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USC Shoah Foundation Institute Signs Historic Agreement With Armenia

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  • USC Shoah Foundation Institute Signs Historic Agreement With Armenia

    USC SHOAH FOUNDATION INSTITUTE SIGNS HISTORIC AGREEMENT WITH ARMENIAN FILM FOUNDATION

    Asbarez
    Monday, May 10th, 2010
    LOS ANGELES

    -The USC Shoah Foundation Institute, part of the USC College
    of Letters, Arts & Sciences, signed an historic agreement with
    the Armenian Film Foundation and Dr. J. Michael and Antoinette
    Hagopian. The agreement paves the way for the preservation and
    dissemination of the largest archive of filmed interviews with
    survivors of and witnesses to the Armenian Genocide.

    The two organizations and Dr. Hagopian will work together to make
    approximately 400 testimonies of Armenian Genocide survivors and
    witnesses available for educational purposes through the Shoah
    Foundation Institute's Visual History Archive. The signed agreement
    is the first step in the process to digitize, index, preserve, and
    disseminate the filmed testimonies collected by Dr. Hagopian and the
    Armenian Film Foundation between 1968 and 2004. Once the process is
    complete, the testimonies will become accessible through the Shoah
    Foundation Institute's Visual History Archive, which contains nearly
    52,000 video testimonies of Holocaust survivors and other witnesses.

    Funds must be raised before work will commence.

    "As a preliminary step towards including Armenian Genocide survivor
    testimonies in the archive, our agreement with the Armenian Film
    Foundation is a major milestone," said USC Shoah Foundation Institute
    Executive Director Stephen Smith. "This project will help preserve
    evidence of a genocide that must be acknowledged. It will honor the
    memory of those whose lives were taken, and it will ensure that future
    generations are able to learn from individuals who experienced the
    Armenian Genocide firsthand."

    With the attempted annihilation of the Armenian people being the first
    major genocide of the 20th Century, the Armenian Film Foundation's
    filmed interviews are significant to the scope of the Shoah Foundation
    Institute's Visual History Archive. The Institute is beginning to work
    with partners around the world to expand its archive with testimonies
    from survivors and witnesses of other genocides, including the Rwandan
    genocide and the Cambodian genocide.

    "We believe this agreement is the beginning of a long-term partnership
    with the world-renowned USC Shoah Foundation Institute that will
    promote the study and prevention of future genocides," said Dr.

    Hagopian. "Inclusion of these filmed Genocide survivor interviews,
    a 'national treasure' of the Armenian people, side by side with
    testimonies of Holocaust survivors in an archive that can be accessed
    and searched around the world, will finally help us fulfill our
    mission of disseminating these eyewitness accounts worldwide."

    The Shoah Foundation Institute's mission is to overcome prejudice,
    intolerance, and bigotry-and the suffering they cause-through the
    educational use of the Institute's visual history testimonies.

    "Victimization and genocide perpetrated and denied in one part of
    the world, can become the breeding ground for greater crimes against
    humanity in another part of the world," said Dr. Hagopian, who is
    96 years old and a Genocide survivor himself. "I have felt that it
    was my responsibility to educate and inform so that history won't
    be repeated."

    About the Testimony Collection

    The foundation's film archive includes nearly 400 interviews of
    Genocide survivors and witnesses conducted in 10 countries. The
    voices of these filmed survivors and witnesses, now deceased, echo
    from all corners of the world in 10 different languages. The majority
    of the 400 interviews are either in English or Armenian (some in rare
    dialects), with some witnesses speaking in Arabic, Greek, Spanish,
    French, Kurdish, Turkish, German, and Russian. Those interviewed were
    from 8 to 29 years of age at the time of the Genocide.

    The major areas that were covered in those interviews are from the
    following cities and towns of Anatolia (mainly Eastern Turkey):
    Adabazar, Eskisehir, Konia, Sivas, Kharpert, Urfa, Aintab, Marash,
    Malatia, Dickranagerd, Erzeroum, Van, Bitlis, Der Zor, Smyrna,
    Erzingan, Musa Dagh, Kessab, Aleppo, Shabin Karahisar, Guren, Sepastia,
    Banderma, Yozgat, Everek, Hadjin, Zeitoun, Amassia, and Kutahya.

