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BEIRUT: Armenians Gather To Discuss Past And Present (HaigazianUnive

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  • BEIRUT: Armenians Gather To Discuss Past And Present (HaigazianUnive

    ARMENIANS GATHER TO DISCUSS PAST AND PRESENT (HAIGAZIAN UNIVERSITY)
    By Jessy Chahine

    The Daily Star - Lebanon
    Sept 13 2005

    Daily Star staff
    Tuesday, September 13, 2005

    BEIRUT: In a three-day conference entitled "The Armenians of Lebanon:
    Their Past and Present," a number of experts from various countries
    gathered yesterday at Haigazian University to discuss aspects of the
    current status of an influential yet minority group in the country.

    Starting on Monday, 16 papers will be presented by scholars coming from
    Canada, the U.S., France, Argentina, Egypt, Syria, Armenia, Germany,
    Italy and of course, Lebanon in the presence of a number of invitees
    from the academic community in Lebanon, both Armenian and non-Armenian.

    In his welcome speech, Dr. Paul Haidostian, the president of Haigazian
    University, said: "It was recognized that despite the undisputedly
    important role that the Armenian community plays both within Lebanon
    and the rest of the Diaspora, its history, culture and other aspects of
    its community life have not been studied adequately to date according
    to internationally accepted scientific standards."

    Among the topics that will be covered during the conferences will be
    the political, socio-economic history of the community within both
    the Lebanese and pan-Armenian contexts, the aspects of the influx
    and exodus of Armenians to and from Lebanon, the Armenian identity,
    literature, music, and contemporary concerns of the community.

    A doctor in Human Geography, Aida Boudjikanian, the opening session's
    keynote speaker, held a lecture showing the different roles and
    functions that Lebanon has held for Armenians spanning four centuries.

    "The significance lies not only in their variety but in their
    length and continuity or succession in time. In the 19th century,"
    Boudjikanian said. "For Lebanese Armenians, Lebanon will always
    represent, in my opinion, the country of consensual co-existence,
    a social and political model," she said, explaining that "all the
    leaders, civil and religious, commonly share the advocacy for the
    success of this experience and the success of the State of Lebanon."

    "For the Armenian Diaspora, Lebanon represents a land of reference and
    history, a land of cultural heritage. Every summer, groups of young
    Armenians coming back from around the world gather in Lebanon to delve
    back into their culture, to learn and practice their ancestral language
    and visit the country," Boudjikanian said. The last statistics in
    Lebanon date back to 1975 and place the community at 186,000 Armenians
    in Lebanon, according to Boudjikanian, who gathered the data.
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