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  • ANC Australia's Canberra Tribute To Relief Fund

    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

    26 March, 2008

    MEDIA RELEASE: For Immediate Release

    {CONTACT: Haig Kayserian (Communications Officer) ~ 0403 317 903 ~
    [email protected]}

    ANC AUSTRALIA'S CANBERRA TRIBUTE TO RELIEF FUND

    SYDNEY: The Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC Australia) and the
    Australia-Armenia Parliamentary Friendship Group hosted an event in
    Canberra's Parliament House last week, recognising the enormous human rights
    contribution of the Armenian Relief Fund of Australia.

    The event, an Australian Institute of Holocaust and Genocide Studies'
    (AIHGS) photo exhibit titled From Beyond Anzac Cove, was attended by key
    parliamentarians from both sides of the political spectrum.

    The photos of the Armenian Relief Fund of Australia were uncovered by the
    AIHGS from various Australian archive sources, and represent the efforts of
    the Australian public who, from 1915-1929, provided humanitarian assistance
    to victims of the Armenian Genocide. Dr. Panayiotis Diamadis and Mr. Vicken
    Babkenian of the AIHGS were in attendance to guide the parliamentarians
    through the exhibit.

    ANC Australia President, Mr. Varant Meguerditchian said: "The Armenian
    Relief Fund of Australia represents a proud moment in Australian history and
    today we thank you, as representatives of our great nation for the
    generosity of your forebears."

    Throughout WWI, some 300 Australians were taken prisoner by the Ottoman
    Empire. Many of these POWs lay witness to the systematic destruction of the
    indigenous Armenian, Greek and Assyrian populations of Anatolia at the hands
    of the Ottoman government.

    The first genocide of the 20th century triggered an incredible humanitarian
    response across the globe. In Australia, from 1915 to 1929, the Armenian
    Relief Fund of Australia provided food, clothing and shelter to victims of
    the Armenian Genocide. By 1922, these efforts had become the first major
    international humanitarian project and set a precedent for providing aid to
    disaster areas to this day.
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