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Jan. 25-Hrant Dink Commemoration at Western Diocese

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  • Jan. 25-Hrant Dink Commemoration at Western Diocese

    PRESS RELEASE
    National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR)
    395 Concord Ave.
    Belmont, MA 02478
    Tel.: 617-489-1610
    E-Mail: [email protected]


    HRANT DINK COMMEMORATION
    TO FEATURE PROMINENT SPEAKERS


    The first anniversary of the murder of Istanbul Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink will be marked on Friday, January 25, at 7:00 p.m., at the
    Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America, 3325 North
    Glenoaks Blvd., Burbank, CA 91504. This special event will feature
    talks by Prof. Taner Akçam of the University of Minnesota, Prof.
    Richard G. Hovannisian of the University of California, Los Angeles, and
    Stephen A. Kurkjian, formerly of the Boston Globe.

    The evening's program is co-sponsored by the Organization of Istanbul
    Armenians of Los Angeles, the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in
    Modern Armenian History at UCLA, and the National Association for
    Armenian Studies and Research, and will take place under the auspices of
    the Western Diocese, His Eminence, Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Primate.
    Simon Acilacoglu, President of the Organization of Istanbul Armenians,
    will give opening remarks and Abp. Derderian will offer closing remarks
    and a prayer. There will be a musical performance by Salpi Kerkonian
    (flute) and Sosi Kerkonian (harp). Edvin E. Minassian, Esq., Vice
    President of the Organization of Istanbul Armenians and Treasurer of the
    Armenian Bar Association, will serve as Master of Ceremonies.

    One Year After: Possibilities and Difficulties

    The murder of Hrant Dink, the Turkish-born Armenian founder and editor
    of the newspaper Agos and passionate advocate of Turkish-Armenian
    dialogue, stunned and horrified the world and prompted an unprecedented
    demonstration of hundreds of thousands taking to the streets of Istanbul
    waving signs saying "We Are All Hrant Dink" and "We Are All Armenian."
    The brutal slaying of the peace-loving, reconciliation-oriented Dink
    underscored both the possibilities and the difficulties of
    Armenian-Turkish dialogue and reconciliation efforts.

    His prosecution under Turkey's Article 301 for "insulting Turkishess"
    and the subsequent prosecution of his son, Arat, for the same "crime"
    raise serious questions about free speech in Turkey and have dramatized
    the difficulties faced by journalists in a country seeking entry into
    the European Union.

    To mark the first anniversary of his death, a program has been organized
    that will not only pay tribute to this courageous man but also bring
    together a group of speakers who are well qualified to put both his life
    and his untimely and tragic death in some meaningful perspective.

    Profiles of Featured Speakers

    A pioneer among scholars of Turkish origin, Prof. Taner
    Akçam is the author of A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the
    Question of Turkish Responsibility, a groundbreaking study that makes
    extensive, unprecedented use of Ottoman and other sources largely
    unexamined in English-language works, as well as From Empire to
    Republic: Turkish Nationalism and the Armenian Genocide, Dialogue Across
    An International Divide: Essays Towards a Turkish-Armenian Dialogue, as
    well as numerous other books and articles in Turkish, German, and
    English. Akçam, a close friend of Hrant Dink, will discuss his final
    conversations with Dink which took place only two weeks before his
    death.

    Prof. Richard G. Hovannisian is the holder of the Armenian
    Educational Foundation Chair of Modern Armenian History at the
    University of California, Los Angeles. He is the author of the
    four-volume history The Republic of Armenia, Armenia on the Road to
    Independence, and has edited and contributed to more than twenty books
    including The Armenian Genocide in Perspective; The Armenian Genocide:
    History, Politics, Ethics; The Armenian People from Ancient to Modern
    Times; Remembrance and Denial; Looking Backward, Moving Forward; The
    Armenian Genocide: Ethical and Cultural Legacies; and six volumes on
    historic Armenian cities and provinces. He recently co-chaired a
    special session on "On Hrant Dink and Armenian-Turkish Relations" at the
    Middle Eastern Studies Association 2007 Annual Meeting in Montreal. He
    will reflect on Hrant Dink's legacy now and in the future

    Stephen A. Kurkjian recently retired from the Boston Globe
    after a career of more than thirty-five years at the paper during which
    he won three Pulitzer Prizes and more than twenty other regional or
    national awards for his investigative reporting. The Globe's Washington
    bureau chief from 1986-1991, he had previously been a founder and the
    head of the Globe's Spotlight investigative team. He is a member of
    NAASR's Board of Directors and serves on its Executive Committee. In
    January 2007 he traveled to Istanbul to witness and cover the funeral of
    Hrant Dink and its aftermath. He presented his initial report in a
    Globe feature and in a talk at NAASR in February 2007, following up with
    a lengthy article in the AGBU Magazine in April. He has continued to
    follow the murder investigation and related developments in Turkey and
    will give an updated report and personal view.

    More information on the Hrant Dink commemoration may be
    obtained from NAASR by calling 617-489-1610, e-mailing [email protected], or
    by writing to NAASR, 395 Concord Ave., Belmont, MA 02478; by contacting
    the AEF Chair at [email protected], or by contacting the OIA by
    calling 818-342-6378 or writing to Organization of Istanbul Armenians,
    19726 Sherman Way, Winnetka, CA 91306. The Western Diocese can be
    contacted at 818-558-7474 or [email protected].
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