{"id":4844,"date":"2011-03-13T11:49:34","date_gmt":"2011-03-13T11:49:34","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aaeurop.com\/?p=4844"},"modified":"2011-03-13T11:49:34","modified_gmt":"2011-03-13T11:49:34","slug":"martin-marootian-dies-at-95-lead-plaintiff-in-suit-over-armenian-genocide-victims-insurance-policies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aaeurop.com\/?p=4844","title":{"rendered":"Martin Marootian dies at 95; lead plaintiff in suit over Armenian genocide victims’ insurance policies"},"content":{"rendered":"
Martin Marootian, a retired pharmacist who stood up for Armenian genocide victims as the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit that resulted in a $20-million settlement from New York Life Insurance Co. for failing to honor claims on policies sold to thousands of Armenians slain during the last years of the Ottoman Empire, has died. He was 95.<\/p>\n
Marootian died Feb. 25 of natural causes at his home in San Diego, said his daughter, Andrea.<\/p>\n
In 1999 Marootian joined a legal battle to force New York Life to honor policies purchased by more than 2,000 Armenians, most of whom perished in what some historians have described as the first genocide of the 20th century. From 1915 to 1923, an estimated 1.5 million Armenians died at the hands of the Turks, who ruled the Ottoman Empire until its dissolution after World War I. Many of the Armenians were executed and others died on forced marches into the desert.<\/p>\n
The cause of their deaths has long been disputed by the Turkish government, which has maintained that the Armenians were casualties of war, not targets of persecution.<\/p>\n
Some Armenians, including Marootian, saw the battle with New York Life as an opportunity to win some official acknowledgement of the suffering of genocide victims and their heirs.<\/p>\n
Marootian “was not interested in \u0569\u00a7\u0549\u0082-\u0539\u00bb money but in the restitution of Armenian history,” said Vartkes Yeghiayan, the Glendale attorney who spearheaded the lawsuit. “He was one of my heroes.”<\/p>\n