest detention center during the last military dictatorship of Argentina, where thousands suffered forced disappearances, torture and illegal executions. In 2004 it was converted to a museum and a space of memory and today is the most important symbolic place in defense of human rights of the country.

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"It was only in 1985 that the Armenian Genocide committed by the Turks at the United Nations was spoken for the first time, for political reasons, because of Turkey's negation and its political weight," said Jorge Taiana. "This law does justice to a horrific fact that happened, it is part of an international policy of recognizing massive and systematic violations of human rights. Secondly, it is a recognition of a major community such as the diaspora of the Armenian people that came to Argentina that feel the need for reparation and identification. The third element has to do with the Argentine society, with this idea that it was in 'self-defense', a law in defense of all the people who feel that being different, in this case by nationality, are subject to danger," added Taiana, who was awarded with the Medal of Mkhitar Gosh from President Serzh Sargsyan in 2015.

"The whole Turkish policy supports this kind of siege between Azerbaijan and Turkey to the possibility of Armenian development. The normalization of relations between Armenia and its neighbors would enhance the development and well-being of the Armenians and also in Nagorno Karabakh, which is a national situation that we who also have a subject of territorial occupation also feel strong", said Taiana, referring to the problematic of Islas Malvinas between Argentina and Great Britain.

"The human rights organizations have not been indifferent to fraternal peoples and we are still in contact with other populations that are suffering persecution and death. The Armenian people who live in our country are our great friends: people of peace, culture and history. Argentina's recognition of this genocide was a very important step forward," said Estela de Carlotto.

"The law, unlike the resolutions, would allow us as a community to lay the foundations for public policies that have to be implemented from the state so that events like this do not happen again," said Pedro Mouratian. "What we have to think about is what our active role can be so that this does not happen again not only by remembering it in an act or a rally, but also in everyday life. When there is an alliance of the powerful to commit a genocide, everyone is aware of what they are doing. Those of us who are generally on the side of the victims and the vulnerable can not wait for this to happen to unite us, we must have an active work on these issues," added Nicolas Sabuncuyan.

With the presence of an auditorium full of students from schools of the Armenian community of Buenos Aires, the National Secretary of Human Rights and Cultural Pluralism, Claudio Avruj, sent a message of support to the activity. On the end, the Armenian National Committee closed the ceremony by giving a recognition to all the human rights organizations that accompanied the process of gestation and sanction of Law 26.199 that recognized the Armenian Genocide. 
 


#1465 Yervant1

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Posted 22 April 2017 - 08:35 AM

Armenian flag to be raised at Fresno City Hall
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Photo: Eric Paul Zamora

 

A commemoration and flag-raising event to remember the Armenian genocide is planned at Fresno City Hall, 2600 Fresno St., from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, the Fresno Bee reports.

The Armenian Genocide Commemorative Committee of Fresno announced several events in April to mark the genocide, in which about 1.5 million Armenians were killed by the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923.

Ara Khachatourian, English editor of the Asbarez Newspaper, will be the keynote speaker at Saturday’s event. The AUSA “Sounds of Freedom” Military band is expected to play.

The Armenian flag will be raised by the Homenetmen Scouts and Fresno High School’s Junior ROTC in honor of the survivors and those killed in the genocide.

An event Monday from noon to 1 p.m. will take place at the Armenian Genocide Monument at Fresno State. Associated Students Inc. President Tim Ryan is a guest speaker for the event. Professor Hagop Ohannessian will be the keynote speaker.

Performances by students from the Charlie Keyan Armenian Community School and Fresno State are scheduled.

At the same monument, flowers will be laid at 6 p.m. A religious service is planned for 7 p.m and a civil service is planned for 7:30 p.m.; a reception will follow.

Fresno Mayor Lee Brand will be the keynote speaker during the evening events at the monument at Fresno State. Other speakers include University President Joseph Castro and Honorary Consul of Armenia in Fresno Berj Apkarian. The Armenian Dance Group of Fresno will perform.

