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Lessons in Modern Armenia: BU Alumnus Bequest Will Fund New Courses

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  • Lessons in Modern Armenia: BU Alumnus Bequest Will Fund New Courses

    Advancement
    The newsletter of fundraising and philantropy at Boston University
    http://www.bu.edu/alumni/advancement/20 06/spring/armenia/index.html
    Spring 2006

    Lessons in Modern Armenia
    BU Alumnus's Bequest Will Fund New Courses


    He may have had a Ph.D. in English from Boston University, and have taught
    English for some fifty years, but Charles Kenosian's early days as a scholar
    weren't promising: he failed kindergarten. That really wasn't his fault -
    when he started school, he spoke only Armenian. After being held back, and
    clearly learning a second language very quickly, he got a double promotion.
    "He was a smart guy," says his sister, Elisabeth Kenosian.

    Kenosian had an abiding interest in his heritage, and it bothered him that
    many Americans knew so little about Armenia's history and heritage.
    Kenosian, who died in January 2005, was upset that many of his students and
    even some professors at Salem (Massachusetts) State College were so ignorant
    about the country. "He heard an awful lot of students who thought Armenians
    are Muslims," Elisabeth reports, especially ironic because Armenia was the
    first country to adopt Christianity as its state religion, in the year 301,
    and has been the bastion of Christianity in that region for over 1700 years.

    Kenosian's desire that Americans - especially young people - gain a greater
    understanding of Armenia will be taking the form of new courses in modern
    Armenian history and literature at the College and Graduate School of Arts
    and Sciences, thanks to a generous bequest from Kenosian through the Charles
    and Elisabeth Kenosian Endowment Fund. Armenia's ancient history is the
    subject of programs at other universities, but the new courses are intended
    to focus on events since the 1800s, when Armenia was part of the Ottoman
    empire, through to its current status as a republic.

    "Among the special relationships that the deanship opened for me was to have
    known Charles Kenosian, a dedicated teacher and man of dignity and
    distinction," says Jeffrey Henderson, dean of Arts and Sciences. "He was a
    regular supporter of arts and sciences at BU, and his generous bequest will
    make a special addition to the College and Graduate School's course
    offerings directed toward an important culture in an increasingly important
    part of the world."

    Kenosian wanted his legacy to "go to an academic source," says Elisabeth,
    "and BU was where his close ties were, and where he began his teaching
    career."

    --
    Taylor McNeil
    Editor
    Bostonia
    Boston University
    10 Lenox Street
    Brookline, MA 02446

    617-353-7350 (v)
    617-353-6488 (f)
    [email protected]
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