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Scholar to discuss Armenian immigration to America

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  • Scholar to discuss Armenian immigration to America

    Belmont Citizen-Herald, MA
    Oct 21 2004

    Scholar to discuss Armenian immigration to America


    Visiting scholar Dr. Knarik Avakian of the Institute of History,
    National Academy of Sciences of Armenia, will speak on "Armenian
    Immigration to the U.S.: Evidence From the Constantinople
    Patriarchate" tonight (Thursday) at 8 p.m. at the Center and
    Headquarters of the National Association for Armenian Studies and
    Research (NAASR), 395 Concord Ave., Belmont.

    Avakian has conducted a thorough study of the origins and
    development of the largest and most organized Armenian diasporan
    community, that of the United States of America. The author of the
    Armenian-language "History of the Armenian Community of the United
    States of America (From the beginning to 1924)," published in Yerevan
    in 2000, she is also the author of over 50 articles on the Armenian
    Diaspora, especially immigration to the United States.

    Under various historical circumstances, the Armenians were
    compelled to leave their native lands and immigrate to the United
    States for individual, educational, economic, political, cultural,
    religious and other purposes. These Armenian emigrants, who came
    primarily from the Armenian-inhabited regions of Turkey and Western
    Armenia, maintained their relations with the Armenian Patriarchate of
    Constantinople, regarding it as their permanent spiritual, moral, and
    practical bulwark. This fact is testified to by the extremely
    valuable documents kept up to the present day at the Archives of the
    Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople (founded in 1461).

    Avakian was educated at Yerevan State University, where she
    received a master's degree in history, and completed a Ph.D. at the
    Institute of History, National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of
    Armenia. She has taught history at the university level in Armenia
    and currently serves as senior researcher at the Institute of
    History, senior editor at the Armenian Encyclopedia, and is head of
    the Young Scientists' Council at the Institute of History.

    Admission to the event is free (donations appreciated). The
    NAASR bookstore will open at 7:30 p.m. The NAASR Center and
    Headquarters is located opposite the First Armenian Church and next
    to the U.S. Post Office. Ample parking is available around the
    building and in adjacent areas.

    For more information about the lecture call 617-489-1610, or
    e-mail [email protected].
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