An event on April 26 will feature a book reading of “Echo of Silence” by author Fethiye Cetin. The event is planned for 7:30 p.m. at St. Paul Armenian Church, 3767 N. First Street, in the Haig Berberian Hall.

Admission and parking to the book reading event are free.

A final event will be a documentary film showing of “Women of 1915” by Bared Maronian on April 30.

The film is expected to show the journey of female survivors from the Armenian genocide and the human rights advocates who empowered them.

http://www.fresnobee...e146044729.html

http://www.armradio....esno-city-hall/



#1466 Yervant1

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Posted 22 April 2017 - 08:36 AM

Lebanese Forces commemorates 102 anniversary of Armenian genocide
Lebanese-Forces-620x300.jpg
 
Photo: The Daily Star/Mohammad Azakir

 

The Lebanese Forces Friday held a ceremony commemorating the anniversary of the Armenian genocide, the Daily Star reports.

“April 24, 1915 is not just another day… Humanity was stabbed with the dagger of cruelty,” LF chief Samir Geagea said in a speech during the ceremony held in his Mount Lebanon residence at Maarab.

He added that Lebanese and Armenians have forged historical bonds.

“Our cause is one,” Geagea said. “Armenians struggled for a free Armenia, and so did the Lebanese.”

“It is true that the land of Armenia wept your ancestors … but you have found fathers and mothers in Lebanon,” he added.

A large number of Armenians fled to Lebanon in the wake of the massacres and now make up roughly 4 percent of the population

Geagea also expressed his sympathy with the current regional crises, namely the ongoing war in neighboring Syria.

“We have to be honest with ourselves by condemning the assassins of today like we condemn the assassins of the past,” he said.

http://www.dailystar...n-genocide.ashx

http://www.armradio....enian-genocide/



#1467 Yervant1

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Posted 22 April 2017 - 08:37 AM

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Statement on the Occasion of the 102nd Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
April 21, 2017 3217 0

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On this day, we solemnly gather to commemorate the tragic loss of life among the Armenian population, which took place over a century ago.

In 2015, the House of Commons unanimously passed a motion declaring April 24th as Armenian Genocide Memorial Day.

This day honours the memory of those who unjustly lost their lives and suffered during the genocide. We pay tribute to them and their descendants, many of who now reside in Canada.

On this occasion, Canadians – regardless regardless of faith or ethnic background – stand together in solemn remembrance and reaffirmed dedication to ensuring that we never stand indifferently in the face of hate or violence in any form.

As we observe Armenian Genocide Day, please join me in my hope for a future characterized by peace and mutual respect.

JUSTIN TRUDEAU

Prime Minister of Canada

https://horizonweekl...enian-genocide/



#1468 Yervant1

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Posted 22 April 2017 - 08:38 AM

Statement by Rona Ambrose, Interim Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada, on the anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
April 21, 2017 241 0

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Every April 24, the world stops to remember and honour the Armenian men, women and children
who endured terrible suffering and loss of life 102 years ago.
 
 
It is a day of solemnity and reflection on an event that has left its footprint on our modern world.
 
The Conservative government, under the leadership of Prime Minister Stephen Harper,
recognized the events of 1915 as genocide in 2006. In addition, the Senate of Canada and the
House of Commons have adopted resolutions referring to these events as genocide.
 
Every year, Canada and many other countries use this anniversary as an opportunity to shine a
light on current conflicts so that they may not continue toward similar tragic ends, and to
promote a global effort toward peaceful coexistence.
 
 
Canada is and must remain a proud protector of human rights and democratic freedom wherever
those values are threatened. That’s why we are encouraged to see that Canadians of Armenian
and Turkish heritage can today work together in pursuit of a productive relationship at home
and around the world.
 
 
On this anniversary, I and the entire Conservative caucus join Canadians in remembrance, and
encourage communities on both sides to continue their work toward reconciliation in a spirit of
goodwill.
 
 
Sincerely,
Rona Ambrose interim leader of the Conservative Party of Canada.
 


