Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Professor Richard Hovannisian with Teachers and Deniers in Houston

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Professor Richard Hovannisian with Teachers and Deniers in Houston

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Center for National and International Studies
    75 Yerznkian Street
    Yerevan 375033, Armenia
    Tel: (+374 - 10) 52.87.80 or 27.48.18
    Fax: (+374 - 10) 52.48.46
    E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]
    Website: www.acnis.am


    August 15, 2005


    Professor Richard Hovannisian with Teachers and Deniers in Houston

    Yerevan -- Professor Richard Hovannisian, AEF Chair in Modern Armenian
    History at UCLA, is continuing his worldwide activities on the occasion
    of the ninetieth anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. In June he was
    the keynote speaker at the biennial conference of the International
    Association of Genocide Scholars in Boca Raton Florida, during which
    he placed the Armenian Genocide in perspective and focused on the
    current challenges facing scholars engaged in genocide studies and
    human rights programs. He then traveled to Montpelier, France, to
    participate in an international symposium organized by the "Centre
    de Juifs, Armeniens et Chretiens d'Orient" (Gerard Dedeyan and Carol
    Iancu) on the theme of typologies of mass killing in the twentieth
    century. Hovannisian discussed recent revelations about the planning
    and organization, as well as evolving interpretations, of the genocide.

    Dr. Hovannisian's summer activities included lectures to Yerevan and
    Houston, Texas. In Yerevan he gave the opening lecture on July 22
    to Armenian youth from several countries who had come together for
    the annual Hamazkayin Forum. As a member of the organizing committee
    of the forthcoming international congress on the 1600th anniversary
    of the creation of the Armenian alphabet, to be held in Yerevan in
    September, he also helped to finalize arrangements for the gathering.

    At the invitation of the Holocaust Museum of Houston, Richard
    Hovannisian traveled to Houston on July 25-26 to speak at a summer
    institute for teachers and to give an evening public lecture. For the
    first time, the Max Kaplan Summer Institute for Educators was given
    a formal presentation on the Armenian Genocide, which emphasized the
    importance of inclusion of the Armenian experience as a prototype
    of mass killings in the modern age. On July 26 teachers from
    five states as well as from Chile, Uruguay, and Romania learned
    of the preconditions and warning signals of genocide, the role of
    ideology, the use of technology, and the similarities and differences
    between the Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust. In the words of the
    Museum's Director of Education, Christina Vasquez, the teachers became
    intensely engaged with the subject and "raved" about Dr. Hovannisian's
    presentation. She added: "The lecture about the Armenian genocide and
    its relation to the Holocaust was framed in a very skillful way so that
    our participants could use the information in their classrooms. What
    was particularly striking was the twelve points in the patterns of
    genocide, as well as how the situation in Turkey in regard to the
    Armenian genocide sadly differs from Germany's confrontation of
    its past."

    A turn-away capacity audience was present for Richard Hovannisian's
    public lecture in the auditorium of the Holocaust Museum on the evening
    of July 26. In his reflective discourse, Hovannisian considered
    the historical, ethical, and humanitarian aspects of the genocide
    which remain immediate and relevant in contemporary times. He began
    by taking note of the presence of a significant number of members
    of the American Turkish Association of Houston, who had come with
    denial literature and materials to challenge the reality of the
    Armenian Genocide. Apparently, officials from the very highest levels
    of the Turkish government and supportive committees in the United
    States had attempted to have the lecture cancelled, but the Holocaust
    Museum stood firm in its decision to include the presentation in its
    summer series. Hovannisian suggested that the ATA members and all
    other doubters should become better acquainted with the facts and
    the consensus of world scholarship and join the growing number of
    Turkish scholars who now reject the state's untenable narrative of
    events. He noted that one of the sad consequences of denial is that it
    has prevented proper acknowledgement and respect to the thousands of
    good Turks and other Muslims who intervened to rescue Armenians during
    the deportations and massacres. Hovannisian's adept handling of the
    situation was roundly applauded by the audience but apparently did not
    satisfy all of those who had come to detract. During the discussion
    period, many of the familiar denial arguments were repeated, but they
    were met with calm, factually-based responses and a new appeal for
    all sides to face their history honestly as a necessary precondition
    to some form of eventual conciliation. He hoped that his reflections
    on the legacy of the Armenian Genocide might further the on-going
    quest for truth.

    For further information on the Center call (37410) 52-87-80 or
    27-48-18; fax (37410) 52-48-46; e-mail [email protected] or [email protected];
    or visit www.acnis.am
Working...
X