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Balakian Speaks for Sydney Armenian Genocide Commemoration Week

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  • Balakian Speaks for Sydney Armenian Genocide Commemoration Week

    Armenian National Committee of Australia
    The Peak Public Affairs Committee of the Armenian-Australian Community
    259 Penshurst Street, Willoughby NSW 2068 ~ PO Box 768, Willoughby NSW 2068
    Tel: (02) 9419 8264 ~ Fax: (02) 9411 8898
    Email: [email protected] ~ Website: www.anc.org.au

    27 April, 2008

    MEDIA RELEASE: For Immediate Release

    BALAKIAN SPEAKS FOR SYDNEY ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATION WEEK

    SYDNEY: As the keynote speaker and guest of the Armenian Genocide
    Commemorative Committee, Professor Peter Balakian delivered four lectures in
    Sydney from 20-24 April.

    On Sunday night, 20 April, before a crowd of about a thousand including
    various Members of Australian and New South Wales Parliament, Balakian gave
    the keynote address as part of a two-hour ceremony to commemorate the
    Armenian Genocide of 1915. Speaking about the significance of the Armenian
    Genocide for the twentieth century, Balakian discussed and analysed the
    importance of the event as a template for genocide to follow in the 20th
    century, emphasising that genocide in Germany, Cambodia, Rwanda, the
    Balkans, Darfur and other places could be better understood in light of how
    the Armenian Genocide was conceived and carried out.

    On Monday, 21 April, Balakian spoke at the prestigious Sydney Institute
    directed by Gerard Henderson. In his lecture, he presented the Armenian
    Genocide as a landmark event in modern history and spoke about how the
    Turkish government's unprecedented campaign of denial has become an
    embarrassment to Turkey in the face of one of the best documented genocides
    in history. Balakian reflected on the importance of the Australian
    government's recent apology for its treatment of the Aboriginal peoples.

    At the Shalom College of the University of New South Wales, Balakian spoke
    on Wednesday 23 April, along with a Holocaust survivor, Mr. Feldman and a
    Darfur survivor, Mr. Mansoul about genocide in the twentieth century and the
    lessons of the Armenian Genocide. The lecture was sponsored by the
    Australasian Union of Jewish Students, the Australian Institute for
    Holocaust and Genocide Studies, and the Darfur Australian Network.

    For Thursday 24th April, Balakian delivered the keynote address at the
    Parliament of New South Wales. In a moving ceremony that preceded the event,
    a wreath was laid by the young daughter of a Darfur survivor and by Mr.
    Badelian, the oldest Armenian Genocide survivor in Sydney at the site of the
    Genocide memorial on the grounds of the Parliament. In his address, Balakian
    focused on the lessons of the Armenian Genocide and the problems that arise
    when massive human rights crimes are committed with impunity. He focused on
    the impact of the Turkish denial on the Armenian community and on Turkey,
    noting that Turkey is further alienating itself from the modern world by its
    refusal to own up to its history.

    Balakian also noted the exemplary statement made by Australian Prime
    Minister Kevin Rudd in apology for the Australian treatment of the
    Aborigines.

    "It's a statement that sets a high standard for all the nations of the world
    as they seek to come to terms with dark chapters of their pasts," he said,
    adding that Prime Minister Rudd's emphasis on Australia's need to "deal with
    unfinished business", and the "need to face the pain of past injustice", was
    essential for a nation to "turn the page and move forward". Balakian
    suggested that Australia might be the kind of nation that would see ethical
    meaning in acknowledging the Armenian Genocide.

    Balakian closed by thanking the Armenian Genocide Commemorative Committee
    for their extraordinary work in planning the complex events of the week, and
    for their grace and warmth and their many talents as a cultural community.

    "Professor Balakian has raised the profile of the Armenian Genocide amongst
    the wider Australian community," said Armenian Genocide Commemorative
    Committee Representative, Stephen Abolakian. "As a result of Balakian's
    visit, progress toward affirmation of the Armenian Genocide by the
    Government of Australia has gained greater momentum."

    On Friday, Balakian headed to Melbourne for another week of lectures and for
    the Australian Poetry Festival.

    MEDIA COVERAGE

    The following Australian news agencies covered April's Armenian Genocide
    Commemoration:

    - ABC Radio National
    - ABC Radio Sydney
    - ABC Newsradio
    - ABC Television
    - SBS Radio
    - The Australian
    - The Daily Telegraph
    - The Age
    - Southern Courier
    - North Shore Times


    During the last days of the Ottoman Empire, the government implemented a
    policy of Genocide upon its Christian Armenian population. As a result, up
    to 1.5million Armenian men, women and children lost their lives between 1915
    and 1922. The Armenian Genocide is yet to be recognised by the Government of
    Turkey.
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