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AGMA and Near East Foundation Enter Into Cooperation Agreement

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  • AGMA and Near East Foundation Enter Into Cooperation Agreement

    Armenian Genocide Museum of America
    1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20036
    Phone: 202-383-9009, Web: www.armeniangenocidemuseum.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    June 17, 2008
    CONTACT: Rouben Adalian
    Phone: (202) 383-9009
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: www.armeniangenocidemuseum.org

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM OF AMERICA AND NEAR EAST FOUNDATION ENTER
    INTO COOPERATION AGREEMENT

    New York City - The Armenian Genocide Museum of America (AGMA) and the
    Near East Foundation signed an agreement of cooperation on June 12 at
    the Foundation's international headquarters in New York City.

    Signing the agreement on behalf of the two organizations were Van
    Z. Krikorian, AGMA Trustee and Building and Operations Committee
    Chairman, and Shant Mardirossian, Near East Foundation Board
    Chairman. Also present at the signing were Near East Foundation
    President Alexander Papachristou, Dr. Rouben Adalian, Director of the
    AGMA, and Dr. Hayk Demoyan, Director of the Armenian Genocide
    Museum-Institute in Yerevan, Armenia.

    "This agreement opens a treasure trove of historical Armenian Genocide
    era documents and artifacts for use in the museum's exhibits,"
    Krikorian said. "We are very pleased to be forging a partnership with
    the Near East Foundation to educate the public on one of the most
    significant periods of both Armenian and American history."  The
    Armenian Genocide Museum of America is slated to open in 2010 in
    Washington, DC.

    "The archives of the Near East Foundation house thousands of documents
    which exemplify the first international humanitarian undertaking of
    this sort by the American people," Mardirossian said. "Not only do the
    archives tell us the stories of countless Armenian orphans, but they
    deliver them through the journals, diaries, and writings of the Near
    East Relief workers. This museum, in the heart of Washington, DC, will
    serve as a tribute to their heroic efforts."

    The Near East Foundation is the successor organization to the American
    Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief, which was founded in 1915
    and later incorporated as Near East Relief in 1919 by an act of
    Congress.  Near East Relief established and operated orphanages,
    hospitals, and schools throughout the Balkans, Caucasus, and the Near
    East to ease the suffering of the Armenian Genocide survivors seeking
    refuge from the Ottoman Empire.

    "Near East Relief was at the forefront of America's efforts to respond
    to the human suffering that occurred in the wake of the Armenian
    Genocide," Krikorian said. "Armenians in the United States and all
    over the world benefited directly or indirectly from this monumental
    undertaking."

    According to Near East Foundation records, from 1915 to 1930 the Near
    East Relief administered $117 million worth of assistance and is
    credited with saving a million lives and providing vocational training
    to 132,000 Armenian orphan children.

    "Millions of dollars were raised through appeals in the media, at
    public rallies, in churches and synagogues, and in schools,"
    Mardirossian said. "Not only were funds raised, but hundreds of Near
    East Relief volunteers were on the ground ministering to the suffering
    survivors of the Genocide, delivering food, clothing, and materials,
    but most of all comfort and hope. Many risked their lives and several
    gave their lives for this noble cause. Their stories and memories
    should be preserved as an example of the American spirit."

    This agreement with the Near East Foundation is the second cooperative
    agreement AGMA has forged in recent months. In April, the museum
    entered into a partnership with the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute
    at the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex in Yerevan, Armenia.

    The resources and expertise from the genocide museum in Armenia and
    the valuable archival materials from Near East Relief will complement
    other artifacts and documents to be incorporated in the AGMA exhibits,
    which are being designed by the preeminent Washington, DC area firm of
    Gallagher & Associates.

    The museum will be housed in the historic National Bank Building in
    Washington, DC, at 14th and G Streets, NW, just blocks from the White
    House.  When completed, it will be the first international class
    museum in the Armenian Diaspora dedicated to preserving and honoring
    the memory of the victims and survivors of the Armenian Genocide. From
    1915-1923 a centrally-planned, government-directed campaign subjected
    the Armenian population in Turkey to deportation, expropriation,
    abduction, torture, starvation, and outright killings. An estimated
    1.5 million Armenians perished and tens of thousands became widowed,
    orphaned and homeless.

    Today, the Near East Foundation operates development projects in seven
    countries in the Middle East and Africa and is planning a project in
    Armenia. In 1930, the organization re-defined itself. It gave the
    schools, orphanages, hospitals, and other facilities that it had
    founded to the countries where it operated, and it became a pioneer in
    the field of economic development. Current projects include
    agricultural innovation to combat climate change in Mali and Egypt,
    reforming primary education to include girls in Morocco, and assisting
    Iraqi refugees to support themselves in new communities in Syria and
    Jordan. The 100-member field staff all work in their own countries, so
    the Near East Foundation supports local professionalism while helping
    the region's poorest people.

    "We are proud to continue the tradition of American assistance to
    communities in peril in the Middle East and Africa," said NEF
    President Papachristou. "We rely fully on the expertise and dedication
    of our colleagues who know best how to organize these communities to
    solve their own challenges." 

    The agreement between the AGMA and the Near East Foundation also
    anticipates the promotion of each other's programs and projects. The
    links to the Web sites of the two organizations are www.neareast.org
    and www.armeniangenocidemuseum.org.

    The Armenian Genocide Museum of America is an outgrowth of the
    Armenian Assembly of America and the Armenian National Institute
    (ANI), catalyzed by the initial pledge of Anoush Mathevosian toward
    building such a museum in Washington.

    ####

    NR#2008-04
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