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Armenian Genocide doc to be honored at Midwest Journalism Conference

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  • Armenian Genocide doc to be honored at Midwest Journalism Conference

    PRESS RELEASE
    March 10, 2006

    Armenian Genocide Resource Center
    5400 McBryde Ave
    Richmond, CA 94805
    Contact: Richard Kloian
    Email: [email protected]
    Tel/Fax (510) 965-0152


    Armenian Genocide Documentary to be Honored
    at 2006 Midwest Journalism Conference in April

    The Armenian Genocide: 90 Years Later, a 2005 Regional Emmy nominee,
    will be honored at the 2006 Midwest Journalism Conference in
    Bloomington, Minnesota, on Saturday, April 1.

    ABC News chief investigative journalist Brian Ross, who reports
    extensively for 20/20, Primetime, Nightline, World News Tonight, and
    Good Morning America, will be the Keynote speaker.

    The event is sponsored by the Northwest Broadcast News Association in
    memory of journalist Eric Sevareid. The Armenian Genocide: 90 Years
    Later was one of two winners in the Talk and Public Affairs category.

    The Midwest Journalism Conference is jointly sponsored by the
    Associated Press, Association of Electronic Journalists, Minnesota
    Journalism Center, National Press Photographers Association, National
    Television Academy, Northwest Broadcast News Association, Society of
    Professional Journalists, and the University of Minnesota School of
    Journalism and Mass Communication.

    The documentary is a co-production of Twin Cities Public Television
    and the University of Minnesota Center for Holocaust and Genocide
    Studies, (CHGS) and is distributed by the Armenian Genocide Resource
    Center in Richmond California through a special arrangement with CHGS.

    The Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies in Minnesota has been at
    the forefront of education on the Armenian Genocide for many years.
    It was established within the College of Liberal Arts as an
    Independent Center with its main administrative relationship with the
    Department of History. CHGS is also affiliated with The Institute for
    Global Studies, The Humanities Institute, Department of German, Dutch
    and Scandinavian Languages, The Human Rights Program at the University
    of Minnesota School of Law and The Center for European Studies.

    It's director Dr Stephen Feinstein has been at the helm of the Center
    since its creation in1997 and has expanded its website to include
    eyewitness survivor testimonies, documents, teaching guides, online
    streaming video and audio and other materials on the Armenian
    Genocide, some of which were provided to the Center over the years by
    the Armenian Genocide Resource Center (AGRC), including an expanded
    reference guide for teachers and students which is currently on the
    web site.

    The Armenian Genocide: 90 Years Later is part of an ongoing series by
    CHGS about genocide and its lingering effects and was aired on public
    television in Minnesota last April and was nominated for the 2005
    Regional EMMY® in the category of `Best News Special.'

    The documentary discusses events that led to the genocide, issues
    related to genocide recognition, how that affects Turkish democracy,
    and how the question of how historical writing takes place when a
    regime decrees an official history about certain issues in its society
    and brings criminal prosecution against scholars, writers and others
    who attempt to bring truths about the past into the present.

    The program discusses this phenomenon and raises questions about how
    the issue of the recognition of the Armenian Genocide fits into the
    context of understanding the current status of Turkish democracy,
    academic freedom in universities and issues involving language and
    identity for minorities. Most poignant in the program is the
    testimony related by those whose family members survived the genocide
    and lived to tell about it. Many remember their parents telling of the
    horrors and of leaving their homes and hiding from Turkish gendarmes,
    and they discuss how remembrance of the events of1915 is now embedded
    in Armenian identity.

    Program discussants include Taner Akçam, Stephen Feinstein, and Eric
    Weitz, from the University of Minnesota, as well as descendants of
    survivors, and members of the community who explore issues related to
    the genocide. The educational program would greatly benefit students,
    teachers and the general public alike. The DVD is available from
    AGRC. For information on how to obtain a copy please send SASE to
    AGRC, 5400 McBryde Avenue, Richmond, CA 94805 or call the number
    above.

    ####
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