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"Karabakh Always Armenian," Says Historian at AGBU Lecture

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  • "Karabakh Always Armenian," Says Historian at AGBU Lecture

    AGBU Press Office
    55 East 59th Street
    New York, NY 10022-1112
    Phone 212.319.6383 x.118
    Fax 212.319.6507
    Email [email protected]
    Website www.agbu.org

    Thursday, February 24, 2005

    "KARABAKH ALWAYS ARMENIAN," SAYS HISTORIAN AT AGBU LECTURE
    Bournoutian Talk Provides Hard Data, Facts

    By J. K. Hovhannes

    New York, NY - One crucial component in consolidating the Armenian
    position in the Karabakh conflict between Armenians and Azeris is
    providing evidence of the continuous and overwhelming majority
    Armenian presence in Karabakh since ancient times. And this, the
    historian and author George Bournoutian presented in a lively and
    convincing lecture on February 3, 2005 at the AGBU Central Office in
    Manhattan.

    Bournoutian set himself two difficult criteria during his hour-long
    lecture. On the one hand, he limited his sources, both primary and
    otherwise, to non-Armenian authors to assure impartiality and to
    debunk Azeri claims of partisanship. On the other hand, he steered
    clear of the present day politics of the region and the various plans
    and road maps put forward to solve the crisis.

    "I will leave that to the political scientists, rather I'll present
    the historical data and let you judge for yourself the legitimacy of
    Armenian and Azeri claims to Nagorno Karabakh," Bournoutian said at
    the start of his talk.

    Dr. George Bournoutian, who was introduced by Betty Cherkezian of the
    AGBU New York Special Events Committee (NYSEC), is currently professor
    of East European and Middle Eastern History at Iona College and has
    taught Armenian and Iranian history at several major universities
    across the country. He is the author of fourteen books, including the
    best-seller "A Concise History of the Armenian People", and the recent
    scholarly but readable "Two Chronicles of Karabakh." Professor
    Bournoutian is also a member of the New Jersey Commission on
    Education.

    Bournoutian was invited to deliver his lecture by AGBU NYSEC. The
    group, a ten-member team, plans at least five events during the year
    that deal with cultural, historical, artistic and educational
    activities. Past events have included a private tour of the treasures
    of Alexander the Great at the Onassis Foundation; guided tours of
    Central Park and Caramoor; a tour of the Kips Bay Decorators
    Showhouse; and a previous lecture by Professor Bournoutian, entitled
    Armenian History 101.

    To a rapt standing-room-only audience at a specially set up conference
    room at the AGBU Central Office, Professor Bournoutian presented
    historical and chronological data from a variety of non-Armenian
    credible sources, all corroborated by quotations from his meticulous
    research, validating the legitimacy of the Armenian presence in
    Karabakh. Copies of two detailed maps of the South Caucasus region
    were given to the attendees to follow up the intricate and sometimes
    complicated flux of history that spanned many ages and involved a
    dozen or so major ethnic and religious groups.

    During the talk, which he peppered with anecdotes and livened up with
    humor, Bournoutian highlighted five main eras covering the history of
    the region: The classical Greek-Roman-Persian period until the 6th
    century; the Arab-Moslem era extending between the 7th and 11th
    centuries; the Mongol-Seljuk-Turkic period; the
    Iranian-Russian-Ottoman period until the end of the 19th century; and
    the Soviet era until the break-up in 1990 of the USSR and the
    subsequent declaration of Karabakh of its independence.

    Dr. Bournoutian stated emphatically that, based on the historical
    record gleaned from official archives, linguistic studies, chronicles
    and documents, all non-Armenian, at no time in the past fifteen
    centuries have Nagorno Karabakh and Zangezur lost their Armenian
    character and majority population, even though some regions of
    Karabakh east of the river Kur and the riparian lowlands surrounding
    it experienced population shifts.

    The lecture was followed by a buffet-style Armenian luncheon with wine
    and dessert. The hall was decorated tastefully by intricate
    one-of-a-kind handcrafted articles, all of them on sale and created by
    students from the three AGBU-sponsored Children Centers in Armenia. A
    brief video projection during lunch illustrated upbeat scenes from the
    three Centers in Arapkir, Nork and Malatya, which provide after school
    instruction in the arts, culture, religion, literature and athletics
    to over 3,500 youngsters.

    The next event for AGBU NYSEC is a tour of the recently redesigned
    Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) on Thursday, April 7, 2005. For more
    information, please call, 212.319.6383, or email, [email protected].
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