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On April 22, UCLA Students To Mark Genocide With Look Into Its Cultu

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  • On April 22, UCLA Students To Mark Genocide With Look Into Its Cultu

    ON APRIL 22, UCLA STUDENTS TO MARK GENOCIDE WITH LOOK INTO ITS CULTURAL RESPONSE

    Asbarez
    www.asbarez.com/index.html?showa rticle=41669_4/20/2009_1
    April 20, 2009

    Community Invited to Campus to Explore Genocide's Impact on Armenian
    Art and Literature

    LOS ANGELES--Students and community members from across the greater
    Los Angeles area will have a unique opportunity this Wednesday,
    April 22 to explore the impact of the Armenian Genocide on art and
    culture in the Armenian reality.

    The issue is seldom given attention during annual genocide
    commemorations in the community and promises to be a welcomed break
    with established norms, according to its organizers.

    The event, dubbed Rebirth: A Cultural Response to the Armenian
    Genocide, will begin at 6pm at UCLA's Ackerman Grand Ballroom (308
    Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA). It is being organized by the Armenian
    Students' Association at UCLA in association with the Armenian Youth
    Federation, the Unified Young Armenians and the All-ASA confederation
    308 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA.

    "We have commemorated the Armenian Genocide for almost a century. But
    do we all know and understand the horrific extent of the consequences
    wrought by that crime?" asked Mariam Tsaturyan, one of the event's
    organizers. "The Genocide affected more than just the population
    figures and geographic area of the Armenian nation. It also drastically
    transformed our culture, literature and art."

    "Our goal is to use art and culture to show how the Armenian
    Genocide changed not just our demographics but also our way of life,"
    Tsaturyan said.

    Wednesday's program will showcase a combination of visual displays
    and presentations to illustrate the transformation of literature and
    art that followed the Armenian Genocide. Speakers will include Vahe
    Berberian and Lilly Thomassian, who will also be performing her play
    "Let the Rocks Speak."

    The event will also include an art show and a rare collection from
    the Armenian Philatelic Society featuring stamps from the First
    Republic of Armenia, as well as Genocide commemorative stamps from
    across the world.
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