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Armenian Genocide Observance 4-05

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  • Armenian Genocide Observance 4-05

    PRESS RELEASE
    Near East Foundation - Headquarters
    90 Broad Street, 15th Floor - New York, NY 10004, USA
    Phone: +1 (212) 425-2205 Fax: +1 (212) 425-2350


    This speech was the keynote address for the April 20th Congressional
    Armenian Genocide Commemoration held on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.

    200 distinguished guests attended including members of Congress and
    Armenian American representatives from around the country, religious
    leaders and the Armenian Ambassador to the US. If you have any
    questions/comments pls contact Andrea Couture, Near East Foundation
    [email protected] telephone in New York 212-425-2205 x17.

    Also available, but not included here, is a 3-part series on the history
    of the Near East Foundation which was founded to respond to the Armenian
    Genocide and deportations and consequently is celebrating its 90th year
    as this country's oldest international development organization. I hope
    you are interested in seeing the series as well.
    _____

    Keynote Remarks
    Armenian Genocide Observance
    Capitol Hill
    Ryan A. LaHurd, Near East Foundation
    April 20, 2005


    Honorable congresswomen and congressmen and honored guests: I
    am privileged to be addressing you today as we commemorate the 90th
    anniversary of the Armenian Genocide and deportations, one of the
    darkest times of our era, and privileged to be representing the Near
    East Foundation which this year commemorates the 90th anniversary of its
    founding as America's first nationwide international relief and
    development effort, born in response to those tragic events.
    On the wall of the offices of the Near East Foundation in
    downtown Manhattan hang framed yellowed front pages from New York Times
    editions of the autumn of 1915. In terms very reminiscent of what we
    read in the New York Times these days about Darfur, lead stories tell of
    almost unimaginable atrocities against innocent people and the
    determination of Americans to respond to the victims' needs. I pass
    these newspapers every day as I work around the office, just as I pass
    vintage posters by American artists of the early 20th Century with
    legends like "They Shall Not Perish," "Remember the Starving Armenians,"
    and "Which Shall it be: Life or Death?" These artifacts are invitations
    to despair, for they simultaneously recall the subsequent human
    tragedies of the Nazi holocaust and of Cambodia, Rwanda, Yugoslavia, and
    Darfur - inescapable evidences of humanity's terrible propensity toward
    what we have come to call "man's inhumanity to man." The fact that we
    call such actions "inhuman" indicates our deep desire that such
    murderous events remain unrepresentative of who we are essentially as
    human beings.
    Yet, in a very real sense, those same newspaper pages and posters stand
    also as a monument to hope, heroism, and what is best in us as human
    beings. And, notwithstanding the beating Americans have taken recently
    in the forums of international opinion, I think we can feel comfortable
    in the assertion that they truly report something representative of us
    as Americans. For despite our vaunted isolationism and the warnings of
    our national founding fathers against international entanglements,
    Americans by and large understand the great privilege we have of living
    in a land of freedom and bounty; and we are motivated to bring to others
    in need the help we are able to give.
    So it was that in September 1915, Henry Morgenthau, then U.S. Ambassador
    to the Ottoman Empire, gave notice to President Wilson that the world
    was witnessing "the destruction of the Armenian race in Turkey" and that
    immediate assistance was needed. Despite the fact that the American
    government had determined to maintain neutrality with regard to the
    alliances fighting in the Ottoman Empire, the situation of the Armenians
    demanded a response. At the request of the President, a private relief
    committee was established in New York headed by industrial leader
    Cleveland H. Dodge "with the remote hope of raising $100,000 for relief
    in Turkey" for hundreds of thousands of Armenians, Greeks and suffering
    members of other minorities. The committee received bipartisan
    congressional support, including the active assistance of President
    Wilson, who himself appealed to the American people for contributions.
    The "remote hope" was not so remote after all. Between 1915 and 1918,
    hundreds of thousands of refugees were fed, clothed, housed and cared
    for in camps and orphanages in Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, the Caucasus and
    Persia. After the Armistice, the committee was chartered by an act of
    Congress in 1919 as Near East Relief, and designated as the primary
    channel for U.S. post-World War I aid to the region. Foreshadowing its
    future name change, NER expanded its mandate beyond relief to address
    the resulting huge social problems of the vast numbers of refugees,
    including over one hundred thousand orphans. Help was for all
    "suffering people" on the basis of "need not creed" and under the slogan
    "Hunger Knows no Armistice." As one of the founders of the organization
    observed, they could continue to give relief forever and nothing would
    change. If there was to be hope for the future, people must have their
    capabilities developed so they could build their own futures.
    Based on population, each American town and city was asked to
    contribute, resulting in an unprecedented manifestation of American
    generosity to provide hope and reconstruction. Among the innovative
    fundraising approaches employed were the posters created by top American
    illustrators. Thousands of tons of used clothing collected on "Bundle
    Days" were sent overseas; and the "Milk Campaign" was spearheaded by
    10-year-old child actor Jackie Coogan with movie theaters around the
    country used as "food stations" for the collection of cans of milk.
    Coogan even visited the Near East, traveling on a "milk ship" out of New
    York Harbor. On "International Golden Rule Sundays," families across
    the nation ate a simple "orphanage meal" and donated the equivalent cost
    of an average American Sunday dinner.
    By 1930, when it was renamed the Near East Foundation, $110 million had
    been collected and dispensed for humanitarian assistance, including $25
    million in in-kind food and supplies in less than 15 years - at a time
