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AAA: Newseum Honors Slain Journalist Hrant Dink

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  • AAA: Newseum Honors Slain Journalist Hrant Dink

    Armenian Assembly of America
    1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600
    Washington, DC 20036
    Phone: 202-393-3434
    Fax: 202-638-4904
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: www.aaainc.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    April 7, 2008
    Contact: Christine Kojoian
    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: (202) 393-3434

    NEWSEUM HONORS SLAIN JOURNALIST HRANT DINK

    Mrs. Rakel Dink Attends Dedication Ceremony for Journalists Memorial

    Washington, DC - Ambassadors, prominent journalists and Armenian
    Assembly representatives were among the more than 400 guests at the
    dedication of the Journalists Memorial at the Newseum in Washington, DC
    on April 4th. The memorial pays tribute to some 2,000 journalists who
    were killed in the pursuit of news, including noted Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink.

    Dink's widow Rakel traveled from Turkey to attend the dedication
    ceremony, which honored journalists from around the world who died
    reporting the news from 1837-2007. The event included a special
    recognition for the 158 journalists who lost their lives in 2006 and
    2007. The Assembly contacted the Newseum shortly after Dink's
    assassination in January 2007 to ensure that his name was included in
    the list of names to be inscribed in the memorial.

    In his opening remarks, Joe Urschell, Executive Director and Senior Vice
    President of the Newseum, welcomed the relatives of Hrant Dink, as well
    as other family members who traveled from afar.

    "While these families, colleagues and government representatives may
    have journeyed here today from diverse parts of the globe, they share a
    common bond," Urschell said. "The join us to pay tribute to the courage,
    dedication and sacrifices made by their loved ones in the pursuit of
    news."

    The event also included remarks by ABC Newsman Bob Woodruff, who was
    seriously injured by a roadside bomb while covering the Iraq war in
    January 2006.

    "I look at the pictures of the journalists who were killed and I feel a
    connection to them," Mrs. Dink said in Armenian. "I look at their
    smiling faces and feel sad that this happened to them. It is clear that
    they believed in the importance of their work and in what they were
    doing. It is unfortunate to see the measure of cruelty that still
    exists in our lives today."

    "The only crime my husband committed was to stand up and take ownership
    of his past," Mrs. Dink continued. "In a free society, his actions would
    not have been a crime. We should change those issues that men die for,
    to issues that men live for."

    "The Armenian Assembly applauds the Newseum for this special dedication
    which honors the memory and life's work of so many brave men and women,"
    said Assembly Board of Trustees Member Annie Totah, who attended the
    event. "Hrant Dink was an exceptional human being and civil rights
    advocate who was determined to serve as a catalyst for mutual
    understanding, tolerance and dialogue between Turks and Armenians. We
    commend Rakel and the entire Dink family in their efforts to continue
    Hrant Dink's legacy."

    The Journalists Memorial is a soaring two-story glass structure that
    bears the names of reporters, editors, photographers, broadcasters and
    executives who died covering wars, civil violence or natural disasters,
    or who were killed because of their work.


    Following the event, Mrs. Dink attended a private luncheon for family
    members and close friends, hosted by the Newseum, a $450 million
    seven-story, steel-and-glass monument to journalism which opens to the
    public on April 11.

    Last year, the Assembly posthumously honored Hrant Dink with the
    Distinguished Humanitarian Award for his leadership and tireless efforts
    in building bridges between Armenians and Turks through tolerance,
    honesty, goodwill, and dialogue. Mrs. Dink accepted the award on behalf
    of her late husband during the Assembly's National Gala in Beverly
    Hills, California.

    Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly is the largest
    Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public understanding
    and awareness of Armenian issues. It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt
    membership organization.

    ###

    NR#2008-038

    Editor's Note: Photographs can be viewed on the Assembly's website at
    the following links:

    http://www.aaainc.org/fileadmin/aaainc/ima ges/PR_-_2008_April_-_May/News
    eum_1.jpg

    Caption: Rakel Dink with Charles L. Overby, Chief Executive Officer of
    the Freedom Forum and Newseum.

    http://www.aaainc.org/fileadmin/aaainc/i mages/PR_-_2008_April_-_May/News
    eum_2.jpg

    Caption: L to R: Rakel Dink flanked by Assembly Board of Trustees Member
    Annie Totah and Executive Director Bryan Ardouny.

    http://www.aaainc.org/fileadmin/aaainc/i mages/PR_-_2008_April_-_May/News
    eum_3.jpg

    Caption: Rakel Dink, left, and Assembly Board of Trustees Member Annie
    Totah stand next to a photograph of Hrant Dink at the Newseum.
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