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GLENDALE - The
blood-stained carriage and the smoldering city
still seemed fresh to the Rev. Vartan Dulgarian
as he recalled personal memories of what many
believe was the first genocide of the 20th
century.
"The garbage wagon
- all the bodies just piled up - the blood was
flowing for three days," Dulgarian, 96, said
Monday as he recounted memories of a massacre of
Armenians in Izmir in 1922. The city on Turkey's
Aegean coast, then held by Greeks, was set
ablaze by invading Turks.
He had lived there
with his mother and sister, and was being
marched away with dozens of others to the
slaughter when he recognized a Turkish grocer
whom he had worked for during the past three
summers.
"He was the head
of the soldiers," he said. "I went up to him and
embraced him. He said, 'Oh, you are here?' He
said, 'Put this child in my cart and put a fez
on him.' He took me back to my mother."
Dulgarian
eventually got on a ship to Greece, then ended
up in Egypt before coming to America decades
later and settling in Glendale.
As old age claims
more survivors of the mass slaughter known as
the Armenian Genocide - which Armenians say
began on this date in 1915 - Dulgarian is among
the handful of eyewitnesses still able to tell
his story. In a way, he's planting seeds in the
minds of the next generation that he knows one
day will bear fruit. "I am 96 years old," he
said. "All the bloody things happened in my life
... it's important for the new generation to
know that these people have been brutalized, and
massacred, so they know their history."
Dulgarian's story
is a slice of forbidden history still disputed
in the halls of power in Europe, a story the
U.S. government does not recognize as genocide.
Armenians and many
historians have asserted that Ottoman Turks
began the displacement and slaughter of some 1.5
million ethnic Armenians in Turkey on April 24,
1915, a campaign that lasted until 1923.
Its 92nd
anniversary today will be marked by remembrances
in Glendale, home of the largest Armenian
community outside Armenia. In L.A., a march from
the Little Armenia neighborhood to the Turkish
consulate is planned.
Meanwhile, Turkey
has acknowledged that large numbers of Armenians
died between 1915 to 1923 but has denied that it
was genocide. Instead, its leaders say the death
toll is inflated and that the massacres were the
result of civil unrest during the collapse of
the Ottoman Empire.
Turkey took out a
full-page newspaper ad Monday, paid for by its
embassy in Washington, which invited Armenia to
"study the historical facts jointly."
The idea of a
joint historical commission has been touted by
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
since April 2005 - and has been rebuffed by
Armenian leaders.
"We think that
there are two narratives here that are
diametrically opposed to each other," Turkish
Consul Timur Soylemez said Monday. "It is a
matter that belongs to history. ... In order to
reconcile this history, we need to look at it in
a sober, sincere and genuine way."
For Levon
Marashlian, a historian at Glendale College, the
proposal is actually a step back.
"It's an effort to
divert attention from the main issue," he said.
"There is so much evidence already that it's a
genocide that a study - the kind Turkey wants -
would not be productive. It's like proving again
the Civil War happened."
The ad also
supports efforts to "examine history, not
legislate it." U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff,
D-Pasadena, is making his annual push to pass an
Armenian Genocide recognition bill in Congress.
But the White House and Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice have sidestepped the issue, as
Turkey is a key regional ally.
"The crime of
genocide is the highest crime according to
international law," Soylemez said. "You don't
throw these allegations around lightly. The
solution is not in the U.S. The solution is
between Turkey and Armenia."
But for many who
have lost relatives in the massacres or during
the subsequent exile in the Syrian desert,
healing can only begin with recognition.
"We're still
trying to get away from the desert," said Raffi
Momjian, executive director of the Genocide
Education Project, a San Francisco-based
nonprofit focused on Armenian Genocide
education. "We can't do that until we get the
proper recognition."
And those
nightmarish memories will always be etched in
Dulgarian's mind.
"In my life,
always I pray for the people," he said. "I
(forgive) them. But I can never forget the
genocide."
eugene.tong@dailynews.com
(818) 546-3304
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