#1469 Yervant1

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Posted 22 April 2017 - 08:39 AM

Statement by Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne on the Occasion of the 102nd Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
April 21, 2017 811 0

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On behalf of the Government of Ontario, it is my distinct honour to join the Armenian community in commemorating Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day.
 
 
History is a great teacher — for those whose hearts and minds are open to its lessons. That is why we gather today to remember the 1.5 million Armenians who were deprived of their freedom, property,
cultural heritage and lives. The Armenian Genocide is a compelling reminder of our obligation to learn from the lessons of our history.
 
 
While we have come a long way from those dark days, reports of hate crimes in North America and around the world serve to remind us that we must remain ever-vigilant against all forms of bigotry and intolerance.
 
 
I thank the Armenian community for all they have brought to Ontario’s multicultural success story. Your remembrance helps ensure that future generations will learn from Medz Yeghern, the Great Crime.
 
 
Please accept my best wishes for a meaningful day. 
 


#1470 Yervant1

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Posted 22 April 2017 - 08:44 AM

Tribute to Armenian Genocide victims paid in Boston
16:05, 22.04.2017
Region:World NewsArmenia
Theme: Politics
 
default.jpgDozens of state leaders gathered at the State House in Massachusetts yesterday to mark the 102nd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, Boston Herald reported.

House Speaker Robert A. DeLeo, state Rep. David Muradian and Attorney General Maura Healey were among those who spoke at the annual event.

 

 

http://www.bostonher..._on_beacon_hill

https://news.am/eng/news/385973.html



#1471 Yervant1

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Posted 22 April 2017 - 10:34 AM

‘Sherlock Holmes of Armenian Genocide’ Uncovers Lost Evidence

By TIM ARANGO

 

APRIL 22, 2017

 

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A small stream flowing into the Dudan cave in Turkey. It was here that the Armenian residents of a local village are said to have been thrown, after being led there by Ottoman gendarmes and local Kurdish paramilitary personnel. CreditBryan Denton for The New York Times. 

 

 

For more than a century, Turkey has denied any role in organizing the killing of Armenians in what historians have long accepted as a genocide that started in 1915, as World War I spread across continents. The Turkish narrative of denial has hinged on the argument that the original documents from postwar military tribunals that convicted the genocide’s planners were nowhere to be found.

Now, Taner Akcam, a Turkish historian at Clark University in Worcester, Mass., who has studied the genocide for decades by piecing together documents from around the world to establish state complicity in the killings, says he has unearthed an original telegram from the trials, in an archive held by the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem.

“Until recently, the smoking gun was missing,” Mr. Akcam said. “This is the smoking gun.” He called his find “an earthquake in our field,” and said he hoped it would remove “the last brick in the denialist wall.”

The story begins in 1915 in an office in the Turkish city of Erzurum, when a high-level official of the Ottoman Empire punched out a telegram in secret code to a colleague in the field, asking for details about the deportations and killings of Armenians in eastern Anatolia, the easternmost part of contemporary Turkey.

Later, a deciphered copy of the telegram helped convict the official, Behaeddin Shakir, for planning what scholars have long acknowledged and Turkey has long denied: the organized killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians by the leaders of the collapsing Ottoman Empire, an atrocity widely recognized as the 20th century’s first genocide.

And then, just like that, most of the original documents and sworn testimony from the trials vanished, leaving researchers to rely mostly on summaries from the official Ottoman newspaper.

Mr. Akcam said he had little hope that his new finding would immediately change things, given Turkey’s ossified policy of denial and especially at a time of political turmoil when its president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has turned more nationalist.

But Mr. Akcam’s life’s work has been to puncture, fact by fact, document by document, the denials of Turkey.

“My firm belief as a Turk is that democracy and human rights in Turkey can only be established by facing history and acknowledging historic wrongdoings,” he said.

He broadened his point to argue that much of the chaos gripping the Middle East today was a result of mistrust between communities over historical wrongdoings that no one is willing to confront.

