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Handel joined 640 KFI Los Angeles in 1989 doing a weekend legal show called "Handel On The Law." On July 16, 1993, Handel began broadcasting a talk and information wake up show, replacing the prior morning team. Prior to January 2014, The Bill Handel Show aired from 5 a.m. to 9 a.m., and was heavily news based. The first hour was primarily ...
Keith David Watenpaugh left a favorable review of the book, stating that it draws on the work of the Workshop for Armenian/Turkish Scholarship and succeeds in "incorporating the perspective of a descendant of the genocide’s victims". [2] In International Affairs, Bill Park called the book a "painstakingly researched and highly readable work". [7]
Armenian victims Armenian massacre by Amir Timur [citation needed] 1389-1390 Tataev, Armenia: Timurids: 20,000-100,000 Hamidian massacres: 1894–1896 Ottoman Empire: Ottoman government under Sultan Abdul Hamid II: 88,243 [1] –300,000 [2] Armenian–Tatar massacres: 1905–1907
In the mid-2000s, attorneys won a pair of legal settlements for $37.5 million in the names of Armenian genocide victims. But families who stepped forward to collect on behalf of ancestors in one ...
On April 24, 2021, Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, President Joe Biden declared that the United States considers the events "genocide" in a statement released by the White House, [3] [4] [5] in which the president formally equated the genocide perpetrated against Armenians with atrocities on the scale of those committed in Nazi-occupied Europe.
New cemetery of massacred Armenians revealed in Turkish Diyarbakır; Meyrier, Gustave. Les Massacres de Diarbekir (PDF) (in French). - Presented and annotated by Claire Mouradian and Michel-Durand Meyrier - Posted at the Institute for Armenian Studies, Yerevan State University
Open Wounds: Armenians, Turks and a Century of Genocide is a 2015 book by Vicken Cheterian and published by Hurst that aims to be a "political history of the genocide since [1915] and the consequences of denialism".
From 1894 to 1896, up to 300,000 Armenians were killed in the Hamidian massacres. [9] From 1915 to 1923, the Armenian genocide took the lives of around 1.5 million Armenians, who were killed by the Ottoman government. [10] The German political scientist Christoph Zürcher notes: "Genocide" became a key word, which had several connotations.