    when bread cost a nickel a loaf. More than one million people had been
    rescued from certain death by starvation and exposure. Some 12 million
    people had been fed, and at one point between 1919-20, an average of
    333,000 people were fed daily. Forty hospitals were built as NEF
    provided medical aid to six million patients. Over 135,000 children
    were housed, fed and taught in orphanages and provided with medical
    care.
    In the almost 90 years since the Near East Foundation's founding, calls
    like that of Ambassador Morgenthau have continued to come. Though they
    are usually less dramatic, they are no less critical to people in the
    extremes of crisis, poverty and need. And NEF still answers these
    calls, seeking to accomplish its mission of helping people in the Middle
    East and Africa build the future they envision for themselves. Whether
    it is a village woman in the mountains of Morocco learning to read, a
    young man in Lebanon disabled by a landmine getting a job, a family in
    Darfur getting food to celebrate a holiday, or a man in Egypt turning
    his life from drug use to contributing citizenship - NEF continues what
    it started by helping people one by one to have a better life today and
    tomorrow.
    What this continuing work demonstrates is that something of long term
    benefit has come from the terrible malice perpetrated in the Armenian
    Genocide. The work of NEF argues that humanity can respond to evil with
    good, to despair with hope, and to destruction with rebuilding. Perhaps
    more than anything, the Near East Foundation's continuity recalls that
    while human beings are capable of extreme self-interest, we are also
    capable of great generosity - and we celebrate the choice of generosity.
    Another lasting impact of the work of Near East Relief is the creation
    of the idea of international development. One of NEF's early leaders
    noted that "everything we know we learned from the orphans." What these
    philanthropists learned is that if we are to truly help those in need,
    we must move beyond relief into development, building their capacity
    through education and supplying technical assistance and resources. In
    this way they can build their own better future in independence and
    self-reliance. Thus the work with the survivors of the Armenian
    Genocide became through Near East Foundation the model for the Marshall
    Plan of post-World War II recovery, Truman's Point-4 Program, the US
    Agency for International Development (USAID), the Peace Corps, and the
    United Nations Development Program. Good has come from evil; hope, from
    despair.
    Perhaps most importantly, the notion that the Near East
    Foundation learned its approach from dealing with the orphans of the
    Armenian Genocide reinforces the value of dealing with recipients of our
    philanthropic concern, not as projects, but as fellow human beings. In
    the best spirit of our country, America's citizens, not its
    government, took responsibility for rescue and relief efforts among
    these people they did not know, and formed an organization that has
    lasted nine decades. The organization pioneered an approach its
    leadership called "practical citizen philanthropy." By this they meant
    assisting people to gain the skills and resources they need, using an
    approach that seeks partnership and equality with "no sense of
    domination or superiority." It is this approach the Near East
    Foundation has continued to use throughout its history and still
    employs, one which encourages participation of the people we seek to
    assist and listens to their needs and plans, treating them with the
    dignity and respect they deserve.
    The reward of this approach is not only that the projects we work on
    together are more likely to be successful but, in the process, we build
    friendships and we build human beings. Our staff has seen repeatedly
    over the years that dealing with people as dignified and honorable
    equals builds their capacity more than any training sessions or
    educational programs. By insisting on building the capacities of its
    local partners and on programs that will be sustainable after NEF has
    moved on, the Foundation has, over the decades, built local
    community-based organizations that still exist. There are numerous
    village organizations throughout Egypt; cooperatives and women's
    associations in Sudan and Mali; larger scale non-governmental
    organizations birthed by NEF and then spun off as independent
    organizations like GROW in the Mokhotlong province of Lesotho; a
    cooperative for women who raise goats and produce and sell goat cheese
    in Morocco continues today, fifteen years after NEF's work introduced
    such goat raising in the Atlas mountains.
    The Near East Foundation was truly an American response to the Armenian
    Genocide. This is true not simply because it occurred in the United
    States, but because it combined private, independent entrepreneurship
    with Americans' great commitment to humanitarianism. These values came
    together and developed a creative approach in a successful venture which
    saved over a million lives and then went on to find new places of need.
    Further, NEF values the American commitment to investment rather than
    simply spending, understanding the time and energy needed to help people
    learn new ways and change old approaches in a manner that preserves what
    is most valuable in their culture. Ironically, this very approach which
    gave birth to USAID has largely been abandoned. In an effort to
    streamline their approach and supposedly become more cost-effective,
    USAID and other government agencies which fund international development
    now fund almost entirely short term, very large, tens-of-million dollar
    projects. This approach has given birth to large contractors whose sole
    purpose is to manage such grants, often leaving organizations like ours
    - with our hands-on, people orientation -- out in the cold.
    I ask those of you in Congress to remember today not only the past, but
    the living legacy of America's response to the Armenian Genocide, first
    in the people who survived it and went on to become valuable citizens in
    our own and many other countries, and then the living legacy of those
    Americans who helped them to survive. While we recall the horrors of
    which humankind is capable, recognize the need to demand justice and
    commit ourselves to preventing the recurrence of such inhumanity, let us
    also recall the philanthropy and heroic generosity of which we are also
    capable and commit ourselves to ensure its continuity as an American
    value.
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