“The past is not the past in the Middle East,” he said. “This is the biggest obstacle to peace and stability in the Middle East.”

Eric D. Weitz, a history professor at the City College of New York and an expert on the Armenian genocide, called Mr. Akcam “the Sherlock Holmes of Armenian genocide.”

“He has piled clue upon clue upon clue,” Professor Weitz added.

Exactly where the telegram was all these years, and how Mr. Akcam found it, is a story in itself. With Turkish nationalists about to seize the country in 1922, the Armenian leadership in Istanbul shipped 24 boxes of court records to England for safekeeping.

The records were kept there by a bishop, then taken to France and, later, to Jerusalem. They have remained there since the 1930s, part of a huge archive that has mostly been inaccessible to scholars, for reasons that are not entirely clear. Mr. Akcam said he had tried for years to gain access to the archive, with no luck.

Instead, he found a photographic record of the Jerusalem archive in New York, held by the nephew of a Armenian monk, now dead, who was a survivor of the genocide.

While researching the genocide in Cairo in the 1940s, the monk, Krikor Guerguerian, met a former Ottoman judge who had presided over the postwar trials. The judge told him that many of the boxes of case files had wound up in Jerusalem, so Mr. Guerguerian went there and took pictures of everything.

The telegram was written under Ottoman letterhead and coded in Arabic lettering; four-digit numbers denoted words. When Mr. Akcam compared it with the known Ottoman Interior Ministry codes from the time, found in an official archive in Istanbul, he found a match, raising the likelihood that many other telegrams used in the postwar trials could one day be verified in the same way.

For historians, the court cases were one piece of a mountain of evidence that emerged over the years — including reports in several languages from diplomats, missionaries and journalists who witnessed the events as they happened — that established the historical fact of the killings and qualified them as a genocide.

Turkey has long resisted the word genocide, saying that the suffering of the Armenians had occurred during the chaos of a world war in which Turkish Muslims faced hardship, too.

Photo
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Tripods used for hanging people during the Armenian genocide that started in 1915.CreditCulture Club/Getty Images

Turkey also claimed that the Armenians were traitors, and had been planning to join with Russia, then an enemy of the Ottoman Empire.

That position is deeply entwined in Turkish culture — it is standard in school curriculums — and polling has shown that a majority of Turks share the government’s position.

“My approach is that as much proof as you put in front of denialists, denialists will remain denialists,” said Bedross Der Matossian, a historian at the University of Nebraska and the author of “Shattered Dreams of Revolution: From Liberty to Violence in the Late Ottoman Empire.”

The genocide is commemorated each year on April 24, the day in 1915 that a group of Armenian notables from Istanbul were rounded up and deported.

It was the start of the enormous killing operation, which involved forced marches into the Syrian desert, summary executions and rapes.

Two years ago, Pope Francis referred to the killings as a genocide and faced a storm of criticism from within Turkey. Many countries, including France, Germany and Greece, have recognized the genocide, each time provoking diplomatic showdowns with Turkey.

The United States has not referred to the episode as genocide, out of concerns for alienating Turkey, a NATO ally and a partner in fighting terrorism in the Middle East. Barack Obama used the term when he was a candidate for president, but he refrained from doing so while in office.

This year, dozens of congressional leaders have signed a letter urging President Trump to recognize the genocide.

But that is unlikely, especially after Mr. Trump recently congratulated Mr. Erdogan for winning expanded powers in a referendum that critics say was marred by fraud.

Mr. Shakir, the Ottoman official who wrote the incriminating telegram discovered by Mr. Akcam, had fled the country by the time the military tribunal convicted him and sentenced him to death in absentia.

A few years later, he was gunned down in the streets of Berlin by two Armenian assassins described in an article by The New York Times as “slim, undersized, swarthy men lurking in a doorway.”



