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Svajian's Lecture on Centennial of Adana Massacres at AGBU Montreal

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  • Svajian's Lecture on Centennial of Adana Massacres at AGBU Montreal

    AGBU Press Office
    55 East 59th Street
    New York, NY 10022-1112
    Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
    Fax: 212.319.6507
    Email: [email protected]
    Website: www.agbu.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    Monday, July 6, 2009

    Berdj Svajian's Lecture on the Centennial of the Adana Massacres at AGBU
    Montreal

    On April 29, 2009, Berdj Svajian delivered a lecture about the Adana
    Massacres to an audience of over one hundred people at the AGBU
    Demirdjian Hall in Montreal, Canada. The event was organized by the AGBU
    Montreal Cultural Committee and the Manuel Keoseyan Armenian Studies
    Course on the centennial of this historic event and included a
    presentation of documentary evidence and 200 slides.

    The lecturer was introduced by Shahe Tanashian, director of the Manuel
    Keoseyan Armenian Studies Course. Svajian began his presentation by
    dedicating the event to the memory of his grandparents, who were forced
    to leave their native Adana during the massacres of 1909. Starting with
    general information about the geography and history of the city, he
    included a detailed description of local customs and practices that
    defined the place.

    He projected slides depicting the massacre, torture of intellectuals,
    destruction of churches and transformation of schools into stables. The
    first massacre took place on April 1, 1909 and was followed by a second,
    and even more horrible event, which aimed to eliminate the whole
    Armenian population. Svajian's slides also included scenes of the Ayn
    Toura orphanage in Lebanon, which had been established to house and
    Turkify Armenian orphans. This insidious operation was under the
    supervision of Turkish parliamentarian Halide Edib Hanim, who was also
    one of the planners of the Armenian Genocide several years later, and
    Jemal Pasha, who later served as the Turkish Marine Minister.

    The final slides showed the documents and photos of the signed property
    deeds belonging to Svajian's grandparents, which were rescued from the
    1909 massacre. At the end of the program, Svajian invited Garbis
    Dekmezian, an Adana native, to light candles in memory of the victims of
    1909.

    Words of appreciation and thanks were spoken by Arsine Attarian, chair
    of AGBU Montreal's Cultural Committee, and Arshavir Gundjian, AGBU vice
    president and founding president of the Alex Manoogian School.

    The program came to a close with a prayer by Rev. Mher Khachigian and
    the blessings of Bishop Bagrat Galstian, Primate of the Diocese of
    Canada.

    Established in 1906, AGBU (www.agbu.org) is the world's largest
    non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU
    preserves and promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through
    educational, cultural and humanitarian programs, annually serving some
    400,000 Armenians on six continents
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