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AGMA: AGMA Announces Opening of ANI Research Library

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  • AGMA: AGMA Announces Opening of ANI Research Library

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Genocide Museum of America
    March 8, 2010
    Contact: Press Office
    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: (202) 383-9009

    AGMA Announces Opening of ANI Research Library

    Washington, DC - The Armenian Genocide Museum of America (AGMA)
    announced in advance of the museum opening that the Armenian National
    Institute (ANI) Research Library will be opened in time for the 95th
    anniversary of the Armenian Genocide on April 24, 2010. ANI has been
    part of the AGMA organization since 2003.

    The support extended AGMA and ANI by donors has prompted plans to
    create a research facility that may also be accessible to researchers
    studying the Armenian Genocide. The special collections of books on
    the topic of genocide in general and the Armenian Genocide in
    particular that have been gifted to ANI already constitute a critical
    component of the future museum. As a step toward encouraging further
    research on the Armenian Genocide, AGMA has decided that the ANI
    Research Library should be made available for public use by qualified
    specialists.

    "The thousands of publications that form the core of the scholarly and
    documentary record on the Armenian Genocide are a critical resource
    that ANI has been collecting over the years," said Van Z. Krikorian,
    museum trustee and chairman of the museum's building and operations
    committee. "The AGMA planning process has depended on the services
    provided by ANI to develop the exhibit concepts and contents. While
    we look ahead to the time when the entire museum facility is open to
    the public, we wanted to take this initial step in encouraging more
    learning and academic research on the Armenian Genocide as that
    constitutes one of the core missions of AGMA."

    "With ANI already located at the AGMA site, we will be expanding the
    Institute's research facility and incorporate the resources that have
    been gathered and that continue to arrive," added Krikorian. "ANI has
    collected documentation on the Armenian Genocide from around the
    world. As these records are processed and organized, we expect that
    more and more of the collected resources will be available for study
    and research."

    "With its rapidly growing library of 8,000 volumes, the base for
    creating a comprehensive collection centered on the Armenian Genocide
    has been created. With more donors prepared to share their
    specialized collections, and planning for a capacity of 100,000
    volumes, the time had arrived to organize the ANI Research Library for
    use by scholars and researchers seeking access to resources on the
    Armenian experience," Krikorian said.

    The ANI Research Library will be located in, and utilize three floors
    of, the facilities adjacent to the historic bank building that will be
    converted into the museum. "The AGMA building and operations
    committee, whose members include Edele Hovnanian, Denise Darmanian,
    Richard Papalian, and Zaven Tachdjian, have worked tirelessly to begin
    converting the museum properties into useable spaces," added
    Krikorian. "All of us are happy to take this second significant step
    toward assembling the AGMA project. ANI offices were relocated to the
    converted spaces in June 2009."

    ANI was established in 1997 by a special grant to the Armenian
    Assembly of America by the chairman of its board of trustees, Mr.
    Hirair Hovnanian. The Institute is dedicated to the study, research,
    and affirmation of the Armenian Genocide. As part of its public
    service, ANI maintains the most extensive website on the Armenian
    Genocide available on the Internet at the following address:
    www.armenian-genocide.org. Since its founding the Institute has been
    under the direction of Dr. Rouben Adalian, who has also directed the
    AGMA project since 2008.

    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# 2010-01
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