#1472 Yervant1

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Posted 23 April 2017 - 08:47 AM

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Politics 19:53 22/04/2017
Rally in Amsterdam to commemorate the Armenian Genocide anniversary

Armenian organizations of the Netherlands held a protest march on Saturday in Amsterdam to commemorate the 102nd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

As the Facebook page “Diary of the Netherlands” reports, the event kick-started from Amsterdam Centre Stopera and marched through the city central streets. Participants of the rally observed a moment of silence to honor the victims of the Armenian genocide.

According to the source, representatives of Turkish, Kurdish, Assyrian as well as Armenian and Dutch public and political figures attended d the commemorative event.

http://www.panorama....versary/1765752



#1473 Yervant1

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Posted 23 April 2017 - 09:06 AM

LOST EVIDENCE OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DISCOVERED IN JERUSALEM ARCHIVE
 
   
 APRIL 23, 2017 09:41
  Boxes of evidence have rested in the archives of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem for nearly a century, inaccessible to scholars "for reasons that are not entirely clear. 

 

 

 
 

Demonstrators hold candles and pictures of Armenian victims during a commemoration for the victims of mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in the Armenian Genocide, in Istanbul April 23, 2015. . (photo credit:REUTERS)

 

While Turkey has denied the systematic deportation, rape, and murder of Armenians beginning in 1915 that have come to be known as The Armenian Genocide, in which about 1.5 million Armenians were murdered by Ottoman Turks, lost evidence was recently recovered in a Jerusalem archive that researchers have dubbed the "smoking gun" of the massive crime.

The New York Times reported on Saturday that Taner Akcam, a Turkish historian at Clark University in Worcester, MA, has come upon an original telegram from the military tribunals that initially convicted the genocide's planners. This key evidence has long been missing, and the lack of original documents, the Times said, is the foundation of the Turkish narrative of denying the genocide.


"Until recently, the smoking gun was missing," Akcam told the Times. "This is the smoking gun."

The telegram, in code, is from Behaeddin Shakir, a high ranking Ottomoan official, to a colleague, inquiring about specifics regarding the deportation and murder of Armenians in eastern Anatolia. A copy of this telegram  was used in Shakir's conviction, shortly before almost all original documents and testimony went missing, forcing scholars to rely on secondary sources for their research on the topic.
According to the Times, Armenian leadership in Istanbul shipped 24 boxes of records to England when Turkish nationalists were seizing control of the country in 1922. The documents then made their way to France in the care of a bishop and finally to the archive of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem, where they've remained since the 1930s, inaccessible to scholars "for reasons that are not entirely clear."

Akcam came upon photographs of the original telegram in New York, in the possession of the nephew of a now-dead Armenian monk.

Last year, the Israeli Knesset Education, Culture and Sports Committee announced that it recognized the Armenian Genocide.

“It is our moral obligation to recognize the Holocaust of the Armenian nation,” committee chairman MK Ya’acov Margi (Shas) said.

Georgette Avakian, chairwoman of the Armenian National Committee in Jerusalem, told the Knesset committee that after 101 years, the time had come for the Knesset to join parliaments around the world and the 31 countries who have already recognized the Armenian Genocide.

MK Zehava Gal-On (Meretz) who initiated the committee meeting, said that “each year we instill false hope in the people who are sitting here.”

“It dishonors the Knesset to continue to go on and on about this issue, year after year, without reaching a decision that the State of Israel and the Israeli legislature recognize the genocide of the Armenian people.”

Lidar Grave-Lazi and Herb Keinon contributed to this report.


#1474 Yervant1

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Posted 24 April 2017 - 08:42 AM

Large numbers of people visit Armenian Genocide Memorial, since morning (PHOTOS)
16:05, 23.04.2017
Region:Armenia
Theme: Society
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YEREVAN. – Large numbers of people on Sunday are visiting the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Armenia’s capital city of Yerevan, to honor the victims of this tragedy, on the eve of its 102nd anniversary.

Hundreds of soldiers, tourists, and schoolchildren also are heading toward the memorial since early morning, the Armenian News-NEWS.am correspondent reported from on location.

