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U.Mich: 2 OppositeFigures of the History of the Genocide Discussed

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  • U.Mich: 2 OppositeFigures of the History of the Genocide Discussed

    PRESS RELEASE
    University of Michigan
    Armenian Studies Program
    Gloria Caudill Administrator
    1080 S. University
    Ste., 2603 SSWB
    Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1106
    Tel: (734) 763-0622
    Fax: (734) 763-4918


    Armenian Studies Program
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

    For further information please contact:
    Ms. Gloria Caudill, Administrator
    [email protected]
    (734) 763-0622



    Two Opposite Figures of the History of the Armenian Genocide Discussed
    in Public Lectures



    Professor Hans-Lukas Kieser, Manoogian Simone Foundation Visiting
    Scholar at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, presented two public
    lectures last week, each devoted to two opposite figures critical for
    the understanding of Armenian history during and after the Genocide.

    On March 12 Professor Kieser addressed the University community and
    discussed the personality of Talaat Pasha, the chief architect of the
    Genocide from a biographical point of view. Talaat should be seen as a
    complex figure, argued Professor Kieser, one who had the closest ties
    with Armenian leaders, particularly leaders of the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation; he was involved in all major negotiations
    related to reforms in the Armenian provinces. Yet, at the same time,
    equally easily he ordered the deportation of Armenian which he knew
    would end up in their deaths. "He had two souls," Kieser stated, "but
    violated one of them."

    In his second lecture, to the larger community in Dearborn, Michigan, on
    March 15, Professor Kieser presented the biography of the Swiss
    missionary Jakob Kunzler who, supported by his wife, spent 27 years in
    Urfa and another 24 in Lebanon. In Urfa he tried to save as many lives
    of Armenians as possible and in Lebanon he organized aid to the refugees
    and initiated a number of projects to facilitate their lives, including
    the Azounieh sanatorium which still functions. "For many survivors and
    their offspring," said Kieser, "Kunzler remains the most important
    figure in the struggle for survival of the Armenian people."

    Professor Kieser, one of the most prominent scholars specializing in
    late Ottoman history, teaches at the University of Zurich. As Manoogian
    Simone Foundation Visiting Scholar with the Armenian Studies Program at
    the University of Michigan during this semester, he is teaching two
    courses: " 'Missionary America' in the Middle East," and "Turkish and
    Kurdish Nationalisms in late 19th and early 20th century."
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