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Armenian Genocide Museum of America and Armenia Enter Into Coop.

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  • Armenian Genocide Museum of America and Armenia Enter Into Coop.

    Armenian Genocide Museum of America
    1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600, Washington, D.C. 20036
    Phone: 202-383-9009; E-mail: [email protected];
    Web: www.armeniangenocidemuseum.org

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    April 28, 2008
    Web: www.armeniangenocidemuseum.org

    CONTACT: Rouben Adalian
    Phone: (202) 383-9009
    E-mail: [email protected]

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM OF AMERICA AND ARMENIA
    ENTER INTO PERMANENT COOPERATION AGREEMENT

    Washington, April 28-The Armenian Genocide Museum of America (AGMA) and
    the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute (AGMI) at the Tsitsernakaberd
    Memorial Complex in Yerevan, Armenia, announced the signing in Yerevan
    of a permanent agreement based upon their common goals. The agreement
    anticipates the sharing of resources and expertise, the integration of
    museum activities, and the promotion of each other's programs and
    projects.

    The agreement reached between Dr. Hayk Demoyan, AGMI Director, Hirair
    Hovnanian, AGMA Board of Trustees chairman, and Van Z. Krikorian, AGMA
    Trustee and Building and Operations Committee chairman, envisions a
    permanent association to allow both museums to coordinate plans and to
    learn from each other's experience in developing exhibits and other
    presentations on the Armenian Genocide.

    Since AGMI's opening in 1995, the museum and the adjoining institute at
    the Tsitsernakaberd memorial complex in Armenia have emerged as the
    principal repository of resources and information about the Armenian
    Genocide. The memorial is of international significance as the site
    visited by foreign dignitaries who come to pay tribute to the victims of
    the Armenian Genocide. The laying of a wreath at the memorial and a
    tour of the museum are a customary part of official visits to Armenia.
    Many heads of state and their delegations have walked through the
    memorial complex and have taken occasion to speak about the importance
    of remembrance and the commitment to tolerance.

    Part of the National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Armenia,
    AGMI, which functions as a research center, is also dedicated to the
    objective of collecting the visual, textual, and artifactual evidence on
    the life of the Armenian people once living in the Ottoman Empire. In
    addition to managing the museum facility and maintaining the memorial
    complex in the heart of Yerevan, AGMI also organizes international
    conferences, publishes documentation and studies on the Armenian
    Genocide, and runs a major Website that posts news on developments in
    the international affirmation of the Armenian Genocide, announces
    publications in the field of genocide studies, and releases newly
    uncovered documentation through its research programs. The Websites of
    the two museums will be linked, as well as oral history projects and
    resources.

    The Armenian Genocide Museum of America is an outgrowth of the Armenian
    Assembly of America and the Armenian National Institute (ANI), catalyzed
    by a foundational grant from Anoush Mathevosian for the purpose of
    establishing an Armenian Genocide museum in Washington, D.C. The
    Armenian Assembly has championed the cause of affirmation with
    legislative and executive branches of the American government, while ANI
    has served as a research facility documenting the Armenian Genocide on
    the basis of the United States archives and other records. ANI is
    presently also providing coordination for AGMA planning and exhibit
    designing.

    The cooperative agreement was reached in the framework of the AGMI's
    mission, which is shared by the Armenian Genocide Museum of America, to
    educate a wider public about the extent of the crimes committed against
    the Armenian people during the First World War and the long-lasting
    effects and consequences of the gross human rights violations of that
    era. The agreement was finalized after months of discussions and
    informal cooperation and assistance from AGMI to AGMA as it progresses
    toward opening. AGMA publicly thanks AGMI and Dr. Hayk Demoyan for the
    help he has provided these past months.

    As the first major institution in the Armenian diaspora dedicated to
    preserving and honoring the memory of the victims and survivors of the
    Armenian Genocide, AGMA will offer interactive exhibits and educational
    programs incorporating the latest scholarship with state-of-the art
    technology. AGMA will be a place for reflection, where memories and
    emotions can be confronted in an environment filled with hope,
    inspiration and a commitment to eradicate the scourge of genocide and
    stopping other atrocities against humankind.

    The museum in Washington has already been granted project approval and
    planners have completed the schematic design phase of the exhibits. The
    endorsement by a District of Columbia preservation review board of
    restoration plans for the historically-designated building, which will
    house the museum, and the completion of exhibit schematic designs,
    concluded the second phase of the museum planning, which was inaugurated
    in November 2007. Phase one planning began in August 2007. AGMA is now
    entering the third phase of development and the museum is scheduled to
    open in 2010.

    The links to the Websites of the two museums are www.genocide-museum.am
    and www.armeniangenocidemuseum.org.


    NR#2008-03
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