People are laying flowers at the Eternal Flame, and paying a silent tribute to the holy martyrs of this calamity.

More than 1.5 million Armenians were killed as a result of this crime committed by the Ottoman Empire.

All Armenian intellectuals in Constantinople—Istanbul of today—were arrested on April 24, 1915, and killed. Hence, April 24 has become the Armenian Genocide commemoration day.

Numerous countries have formally recognized and condemned this tragedy.

https://youtu.be/ZB_o_mgffBc

https://news.am/eng/news/386118.html



#1475 Yervant1

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Posted 24 April 2017 - 08:44 AM

Human Rights Association of Turkey to honor Armenian Genocide victims
11:41, 23.04.2017
Region:ArmeniaTurkey
Theme: Politics
 
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ISTANBUL. – The Istanbul branch of the “Human Rights Association” NGO in Turkey on Monday will hold Armenian Genocide 102nd anniversary commemoration events. 

At noon local time, the representatives of this branch will recall that today’s Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum used to be a prison, where the Armenian intellectuals that were arrested on April 24, 1915 were taken and then sent to their deaths, reported Agos Armenian bilingual weekly of Istanbul.

And at 3pm, these representatives will assemble at the grave of Istanbul Armenian Sevag Şahin Balıkçı, who was killed on April 24, 2011 by a fellow soldier, while serving in the Turkish army.

Representatives from the European antiracist movement also will take part in these commemorations.

https://news.am/eng/news/386068.html



#1476 Yervant1

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Posted 24 April 2017 - 08:45 AM

Mothers, who lost their sons under unknown circumstances in Turkey, honor Armenian Genocide victims (PHOTOS)
09:32, 23.04.2017
Region:DiasporaTurkey
Theme: Politics
 
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The “Saturday Mothers,” who have lost their sons under unknown circumstances in Turkey, on Saturday assembled at Galatasaray Square in Istanbul, and paid tribute to the Armenian intellectuals that were killed during the genocide in 1915.

These mothers held the photographs of their lost sons and of these intellectuals, and condemned the massacres carried out by the Turkish state, according to Evrensel newspaper of Turkey.

These mothers, who have lost their relatives for unknown reasons, on Saturdays stage demonstrations on a regular basis at Galatasaray Square, and demand to find those behind the killers of their sons.

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https://news.am/eng/news/386061.html



#1477 Yervant1

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Posted 24 April 2017 - 08:51 AM

April 23 2017
 
 
Document Said to Prove Turkey’s Culpability in Armenian Genocide Found in Yerushalayim Archive

By Zalman Ahnsaf

Sunday, April 23, 2017 at 1:41 pm | כ"ז ניסן תשע"ז
Marcharmenians.jpgArmenian civilians, guarded by Ottoman Turkish soldiers, are marched to a prison in present-day Elazig,Turkey, in April 1915.

YERUSHALAYIM - A key document said to point to the culpability of the Ottoman Turkish government in the Armenian Genocide of World War I has been discovered in an archive in Yerushalayim.

The document is an original telegram from the military tribunals that initially convicted those immediately responsible for the genocide.

The coded telegram was a request for information sent by a senior Ottoman official about the deportation and murder of Armenians in eastern Anatolia. A copy of the telegram subsequently disappeared, along with almost all original documents and testimony from the tribunals.

The telegram was part of a trove of some 24 boxes of archives organized by the Armenian leadership in Istanbul for secreting out of the country to England when Turkish nationalists came to power in 1922. The documents were later sent on to a Christian cleric in France, and finally made their way to the archive of the Armenian Patriarchate in Yerushalayim.

There they stayed, inaccessible to scholars since the 1930’s “for reasons that are not entirely clear,” The New York Times reports.

Of the incriminating evidence, historian Taner Akcam told The Times: “Until recently, the smoking gun was missing. This is the smoking gun.”

