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TOPIC: colorado's history Armenia's History, Turkey's Dilemma
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colorado's history Armenia's History, Turkey's Dilemma
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Armenia's History, Turkey's Dilemma by Paul Glastris, The Washington Post - Sunday, March 11, 2001; Page B01 OPINION It is dimly lit and dank as a cavern inside the old National Bank building two blocks from the White House. The electricity is off, and we make our way around with the aid of a flashlight. Its narrow beam reveals an impressive three-story atrium with a carved wood ceiling, dated-looking ATM machines and an old bank vault, its yard-thick steel door yawning open. I'm exploring this vintage space with Ross Vartian of the Armenian National Institute (ANI), a branch of the increasingly powerful Armenian Assembly of America, an ethnic lobbying group. The ANI bought the building last year for $7.25 million, with the aim of transforming it from a place that safeguarded money to one that will preserve a memory. Four years from now, Vartian tells me, this space will be a $50 million museum and memorial filled with mural-size photos, personal artifacts and interactive exhibits chronicling the history of an atrocity that time
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colorado's history Armenia's History, Turkey's Dilemma
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by Paul Glastris, The Washington Post - Sunday, March 11, 2001; Page B01 OPINION It is dimly lit and dank as a cavern inside the old National Bank building two blocks from the White House. The electricity is off, and we make our way around with the aid of a flashlight. Its narrow beam reveals an impressive three-story atrium with a carved wood ceiling, dated-looking ATM machines and an old bank vault, its yard-thick steel door yawning open. I'm exploring this vintage space with Ross Vartian of the Armenian National Institute (ANI), a branch of the increasingly powerful Armenian Assembly of America, an ethnic lobbying group. The ANI bought the building last year for $7.25 million, with the aim of transforming it from a place that safeguarded money to one that will preserve a memory. Four years from now, Vartian tells me, this space will be a $50 million museum and memorial filled with mural-size photos, personal artifacts and interactive exhibits chronicling the history of an atrocity that time
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colorado's history Armenia's History, Turkey's Dilemma
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Armenia's History, Turkey's Dilemma by Paul Glastris, The Washington Post - Sunday, March 11, 2001; Page B01 OPINION It is dimly lit and dank as a cavern inside the old National Bank building two blocks from the White House. The electricity is off, and we make our way around with the aid of a flashlight. Its narrow beam reveals an impressive three-story atrium with a carved wood ceiling, dated-looking ATM machines and an old bank vault, its yard-thick steel door yawning open. I'm exploring this vintage space with Ross Vartian of the Armenian National Institute (ANI), a branch of the increasingly powerful Armenian Assembly of America, an ethnic lobbying group. The ANI bought the building last year for $7.25 million, with the aim of transforming it from a place that safeguarded money to one that will preserve a memory. Four years from now, Vartian tells me, this space will be a $50 million museum and memorial filled with mural-size photos, personal artifacts and interactive exhibits chronicling the history of an atrocity that time
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colorado's history Armenia's History, Turkey's Dilemma
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by Paul Glastris, The Washington Post - Sunday, March 11, 2001; Page B01 OPINION It is dimly lit and dank as a cavern inside the old National Bank building two blocks from the White House. The electricity is off, and we make our way around with the aid of a flashlight. Its narrow beam reveals an impressive three-story atrium with a carved wood ceiling, dated-looking ATM machines and an old bank vault, its yard-thick steel door yawning open. I'm exploring this vintage space with Ross Vartian of the Armenian National Institute (ANI), a branch of the increasingly powerful Armenian Assembly of America, an ethnic lobbying group. The ANI bought the building last year for $7.25 million, with the aim of transforming it from a place that safeguarded money to one that will preserve a memory. Four years from now, Vartian tells me, this space will be a $50 million museum and memorial filled with mural-size photos, personal artifacts and interactive exhibits chronicling the history of an atrocity that time
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colorado's history Armenia's History, Turkey's Dilemma
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REAL a écrit dans le message <
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Armenia's History, Turkey's Dilemma by Paul Glastris, The Washington Post - Sunday, March 11, 2001; Page B01 OPINION It is dimly lit and dank as a cavern inside the old National Bank building two blocks from the White House. The electricity is off, and we make our way around with the aid of a flashlight. Its narrow beam reveals an impressive three-story atrium with a carved wood ceiling, dated-looking ATM machines and an old bank vault, its yard-thick steel door yawning open. I'm exploring this vintage space with Ross Vartian of the Armenian National Institute (ANI), a branch of the increasingly powerful Armenian Assembly of America, an ethnic lobbying group. The ANI bought the building last year for $7.25 million, with the aim of transforming it from a place that safeguarded money to one that will preserve a memory. Four years from now, Vartian tells me, this space will be a $50 million museum and memorial filled with mural-size photos, personal artifacts and interactive exhibits chronicling the history of an atrocity that time
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colorado's history Armenia's History, Turkey's Dilemma
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You practice the art of evading the truth well, your education has served its purpose. The Ottoman Empire was itself a major colonial power. That is the wrong wievpoint of the champions in colonialism. Because they can't accept to be alone colonialist in the world, then they must find otjer colonialists to show that colonialism is a normal way of the strongs. But this is wrong. Because the strongest is God and never be a human. If Ottomans were colonialists, ther will be no other lunguage than the ottoman in the world. In practice, the ottoman lungage in not used yet. ... Stop to tell wrong things about others. Consider yourself at first. Zahit
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