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Prof. Vahakn Dadrian's Books Translated to Italian, Published

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  • Prof. Vahakn Dadrian's Books Translated to Italian, Published

    ZORYAN INSTITUTE OF CANADA, INC.
    255 Duncan Mill Rd., Suite 310
    Toronto, ON, Canada M3B 3H9
    Tel: 416-250-9807 Fax: 416-512-1736
    E-mail: [email protected]
    www.zoryaninstitute.org


    CONTACT: George Shirinian
    August 16, 2003


    Prof. Vahakn Dadrian's Books Published Abroad


    Milan, Italy - The renowned Italian academic publishing house, Edizioni
    Guerini, has just come out with an Italian-language edition of Dr. Vahakn
    Dadrian's now classic History of the Armenian Genocide: Ethnic Conflict
    from the Balkans to Anatolia and the Caucasus.

    In translating this massive study into Italian, Dr. Alessandra Flores
    d'Arcais not only had to deal with some 500-pages of scholarly text, but
    also 1,085 footnotes, some of which extend to a full page in length.

    In addition to the regular edition, Guerini also produced a limited edition
    deluxe version, as the book has great sentimental, as well as intellectual
    appeal.

    The Italian edition is based on the latest revised English edition,
    published by Berghahn Books, dated 2003. The English language edition has
    gone through six printings, so far, and last year appeared in a soft cover
    edition, making it more readily accessible to students. The book is a
    prescribed text in the Genocide and Human Rights University Program held in
    Minneapolis and Toronto, and is required reading for all who take that course.

    A significant portion of the book is based on a study that appeared in the
    Yale Journal of International Law. In commenting on the singular value of
    this study, prominent international law expert, Prof. M. Cherif Bassiouni,
    President of the International Human Rights Institute, and also President
    of the International Association of Penal Laws, wrote,

    Of all the conflicting and contradictory literature on the subject,
    including many Turkish publications denying, justifying or explaining what
    happened, Dadrian's article is the most legally convincing and from other
    accounts, the closest to historical accuracy with such debated facts.

    The French edition of History of the Armenian Genocide is now in its second
    printing, and a slightly abridged Arabic-language version of the book has
    been published in Damascus, Syria. A Greek-language edition was published
    in Athens two years ago by the Stokhasis Publishing House, under the title,
    Historia Tis Armenikan Genoktonias. A Bulgarian-language translation of the
    article, "The Armenian Genocide and the Evidence of German Involvement,"
    which originally appeared in the West Los Angeles Law Review in 1998, was
    made recently by Mr. Boghig Mesrob and distributed to the Bulgarian media
    and major governmental agencies, where it received widespread interest.

    According to recent reports from Turkey, the release of volume one of a
    collection of articles on the Armenian Genocide by Dadrian in Turkish
    earlier this year by Belge Yayinlari is enjoying brisk sales through three
    academic bookstores there: Dost in Istanbul, Kabile in Izmir, and Imge in
    Ankara. The unusual interest by Turkish academics and intellectuals in this
    subject is reportedly sparked by a review of the book by Dr. Taner Akçam,
    who is currently Visiting Associate Professor in the History Department at
    the University of Minnesota. To the surprise of many specialists, the
    prestigious Turkish newspaper Radikal, which is comparable to the New York
    Times, published Akçam's detailed review in its entirety, and without any
    editorial change.

    In the review, Akçam pays high compliments to the author and describes the
    book as "a priceless contribution." He emphasizes the fact that the book
    affords Turkish audiences a rare chance to acquaint themselves with this
    hitherto taboo subject and to be able to engage in an informed debate and
    discussion on the issue of the Armenian Genocide. He also observes that the
    official denial of the Armenian Genocide in Turkey is unbecoming to a
    country aspiring to genuine democracy and eventual accession to the
    European Union. Even though Akçam has been conducting in-depth research on
    the Armenian Genocide for more than a decade, he still expressed shock at
    the scope and intensity of the atrocities surrounding the Genocide as
    revealed in Dadrian's various studies.

    Dr. Vahakn Dadrian is Director of Genocide Research at the Zoryan Institute
    and is currently working on several new publications.
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