Akcam, of Clark University in Worcester, Mass., tracked down the document at the archive of the Armenian Patriarchate of Yerushalayim. Photographs of the original telegram that came into his possession in New York spurred him to pursue the matter.

The telegram’s existence was long recognized as proof of the Turkish role in the genocide, but the inability to locate it has been used by Turkish authorities to insist that no such document ever existed and to deny responsibility for the crimes.

http://hamodia.com/2...alayim-archive/



#1478 Yervant1

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Posted 24 April 2017 - 08:51 AM

The Times of Israel

April 23 2017
 
 
Jerusalem archive yields Armenian genocide ‘smoking gun’ Newly discovered telegram from 1919 military tribunals proves official Turkish coverup of mass killings
By Times of Israel staff April 23, 2017, 12:41 pm                                        
 
In a landmark discovery, a Turkish historian says he has found in a copy of a Jerusalem archive collection a “smoking gun” proving beyond doubt that the Ottoman Empire carried out the premeditated genocide of hundreds of thousands of Armenians and attempted to cover up evidence of the event.

After years of searching for irrefutable proof of the genocide, Taner Akcam, a Turkish-born scholar at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, says he has uncovered a long-lost telegram used as evidence in military tribunals that convicted the planners of the mass killings, The New York Times reported Saturday.                 

“Until recently, the smoking gun was missing,” Akcam, who is considered one of the world’s leading authorities on the Armenian cause, told the paper. “This is the smoking gun.”

The telegram, originally written in secret code, is a request from a high-level Turkish official, Behaeddin Shakir, for details from the field about the deportations and killings of Armenians in the eastern Turkish region of Anatolia, the report said.

The document, found by Akcam in a copy of an archive held by the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem, is a deciphered version of the original telegram that was used to help convict Shakir of planning the murders. According to Akcam, the discovery proves both the existence of the tribunals and, for the first time, the deliberate and willful official planning involved in carrying out the massacres.

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Purple forget-me-not flowers, the symbol of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, in a courtyard of the monastery in Jerusalem‘s Old City. (Melanie Lidman/Times of Israel)

Akcam said the find was “an earthquake in our field,” and expressed hope it would remove “the last brick in the denialist wall.”

The killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I is widely viewed by scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century.

Turkey, however, denies that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll has been inflated and that those killed were victims of war and civil unrest. Ankara has admitted that large-scale massacres took place, but says they were perpetrated in self-defense against what it describes as a Russian-inspired uprising by Armenians.

Monday marks the annual commemoration of the day when some 250 Armenian intellectuals were rounded up in what is regarded as the first step of the massacres.

For years, Akcam, along with other historians, has been searching for documents from the 1919-20 military tribunals to constitute firsthand proof of the genocide and subsequent coverup. With the court transcripts and original documents destroyed, researchers have thus far relied on summaries from Ottoman newspapers for information from the trials.

The telegram was discovered in a collection of court records, shipped out of Turkey in 1922 by Armenian leaders fearing they would be destroyed by Turkish nationalists who would later seize control of the country.

Brought to Jerusalem in the 1930s, the collection was put in an archive in the Armenian Patriarchate but was inaccessible to researchers, the report said. Recently, however, Akcam discovered that the entire collection had been photographed in the 1940s by an Armenian monk who passed the photos on to a nephew currently living in New York.

After hours of painstaking work sifting through the photos, Akcam was eventually able to match some of documents to the the coded letterhead of the Turkish Interior Ministry at the time.

http://www.timesofis...de-smoking-gun/



#1479 Yervant1

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Posted 24 April 2017 - 08:58 AM

Scene from the Armenian Genocide: A French Artist’s Chilling Portrayal of Events at the Euphrates River

Armenian News Network / Groong
April 24, 2017

Special to Groong by Eugene L. Taylor and Abraham D. Krikorian

Long Island, NY

 

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“The Euphrates was the tomb of thousands of the deportees.  The Armenians who did not die were shot point blank by Kurds on the banks of the River — Composition of G. Dutriac.”

