215
Mile Walk Will Honor Victims of Forgotten Genocide
March
for Humanity Campaign Marks
90th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
Los
Angeles, CA February 14, 2005 — California
youth will walk from Fresno Calif. to the State Capitol
starting on April 2, 2005. The 215-mile 19-day journey,
titled March for Humanity, aims to raise awareness about
the unpunished crime of genocide committed against the
Armenian people between 1915 and 1921.
“Ninety
years ago innocent Armenians also marched, but not willingly,
not just 215 miles, and not just 19 days,” said
Serouj Aprahamian, March for Humanity Coordinator. “They
were forced to death marches across deserts - hundreds
of miles for months with no food or water, left to starve
and die in a premeditated act of genocide perpetrated
by the Ottoman Turks. This April we will pay tribute to
the 1.5 million lives lost during the Armenian Genocide
by marching in their memory and the memory of all those
who have been victims of genocides. From the Armenian
Genocide to the Holocaust, from the Cambodian genocide
to the hell of the Rwandan Genocide, our generation has
an obligation to stand against genocide and its denial."
Upon
arriving in Sacramento, march participants, human rights
activists, and Armenian American community members will
gather at the State Capitol for a rally organized to thank
the California State Legislature and 36 other states’
legislatures for officially recognizing the Genocide.
The rally will also promote public involvement in securing
justice not only for the Armenian Genocide, but also for
all unpunished crimes against humanity.
“To
avoid accountability for the murder of 1.5 million Armenians,
the Turkish government denies that the systematic annihilation
of the Armenians was genocide,” said Vicken Sosikian,
director of the March for Humanity. “We turn to
our nation’s leaders, President Bush and the U.S.
Congress, in the name of truth, righteousness, and justice,
ask him to condemn the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians
by holding the government of Turkey accountable for this
crime against humanity.”
Organizers
are expecting hundreds of supporters and activists from
across the country and Canada to join the March for Humanity.
Participants will sleep in community centers, churches,
schools and in tents on the road side. They will walk,
rain or shine, for about 15 miles each day.
Raffi Maronian, a participant who will walk the entire
215 mile distance, is confident that the march will open
people’s eyes up to the threat genocide poses for
all of humanity. “Those of us who are familiar with
the genocide carried out against the Armenians bear a
special responsibility to make sure the lessons of such
crimes are never again repeated. The recent events in
Sudan serve to demonstrate that we have not done an adequate
job. It’s time to raise our level of activism and
put an end to the cycle of genocide,” said Maronian.
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For
more information about the March for Humanity, visit www.marchforhumanity.org
or call (818) 507-1933.
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Media
Contact:
Serouj Aprahamian (818) 507.1933
Vicken
Sosikian
(818) 419.5157
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