NUMBER OF PEOPLE IN TURKEY RECOGNIZING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IS GROWING
news.am
Sept 9 2011
Armenia
YEREVAN. - Professors Ronald Suny and Norman Naimark presented, at
the University Club of Pasadena, their co-authored book entitled "A
Question of Genocide: Armenians and Turks at the End of the Ottoman
Empire," Azg daily reports.
Dr. Suny currently serves as Professor of Social and Political
History and is also Director of the Eisenberg Institute for Historical
Studies at the University of Michigan, as well as Emeritus Professor
of political science and history at the University of Chicago.
During the presentation, Dr. Suny who, having just returned from a
nearly two-month visit to Turkey, expressed his sense that more and
more people recognize the tragedy of the Genocide. "Many of them,
intellectuals and scholars, who are trying under very difficult
political conditions to rethink their own history," Suny noted.
Professor Naimark holds the Chair in East European History at Stanford
University. He is also Senior Fellow of the Hoover Institution and the
Institute of International Studies. Prior to Stanford, Dr. Naimark
was a professor of history at Boston University and a Fellow of the
Russian Research Center at Harvard.
Naimark stated that "after reading these contributions, which represent
the 'state of the art' in the field, no scholar could contend that
there was not genocide in the Armenian case."
The book is edited by Fatma Muge Gocek, and it includes contributions
from numerous scholars.
news.am
Sept 9 2011
Armenia
YEREVAN. - Professors Ronald Suny and Norman Naimark presented, at
the University Club of Pasadena, their co-authored book entitled "A
Question of Genocide: Armenians and Turks at the End of the Ottoman
Empire," Azg daily reports.
Dr. Suny currently serves as Professor of Social and Political
History and is also Director of the Eisenberg Institute for Historical
Studies at the University of Michigan, as well as Emeritus Professor
of political science and history at the University of Chicago.
During the presentation, Dr. Suny who, having just returned from a
nearly two-month visit to Turkey, expressed his sense that more and
more people recognize the tragedy of the Genocide. "Many of them,
intellectuals and scholars, who are trying under very difficult
political conditions to rethink their own history," Suny noted.
Professor Naimark holds the Chair in East European History at Stanford
University. He is also Senior Fellow of the Hoover Institution and the
Institute of International Studies. Prior to Stanford, Dr. Naimark
was a professor of history at Boston University and a Fellow of the
Russian Research Center at Harvard.
Naimark stated that "after reading these contributions, which represent
the 'state of the art' in the field, no scholar could contend that
there was not genocide in the Armenian case."
The book is edited by Fatma Muge Gocek, and it includes contributions
from numerous scholars.