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NAASR Lecture on Effects of Genocide on Descendants

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  • NAASR Lecture on Effects of Genocide on Descendants

    PRESS RELEASE
    National Association for Armenian Studies and Research
    395 Concord Ave.
    Belmont, MA 02489
    Phone: 617-489-1610
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Contact: Marc A. Mamigonian

    NAASR LECTURE ON PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS
    OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AT NAASR

    As part of its efforts to mark the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
    Genocide, the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research
    (NAASR) will present a lecture by psychiatrist Dr. Levon Z. Boyajian
    entitled ~SThe Land That Is No More: Extinction, Survival, and Armenian
    Identity~T on Thursday, March 17, at 8:00 p.m., at the NAASR Center,
    395 Concord Ave., Belmont, MA.

    consequences of the Armenian Genocide and its physical and
    psychological aftereffects, one under-analyzed aspect is that
    extinction of the Armenians took place in their homeland of several
    millennia ~V that is, the area known as Western Armenia or the Eastern
    Anatolian provinces of the Ottoman Empire.

    Link To Ancient Homeland Severed

    The survivors of the Genocide were the last to know their ancestral
    land and were faced with the crushing truth that there was no going
    back to their homeland or yergir. The thread of continuity had been
    severed permanently. For those who could not deal with this truth
    there remained only empty hopes and dreams to assuage the pain of loss.

    For the descendants of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide the
    homeland is mostly a fantasy that we know through our parents and
    grandparents. To those born in new lands the names of the Old Country
    cities themselves are magical ~V Zeitun, Kharpert, Van, Moush, Marash,
    Erzerum, and many more. How does one come to terms with a recent past
    that has already entered the realm of myth?

    Dr. Levon Z. Boyajian is a first-generation Armenian-American who
    grew up in Washington Heights in New York City. He is a psychiatrist
    who has pioneered the study of the effects of the Armenian Genocide on
    subsequent generations in the seminal study ~SPsychosocial Sequelae of
    the Armenian Genocide~T (with Haigaz Grigorian). He is also the author
    of Hayots Badeevuh: Reminiscences of Armenian Life in New York City.

    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. The lecture will begin promptly at 8:00 p.m.
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