Neha Patil (Editor)

Montebello Genocide Memorial

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Type
  
memorial

Architect
  
Hrant Agbabian

Opened
  
21 April 1968

Cost
  
125,000 USD

Owner
  
City of Montebello

Height
  
23 m

Phone
  
+1 323-887-4565

Groundbreaking
  
1967

Montebello Genocide Memorial

Location
  
Bicknell Park, Montebello, California

Address
  
901 Via San Clemente, Montebello, CA 90640, USA

Similar
  
Armenian Heritage Park, Armenian Genocide Museum, Holy Cross Armenian Cathedral, Tsitsernakaberd, Montebello Barnyard Zoo

The Armenian Genocide Martyrs Monument, better known as Montebello Genocide Memorial, is a monument in Montebello, California in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, dedicated to the victims of the Armenian Genocide of 1915. The monument, opened in April 1968, is a tower of eight arches supported on 75-foot-tall (23 m) white concrete columns. The memorial was designed by Hrant Agbabian. It is the oldest and largest memorial in the United States dedicated to the Armenian Genocide victims. The inscription on the memorial plaque reads:

Contents

As part of the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, thousands of Armenians from different parts of Greater Los Angeles area and American politicians gather in Montebello memorial every year on April 24 and lay flowers to the victims of the genocide.

History

After the 50th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in 1965, the Armenian community of Los Angeles decided to build a memorial, which would serve as a permanent location for commemorating the Armenian Genocide victims. They spent months looking for a site in the city of Montebello and came across land that the Bicknell family had dedicated to the city for public use. A group of Armenians led by Michael Minasian who was the founder of the Armenian Monument council started the process of exploring different architectural drawings. On January 12, 1967 the city Approved by a vote of 4-1 the design to build the Armenian Genocide memorial, the headlines read "CITY ACCEPTS PLANS OF ARMENIAN SHAFT". Armenians from around the world participated in the fundraising, which gathered $125,000.

According to journalist Garin Hovannisian, the building of the monument was a "milestone for the Armenians of the United States". Then he continues, "it had taken almost three years of city hall meetings, town hall debates, and community fund-raising to consecrate, in public park, a monument". He also notes that "ARF, Ramgavar, Armenakan, Apostolic, Catholic, Protestant, and every other category of Armenian converged at Bicknell Park for the opening ceremony". According to Hovannisian more than ten thousand Armenians attended the dedication ceremony. Then State Senator George Deukmejian, who would later become Governor of California, read Governor Ronald Reagan's proclamation.

Signs showing the location of the Armenian Genocide Martyr's Monument were installed along California State Route 60 near the Garfield/Wilcox exits on March 22, 2011.

The monument is set to be listed as a historical landmark during the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in 2015.

Notable visitors

  • Ronald Reagan, President of the United States
  • Serzh Sargsyan, President of Armenia
  • Bako Sahakyan, President of Nagorno Karabakh
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger, Governor of California
  • Gray Davis, Lieutenant Governor of California
  • Barbara Boxer, US Senator from California
  • Adam Schiff, US Congressman
  • Jackie Speier, US Congresswoman
  • Grace Napolitano, US Congresswoman
  • Judy Chu, US Congresswoman
  • Michael D. Antonovich, Member of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
  • Antonio Villaraigosa, Mayor of Los Angeles, Majority Leader of the California Assembly
  • Dianne Feinstein, California Senator
  • Eric Garcetti, Mayor of Los Angeles
  • Lee Baca, Los Angeles Country Sheriff
  • Gil Garcetti, District Attorney of Los Angeles County
  • Carmen Trutanich, Los Angeles City Attorney
  • Charles Calderon, California State Assembly Majority Leader
  • Bill Molinari, Mayor of Montebello
  • Art Barajas, Mayor of Montebello
  • Geoffrey Robertson, Intentional Judge and Human Rights activist
  • Israel Charny, psychologist, historian and world-renowned genocide expert
  • Jack Hadjinian Mayor of Montebello
  • Mark Geragos, Armenian-American lawyer
  • Sebu Simonian, Armenian-American singer
  • Judy Chu, US Congresswoman
  • References

    Montebello Genocide Memorial Wikipedia