Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Richard Kloian, 73 Pioneering Armenian Genocide Educator, Passes Awa

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

  • Richard Kloian, 73 Pioneering Armenian Genocide Educator, Passes Awa

    RICHARD KLOIAN, 73 PIONEERING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE EDUCATOR, PASSES AWAY
    by Lou Ann Matossian

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2010- 05-05-richard-kloian-73-pioneering-armenian-genoci de-educator-passes-away
    Wednesday May 05, 2010

    Minneapolis - One Armenian scholar called him "a national treasure,"
    others "an indispensable bridge" between genocide researchers,
    historians, educators, and the public. The name of Richard Diran
    Kloian, 73, who passed away on May 1 of complications from a brain
    stem stroke, was synonymous with that of the Richmond, Calif.-based
    Armenian Genocide Resource Center.

    Richard Kloian and the AGRC were probably best known for The Armenian
    Genocide: News Accounts from the American Press, 1915-1922, a landmark
    1985 collection of articles reproduced from the New York Times and
    other sources. Painstakingly compiled from microfilm in the years
    before digitization and the Internet made historic newspaper stories
    widely accessible, the coverage of what America's newspaper of record
    had once called "systematic race extermination" made a powerful impact
    just as Ankara's denial campaign was shifting into high gear.

    Originally published in 1980 and 1981 as Armenian Genocide: First 20th
    Century Holocaust, subsequent editions through 2007 were expanded
    to cover the Hamidian massacres of the 1890s and the Adana massacre
    of 1909.

    An amateur in the highest sense of the word, Richard devoted himself
    to public education about this crime against humanity, drawing on
    the social acumen and networking experiences of a rich and varied life.

    The Detroit native, born March 7, 1937, studied science in high
    school and English and French in college, also developing interests
    in astronomy, photography, and music. A retail manager during the
    work week and an accomplished Latin percussionist on the weekends,
    he was playing at the Puerto Rican Club in Detroit when he met his
    future wife Antonia, a beautician and former nun to whom he was
    married more than 40 years.

    Richard's interest in the Genocide was inspired by his grandmother,
    Khanum Palootzian, whose harrowing survival story he recorded in
    1972, including eyewitness accounts from his father Zakaria and uncle
    Mesrob of Grasse, France. Realizing the effectiveness of personal
    narratives as a teaching tool, he would later encourage others to
    send family memoirs to Armenian Studies centers where the stories
    could be preserved and shared.

    After moving to California, Richard spent his nights and weekends
    researching the Armenian Genocide at the University of California and
    compiling historic news accounts. Eager to know more, he returned to
    college full time, graduating in 1993 with associate of arts degrees
    in English, sociology, history, political science, and law. Four years
    later, in response to a growing demand for materials on the Genocide
    for classroom use, Richard established the Armenian Genocide Resource
    Center and funded it out of his Social Security benefits.

    To facilitate the teaching of the Armenian Genocide, Richard compiled
    hundreds of articles from scholarly journals and published scores of
    booklets and readers. He compiled, edited, produced, and distributed a
    400-page resource manual of maps, Web sites, photographs, news reports,
    primary-source documents, scholarly articles on the Genocide and its
    denial, and U.S. state-level curricula that mandated teaching about
    the Armenian Genocide.

    Richard was instrumental in making the Genocide part of the
    secondary-school curriculum in many parts of the country and was sought
    after for his expertise. In 2003, for example, he and representatives
    of four Armenian organizations were invited to give expert testimony
    before the California State Assembly Committee on Education in support
    of a genocide education bill.

    As a contributor to National Public Radio, he recorded and edited
    important lectures related to the Genocide and made them available
    as part of the AGRC Educational Audio Series. He also produced and
    distributed a variety of Genocide-related videos, including, in 2009,
    a restored and edited 24-minute segment of the 1919 silent motion
    picture Ravished Armenia.

    "I would like to see funded and staffed resource centers that can
    take on this role, work with their communities, and do outreach,"
    Richard told the Armenian Reporter in 2007. "We need to support
    our existing research centers as well, like Zoryan and others. Much
    work needs to be done but I believe we have the talent and the will,
    the vision and dedication to do it."

    Richard served on the advisory board of The Genocide Education Project
    (genocideeducation.org), a San Francisco-based nonprofit that assists
    educators in teaching about human rights and genocide, particularly
    the Armenian Genocide. In 2002 he was honored by the San Francisco Bay
    Area Armenian National Committee as a "Local Hero" for his dedication
    to the study of the Armenian Genocide.

    Richard Kloian is survived by his widow Antonia; brothers Arnold,
    Bearnard, Michael, and Scott; and several nieces and nephews. The
    funeral services will take place at 9:30 a.m. on Thursday, May 6, at
    Smith & Witter Funeral Home, 5145 Sobrante Ave., El Sobrante, Calif.,
    (510) 758-5466. He will be buried at Rolling Hills Memorial Park,
    4100 Hilltop Dr., El Sobrante, Calif., (510) 223-6161.

    Editor's Note: Adapted from a profile by Tania Ketenjian reproduced
    in full below.

    A man's work, a nation's heritage by Tania Ketenjian from the Armenian
    Reporter, May 26, 2007. , Iss.

    13; pg. C4, 5 pgs

    One Armenian scholar has called him "a national treasure," others "an
    indispensable bridge" between genocide scholars, historians, educators,
    and the public. Richard Kloian. It's not a name with which many of us
    in the Armenian community are intimately familiar - but we should be,
    we must be, because Richard Kloian has dedicated his life to having
    the Armenian voice heard.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X