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AGMA: Roger Smith Donates Personal Library To The AGMA

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  • AGMA: Roger Smith Donates Personal Library To The AGMA

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Genocide Museum of America
    October 13, 2009
    Contact: Press Office
    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: (202) 383-9009

    PIONEERING GENOCIDE SCHOLAR ROGER SMITH DONATES PERSONAL LIBRARY TO
    THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM OF AMERICA

    Washington, DC - Dr. Roger W. Smith, professor emeritus of government
    at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, and a
    co-founder and past president of the International Association of
    Genocide Scholars (IAGS) has donated his personal library of books on
    the subject of genocide to the Armenian Genocide Museum of America
    (AGMA).

    In making this gift, Dr. Smith shared the following thoughts: "I had
    long been involved with various Armenian scholarly organizations, had
    given talks about the Genocide, and especially denial, to many
    Armenian community groups, but I had also been deeply committed to
    educating a new generation of scholars who could carry on the work
    begun by some of us twenty-five years ago. I offered my collection of
    books to the Armenian Genocide Museum of America to provide materials
    that could help educate scholars and policy makers about the Genocide,
    but also as a kind of fulfillment, and continuation, of my association
    with a people whose cause I had come to care about deeply."

    Trustee of the museum and chairman of its building and operations
    committee Van Z. Krikorian welcomed the gift as a valuable addition to
    the resources being assembled to create a state-of-the-art museum
    facility in the nation's capital.

    "As an educator and as a human rights advocate, Dr. Smith has
    selflessly dedicated his time to speak on the Armenian Genocide at
    international conferences, in lecture halls and in the classroom,"
    Krikorian said. "In 2000 he was invited by the House International
    Affairs Committee to testify in Congress about the Armenian Genocide
    resolution then under consideration, and all Armenians owe him our
    gratitude for that and so much more. Along with Robert Jay Lifton,
    Erik Markusen, Vahakn Dadrian, Richard Hovannisian, Helen Fein, Robert
    Melson, Israel Charny and many others, Roger Smith has been a true
    pioneer in bringing the problem of genocide, and the consequences of
    denial, to the attention of policymakers. His choice of the Armenian
    Genocide Museum of America as the repository of his library testifies
    to his continuing commitment to encourage new generations to study,
    analyze, and solve the problem of genocide through prevention and
    tolerance. This library complements our specialized holdings on the
    Armenian Genocide and equips the museum with hard to find resources.
    We are so very grateful to him for his generosity and express our deep
    appreciation for his strong support."

    In 1995, along with Robert Jay Lifton and the late Erik Markusen,
    Roger Smith published a critical exposé of the Turkish Embassy's and
    the Institute of Turkish Studies' campaign of denying the Armenian
    Genocide in the groundbreaking article "Professional Ethics and the
    Denial of the Armenian Genocide," which appeared in the journal
    Holocaust and Genocide Studies issued by Oxford University Press and
    the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

    Dr. Smith, who has written extensively on the problem of denial, is
    the editor and co-author of Guilt: Man and Society and editor of
    Genocide: Essays Toward Understanding, Early Warning, and Prevention,
    a selective compilation of the presentations from the first biennial
    meeting of IAGS at the College of William and Mary.

    An educator par excellence who recently retired after a lifetime of
    teaching, Dr. Smith continues as a leader in the field of human rights
    and genocide education. He has served as the director of the Genocide
    and Human Rights University Program since 2002. This is an intensive
    summer studies program created by the Zoryan Institute based out of
    the University of Toronto. Thanks to Dr. Smith, the two-week seminar
    has hosted over the years dozens of specialists on the Armenian,
    Cambodian, and Rwandan Genocides, the Holocaust, and other crimes
    against humanity, and trained hundreds of students to identify the
    early warning signs of genocide and the steps that can be taken toward
    its prevention.

    Dr. Smith has been the chairman of the Zoryan Institute's Academic
    Board of Directors since 2004. He also served on the Armenian
    National Institute's Academic Council, and in 2008 he was awarded by
    the president of Armenia with the Movses Khorenatsi medal "for his
    considerable contribution to the international recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide."

    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#2009-05
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