Glendale Commemorates Armenian Genocide with Powerful Annual Tribute

Among those at the 24th Annual Armenian Genocide Commemoration Event pianist and composer Joel A. Martin brought his Jazzical Komitas project to the stage.
Photo provided by City of Glendale

On April 21, the City of Glendale hosted its 24th Annual Armenian Genocide Commemoration Event at the Alex Theatre, an emotional and artistically rich program honoring the memory of the 1.5 million-plus Armenians who perished during the Genocide.

The evening opened with a video featuring Glendale City Councilmembers reflecting on what genocide awareness means to them, setting the tone for a night that blended remembrance with artistic expression and cultural pride.

The Haikian Chamber Choir delivered a performance of Fragments from Oratorio in Memory of Victims of the 1915 Armenian Genocide, composed by Khachatur Avetisyan and Ludvig Duryan. Under the direction of artistic director and conductor Gayane Baghdasaryan, and with orchestra conducted by Mikayel Avetisyan, the choir was joined by soloists Gayane Sahakyan and Gegham Manukyan and dancer/choreographer Aida Amirkhanian. Together, they offered an unforgettable tribute through music, voice and movement.
Internationally acclaimed pianist and composer Joel A. Martin brought his Jazzical Komitas project to the stage, blending jazz improvisation with classical Armenian melodies in tribute to the legendary Komitas Vartabed.

The Lernazang Ensemble, under the direction of co-founders Armen Adamian and Natalie Kamajian, honored the endurance of Armenian cultural traditions passed down through generations.
Glendale’s inaugural poet laureate Raffi Joe Wartanian presented two original works centered on memory, displacement and resilience. “ERASURE: Aliyev” reimagined the Azerbaijani president’s remarks at COP29, erasing the rhetoric to expose deeper truths about state-sponsored violence. “Phantom Tongue” offered a personal reflection on genocide, migration and language, drawn from Wartanian’s ancestral ties to Kharpert, Zara, Adana and Hajin. The poem referenced his 2018 visit to indigenous Armenian lands and the destruction of sacred Armenian stone crosses, known as khachkars.
Newly selected Mayor Ara Najarian delivered closing remarks, reiterating Glendale’s commitment to remembrance and justice. Citing recent City Council resolutions condemning ethnic cleansing in Artsakh and advocating for the release of Armenian hostages and POWs, he emphasized that Glendale “will not remain silent in the face of injustice.”
The evening concluded with an invitation to explore genocide exhibit panels on display in the courtyard developed by the Armenian Genocide Museum Institute and made available through the partnership of the Armenian Bar Association. The visuals “documenting the crime of genocide” underscored the night’s message: to remember, and to act.
For photos and video of the event: GlendaleCA.gov/AGCE.