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Bush, George
H.W. (1989-93)
Armenian Remembrance Day, April 20, 1990
Throughout this century, the United States has had a special, enduring
relationship with the Armenian people. Armenians around the world
share with their friends in the United States a love of freedom,
and as proud people they have a strong commitment to the preservation
of their heritage and culture.
Their history, though marked by a number of tragedies,
nonetheless reflects their faith and the strength and resilience
of their tradition. Those tragedies include the Earthquake of 1988
and, most prominently, the terrible massacres suffered in 1915-1923
at the hands of the rulers of the Ottoman Empire.
The United States responded to the victims of
the crime against humanity by leading international diplomatic and
private relief efforts.
The Armenian-American community now numbers nearly
one million people. Those who emigrated to the United States, and
their descendants, continue to make significant contributions to
the betterment of our country in many fields of endeavor.
On this seventy-fifth anniversary of the massacres,
I wish to join with Armenians and all peoples in observing April
24, 1990 as a day of remembrance for the more than a million Armenian
people who were victims. I call upon all peoples to work to prevent
future acts of inhumanity against mankind, and my comments of June
1988 represent the depth of my feeling for the Armenian people and
the sufferings they have endured.
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