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  • Armenian museum mired in conflict

    Fresno Bee, CA
    Feb 7 2009


    Armenian museum mired in conflict
    Donor, nonprofit battle over genocide center.

    Friday, Feb. 06, 2009
    By Michael Doyle / Bee Washington Bureau E-Mail

    WASHINGTON -- Another nasty fight is brewing around the Armenian
    genocide, but this time it has nothing to do with diplomacy. It's all
    about money and control of a museum.

    For years, plans have been in the works for the Armenian Genocide
    Museum of America just two blocks from the White House. That alone
    might be enough to make diplomats cringe. Turkey -- a key U.S. ally --
    regards the mere suggestion of genocide as an affront to its national
    identity.

    But this fight pits Armenian-Americans against one another. At issue
    is a roughly $15 million pledge to help buy the four-story National
    Bank of Washington building and four adjacent pieces of property.

    Now the man behind the donation -- retired millionaire businessman
    Gerard Cafesjian -- is trying to get his money back, saying he doesn't
    like how the project has proceeded.

    The nonprofit organization behind the museum, meanwhile, says
    Cafesjian has been trying to meddle with its project.

    Each side has sued the other.

    The dispute has been anything but diplomatic, and it shows no signs of
    abating. On Friday, attorneys for the warring parties met again in a
    District of Columbia courtroom.

    "The clients are very hostile to each other right now," attorney
    Arnold Rosenfeld told a federal judge last year, a court transcript
    shows.

    Rosenfeld represents the Armenian Genocide Museum and Memorial Inc.,
    which wants to build what it describes as "the premier institution in
    the United States dedicated to educating American and international
    audiences about the Armenian Genocide."

    The museum potentially has high appeal in the San Joaquin Valley and
    other regions with large Armenian-American populations. It's been
    discussed since the mid-1990s, and planners say they want the
    35,000-square-foot facility open before 2011.

    Judge is 'very irritated'

    Armenian genocide discussions often provoke political disputes,
    including denials from Turkish officials and discomfort within the
    U.S. State Department. When completed, the museum will commemorate the
    events between 1915 and 1923, when by some estimates upward of 1.5
    million Armenians died during the final years of the Ottoman Empire
    before Turkey was founded.

    The competing lawsuits now resemble a bad divorce, as mutual rancor
    feeds on itself and prior intimacies become potential vulnerabilities.

    "I must say, I'm very irritated," U.S. District Judge Colleen
    Kollar-Kotelly warned lawyers in August, a court transcript
    shows. "These cases are not a good use of judicial resources and,
    frankly, probably not of your client's resources, either."

    On Thursday, in a ruling that keeps the lawsuits alive, Kollar-Kotelly
    nonetheless characterized them as "very unfortunate."

    "If you're disputing about money, it's going to become bitter," said
    Barlow Der Mugrdechian, coordinator of the Armenian Studies Program at
    California State University, Fresno.

    Der Mugrdechian speculated that the legal dispute may have slowed
    progress and undermined the proposed museum's public visibility in the
    Valley. He said many people still haven't yet heard of the proposal,
    though he predicted many would support it once they did.

    Architects already are designing the project for 14th and G streets in
    downtown Washington. The city's Historic Preservation Review Board
    last year gave conceptual approval to use of the 83-year-old National
    Bank of Washington building.

    The Armenian Assembly of America initiated the museum planning and in
    2003 secured an agreement with Cafesjian and the Cafesjian Family
    Foundation.
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