    About the Armenian Film Foundation

    The Armenian Film Foundation was established in 1979 as a non-profit,
    educational, and cultural organization dedicated to the documentation
    in motion pictures of Armenian heritage and life. Its goals are to
    inspire pride in and to create worldwide recognition of the Armenian
    people and their contributions, and to preserve the visual and personal
    histories of the witnesses to the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

    Dr. J. Michael Hagopian, co-founder of the Armenian Film Foundation,
    has released 17 documentary films on the Armenian heritage, culture,
    and history, including an epic trilogy on the Armenian Genocide
    comprised of Voices from the Lake, Germany and the Secret Genocide,
    and The River Ran Red.

    The foundation has in its archives nearly 400 irreplaceable and
    invaluable filmed interviews with witnesses and survivors to the
    Armenian Genocide, as well as Genocide descendants, scholars and
    others.

    Recognizing the pressing need to record the experience of Armenians
    who were subject to the first genocide of the 20th Century, Dr.

    Hagopian in 1968 began filming Armenian Genocide survivors and
    eyewitnesses.

    As aging Genocide survivors began dying in large numbers, the Armenian
    Film Foundation embarked on a massive project to interview on 16mm
    film the remaining survivors of and eyewitnesses to the Armenian
    Genocide of 1915. When the survivor interview project commenced
    in 1982, an estimated 2,500 credible eyewitnesses to the Armenian
    Genocide of 1915 were still alive. Fifteen percent of these were
    subsequently completed and documented on film by the Armenian Film
    Foundation, which retains the original footage, sound tapes, record
    books, relevant photographs, and other documentation that may have
    been provided by the survivors and eyewitnesses.

    For more information, visit the Foundations's website,
    www.armenianfilm.org.

    About Dr. J. Michael Hagopian

    Born to an Armenian family in Kharpert-Mezreh, Dr. Hagopian
    is a Genocide survivor who has dedicated his life to the visual
    documentation of the Turkish extermination of 1.5 million Armenians in
    1915. In all, his work encompasses nearly 400 interviews of survivors
    of and witnesses to the Armenian Genocide and 40 years of research.

    Dr. Hagopian holds a doctorate in international relations from
    Harvard University and an undergraduate degree from the University
    of California at Berkeley. He also did two years of graduate work in
    cinema at the University of Southern California. He taught political
    science and economics at the University of California at Los Angeles;
    American University of Beirut, Lebanon; Banaras Hindu University,
    India; and Oregon State University, Corvallis.

    Dr. Hagopian is the chair of the Board of Directors of the Armenian
    Film Foundation and producer/director of many award-winning documentary
    films. As President of Atlantis Productions, he has also been engaged
    in the research, writing and production of educational and documentary
    films for instructional and informational use in the classroom and
    on television.

    He has written, directed and produced more than 70 educational and
    documentary films which collectively have won over 160 national and
    international awards, including two Emmy nominations for the writing
    and production of The Forgotten Genocide, the first full-length feature
    film on the Armenian Genocide of 1915. Germany and the Secret Genocide
    received the coveted First Place Golden Camera Award in the History
    Category from the 2004 U.S. International Film and Video Festival,
    the largest festival of its kind. The River Ran Red was voted Best
    International Historical Documentary by the New York International
    Film & Video Festival in 2009 and it won second place in the History
    and Biography categories at the 2009 U.S. International Film and
    Video Festival.

    Several of his films were produced under grants from the U.S. Office of
    Education and the Ethnic Heritage Program, the MacArthur Foundation,
    California Endowment for the Humanities, and California State
    Department of Education.

    Dr. Hagopian himself is the recipient of numerous honors,
    including Jewish World Watch's "I Witness" Award for dedicating his
    professional life to chronicling the history of the Armenian people
    and commemorating victims of the Armenian Genocide. The Armenian
    National Committee honored him as Man of the Year in 2000.

    About the USC Shoah Foundation Institute

    Established in 1994 by Steven Spielberg to collect and preserve
    the testimonies of survivors and other witnesses of the Holocaust,
    the USC Shoah Foundation Institute maintains one of the largest video
    digital libraries in the world: nearly 52,000 video testimonies in 32
    languages and from 56 countries. The Institute is part of the College
    of Letters, Arts & Sciences at the University of Southern California;
    its mission is to overcome prejudice, intolerance, and bigotry-and the
    suffering they cause-through the educational use of the Institute's
    visual history testimonies.

    The Institute works within the University and with partners around
    the world to advance scholarship and research, to provide resources
    and online tools for educators, and to disseminate the testimonies
    for educational purposes. In addition to preserving the testimonies
    in its archive, the Institute is working with partner organizations
    to help document the stories of survivors and other witnesses of
    other genocides.

    For more information, visit the Institute's website,
    www.college.usc.edu/vhi.
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