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Musa Dagh Photo Collection To Be Part Of The AGMA

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  • Musa Dagh Photo Collection To Be Part Of The AGMA

    Armenian Genocide Museum of America
    1140 19th Street
    NW, Suite 600
    Washington, DC 20036
    Web: www.ArmenianGenocideMuseum.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    May 22, 2009
    Contact: Carole Karabashian
    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: (202) 383-9009

    MUSA DAGH PHOTO COLLECTION TO BE PART OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM OF
    AMERICA

    Washington, DC - Rare and historically significant photographs of the
    Armenians of Musa Dagh will be among the Genocide-era images featured in
    the Armenian Genocide Museum of America (AGMA), thanks to the generosity
    of a private collector who is providing the museum with exclusive access
    to the photos.

    This unique collection of black-and-white photographs, dating from 1915
    to 1939, is the life's work of Dr. Vahram Shemmassian, a Los
    Angeles-based historian who is the world's leading expert on the
    Armenians of Musa Dagh.

    "We are profoundly grateful to Dr. Shemmassian for allowing the museum
    to use his priceless photo collection to help tell the heroic story of
    the Musa Dagh Armenians against the backdrop of the larger and much more
    tragic story of the Armenian Genocide," said Van Z. Krikorian, AGMA
    Board Trustee and Building and Operations Committee Chairman. "In
    addition, as the foremost authority on the subject of Musa Dagh, Dr.
    Shemmassian is able to provide authentication of the evidence documented
    in these photographs."

    Krikorian said the Musa Dagh photo collection is the fourth significant
    collection of Genocide-era visual materials which, in the past year,
    have been made available for use by AGMA. AGMA has been granted access
    to the archives of the Near East Foundation and the Armenian Genocide
    Museum-Institute in Yerevan, Armenia, and has received a donation of a
    privately-held research library containing books, maps, photographs and
    other materials focused on the Armenian Genocide and its documentation.

    Dr. Shemmassian has also undertaken pioneering research on the fate of
    Armenian women and children during and in the aftermath of the Genocide,
    another focus area of the museum. Shemmassian, who is currently
    Director of the Armenian Studies Program at California State University,
    Northridge, said the Armenian Genocide Museum in Washington, DC is a
    "perfect match" for his collection.

    "The thousands of people who will visit the museum will be able to look
    into the faces of those brave Armenians of Musa Dagh and learn of their
    unique story," Dr. Shemmassian said. "They resisted and most of them
    survived, but they were forced to leave their homes. These photographs
    document the trying conditions and difficult challenges that the
    displaced Musa Dagh Armenians faced as survivors and refugees."

    According to Dr. Rouben Adalian, Director of the museum's research arm,
    the Armenian National Institute, "The story of Musa Dagh is one of the
    rare instances during the Armenian Genocide era where Armenian
    villagers, who were targeted for annihilation by the Ottoman Turkish
    Army, put up an organized resistance for 49 days and were eventually
    rescued by Allied warships patrolling the Turkish coast."

    Adalian said, "There are no known photographs of the actual defense of
    Musa Dagh, however, the rescue and delivery to safety in Egypt of over
    4,000 survivors made headline news." The Austrian author Franz Werfel
    also immortalized the gripping events in his "Forty Days of Musa Dagh,"
    which became a best-seller upon its release in 1933 and was subsequently
    translated into numerous languages.

    The AGMA recently received a copy of the Dutch edition of "Forty Days of
    Musa Dagh" from a Canadian donor whose family had lived through World
    War II. Adalian added, "The book is important supplemental material to
    the Musa Dagh photo collection, and points to the world-wide impact of
    the story of the resistance of the Armenians of Musa Dagh."

    "Franz Werfel's book was widely read in Europe and made the Jewish
    author unpopular with the Nazi regime, prompting Werfel to flee Austria
    in 1938," Adalian said. He noted that according to Professor Yair Auron
    of the Open University of Israel, Werfel's novel was a source of
    inspiration and reflection for Jews who were trapped by the Nazi
    occupation of Europe. In one historical account, a Holocaust survivor
    from the Kovno Ghetto in Lithuania stated: "Our analysis of the book
    indicated that if the world did not come to the rescue of the Armenians,
    who were Christians after all, how could we, Jews, expect help? No
    doubt Hitler knew all about those massacres and the criminal neglect by
    the free world, and was convinced that he could proceed with impunity
    against the helpless Jews."

    The Armenian Genocide Museum of America is an outgrowth of the Armenian
    Assembly of America and the Armenian National Institute (ANI), catalyzed
    by the initial pledge of Anoush Mathevosian toward building such a
    museum in Washington, DC.

    ###

    NR#2009-02

    Photo:

    http://aaainc.org/fi leadmin/aaainc/pdf_1/Q2_2009/Shemmassian015.jpg

    [ Photo caption: Very few families survived the Armenian Genocide without
    loss of life. Pictured is the family of Krikor Boursalian of Yoghunoluk
    village, Musa Dagh. The picture was taken at the Port Said refugee camp
    in Egypt sometime between October 1915 and summer 1916.
    Copyright: ANI/AGMA - Shemmassian Collection]
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