From a full page sepia image (5 X 8 inches) (by the very well known French artist, illustrator, engraver Georges-Pierre Dutriac (1866-1958): Lectures Pour Tous18e Annèe, 23e Livraison [Delivery date] 1er Septembre 1916, p. 1745, used as one of the illustrations in an article entitled “Dans l’Horreur des Massacres d’Arménie” pp. 1742-1748.  The use of the word composition in French is somewhat different from what it generally means in English.  Here it sums up the entire plot and structure, and relays at a glance in full artistic composition what happened all-too-often to Armenian women and children on their death marches.

No single photograph could depict this particular scenario more vividly.


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#1480 MosJan

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Posted 25 April 2017 - 11:12 AM

Recently Discovered Telegram Reveals Evidence For Armenian Genocide

Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

This is the day of remembrance of the genocide against Armenian people in Turkey that took place just over a century ago. Up to one and a half million Armenians were killed. Turkey has always rejected the term genocide, saying the violence against Armenians was part of widespread conflict in the region.

Taner Akcam has spent his career documenting the targeted killing of Armenian Turks at the start of World War I. He's a Turkish historian at Clark University. And he recently found a document that he calls the smoking gun. Professor Akcam, welcome to the program.

TANER AKCAM: Thank you very much.

SHAPIRO: What is this telegram that you described to The New York Times as a smoking gun?

AKCAM: It is a telegram sent July 4, 1915. And the telegram says the following - are the Armenians who were deported from there being liquidated? Are the troublesome individuals whom you have reported as having been exiled and expelled been eliminated or merely sent off and deported? Please report honestly.

So this is the telegram. And we knew the existence of such a telegram. It was quoted in several indictments and verdicts during the military tribunals in Istanbul. And I discovered the original with an Ottoman letterhead. This is the discovery.

SHAPIRO: Now, one reason Turkey has been able to deny the genocide is that so many of the records of the court proceedings were destroyed or somehow vanished and so all we have is historians' accounts and journalists' accounts. This seems to be pretty extraordinary in that respect. Put it into context for us.

AKCAM: What we were missing in Armenian genocide is the so-called smoking gun because all relevant documents were taken out from Ottoman archive or all these materials - telegrams, eyewitness accounts, they were all gone. We didn't know whereabouts of all these documents. And mainly, the denial strategy was show us the originals. So I discovered in a private archive this telegram.

SHAPIRO: Yeah. It took some real sleuthing. Explain how you discovered this.

AKCAM: I mean, we already knew that these telegrams ended in Armenian patriarch in Jerusalem but this archive is closed. Somehow because of unknown reasons, they don't allow us historians to go and work with material.

SHAPIRO: So you knew these crucial documents were in Jerusalem in this archive but you couldn't get access to them?

AKCAM: Yes, exactly, this was the story.

SHAPIRO: And so how did you finally get it?

AKCAM: Because of an Armenian Catholic priest, Krikor Guerguerian. He went to this archive end of 1960s. And he filmed all the materials there. And he had a private archive. And it was saved and secured by his nephew.

SHAPIRO: So the priest died, his nephew took this document and you got it from the nephew?

AKCAM: Exactly.

SHAPIRO: How do you hope this telegram will change the conversation surrounding the Armenian genocide?

AKCAM: I think Turkish government must try or develop some new strategies to deny the Armenian genocide. They cannot deny as they have been denying over the years. It is over now. There is no way to escape. They have to face this reality. This is a telegram with an Ottoman letterhead and we with the Ottoman coding system.

SHAPIRO: You are Turkish. You are not Armenian. Why have you devoted your life, your career, to studying the Armenian genocide?

AKCAM: I'm a historian. It is my job to educate new generation on violence in the past so that this should not happen again in the future. The second important reason is my firm belief that democracy can only establish in Turkey if Turkey faces its own history.

SHAPIRO: Taner Akcam, thank you so much for your time.

AKCAM: Thank you very much. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

 

http://kttz.org/post...nocide#stream/0

 






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