Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

2009 AGBU Garbis Papazian Award Presented to Tsvetana Paskaleva

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 2009 AGBU Garbis Papazian Award Presented to Tsvetana Paskaleva

    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

    Wednesday, July 8, 2009

    2009 AGBU Garbis Papazian Award Presented to Tsvetana Paskaleva

    In an awards ceremony at the Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall in Yerevan
    on July 3, the AGBU Garbis Papazian Award was presented to Bulgarian
    reporter, documentarian and cinematographer Tsvetana Paskaleva for her
    unwavering devotion to the truthful presentation of the Karabakh
    liberation struggle.

    Established in 1988, the AGBU Garbis Papazian Award is annually bestowed
    on non-Armenian scholars and intellectuals, who, through their scholarly
    research and publications, contribute to the dissemination and
    understanding of Armenian history and culture, as well as the Armenian
    Question.

    Past recipients of this prestigious award have included Polish public
    figure Msgr. Stanislaw Pindera, Spanish intellectual Gonzalo H. Guarch,
    German scholar Wolfgang Gust, UCLA Professor Peter Crowe, Baroness Cox
    of the British House of Lords, Russian intellectual Kim Bakshi and
    Austrian archivists Helmut & Heide Buschhausen.

    Paskaleva worked in Karabakh during that enclave's war of independence
    from Azerbaijan, presenting the battles and politics of the conflict to
    an international audience. As a foreign journalist, she reported on the
    mass deportations and atrocities against the Armenian citizens of
    Azerbaijan. She is the director of seven documentaries about the
    Karabakh war. She has also prepared reports for CNN, NBC, Antene-2 and
    other European media agencies.

    The July 3 ceremony began with a screening of Paskaleva's 1993
    documentary, "My Dears, Living and Dead," and continued with a speech by
    Ruben Gevorkiants, chairman of the Republic of Armenia's Union of
    Cinematographers, who spoke about Paskaleva's war coverage. Razmik
    Hartunian-Tamrazian, member of the AGBU Garbis Papazian Award committee,
    and Levon Kebabdjian, honorary member of the AGBU Central Board of
    Directors, presented Pashkaleva with the award money and certificate.

    AGBU Central Board of Directors member Yervant Zorian spoke about the
    wide range of cultural and educational activities of AGBU and read AGBU
    President Berge Setrakian's congratulatory message. Zorian also
    presented Paskaleva with the special AGBU crystal award for her
    outstanding achievement.

    After accepting the awards, Paskaleva expressed her gratitude to AGBU
    and the Garbis Papazian Award committee for their gift. She spoke
    passionately about the Karabakh liberation struggle and her urge to tell
    the world about the atrocities in Karabakh, "I witnessed human truth
    during the war...which needed to be revealed and protected. It was my
    duty to come and shoot the severe reality of the people of Karabakh."

    The award ceremony was followed by a performance of Avet Terterian's
    Symphony No. 3 by the Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra under its artistic
    director and principal conductor Eduard Topchjan.

    The AGBU Garbis Papazian Award was established in 1988 through the
    initiative and with the financial resources of Garbis Papazian, for the
    purpose of recognizing non-Armenian intellectuals who contribute to an
    increase in awareness of Armenian history, culture and the Armenian
    Question.

    Established in 1906, the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) is the
    world's largest non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New
    York City, AGBU (www.agbu.org) preserves and promotes the Armenian
    identity and heritage through educational, cultural and humanitarian
    programs, annually serving some 400,000 Armenians in 35 countries.
Working...
X