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Libraries Of The Global Village: Diaspora Resources In Glendale, Jer

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  • Libraries Of The Global Village: Diaspora Resources In Glendale, Jer

    LIBRARIES OF THE GLOBAL VILLAGE: DIASPORA RESOURCES IN GLENDALE, JERUSALEM, YEREVAN
    BY ELISE KALFAYAN

    asbarez
    Friday, June 1st, 2012

    The global village created by the world wide web gives the Armenian
    Diaspora great opportunities to connect, but it also poses challenges
    to identity. May's Facebook IPO in some ways reflects the village's
    condition today - its financial prospects are questionable and its
    loyalties indefinable. In contrast, libraries throughout the world
    are rich in cultural resources and committed to serving the public.

    Library professionals like Sylva Natalie Manoogian use electronic
    tools, but understand that the core mission of libraries extends far
    beyond digital information.

    All that said, I found Sylva Manoogian through Facebook! I knew she
    had established an Armenian collection at the Los Angeles Public
    Library. After "retirement," she was a consultant to the Glendale
    Public Library, helping to create a genocide resource collection
    there. She is a founding and lifetime member of the Armenian Library
    Association and an advocate for Armenian libraries wherever they
    may be.

    In a Facebook message to her, I asked about donating a crumbling 1908
    Armenian dictionary to a research library. She replied that UCLA
    already had a copy, in storage, and digitized. We later connected
    in person, and I learned she was pursuing a doctorate at UCLA. In
    June 2012, she will be defending her dissertation, "The Calouste
    Gulbenkian Library, Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem, 1925-1990:
    A Socio-Cultural History of a Monastic Intellectual Resource Center
    for the Armenian Diaspora."

    Libraries are an indispensible resource for the global community and
    its Armenians wherever they are; Manoogian's entire career demonstrates
    that conviction. She says, "My doctoral work is giving me a unique
    opportunity to pay tribute to our great visionary religious, literary,
    and community leaders, in whose life literacy and continuing education
    have played a significant role."

    Manoogian has researched the full story of the personal devotion,
    Armenian church connections and philanthropy contacts which built
    that library in Jerusalem. It has since been a key resource for many
    distinguished scholars and theologians. Several years ago I published
    reviews of two books by noted early church historian Abraham Terian.

    When I mentioned Terian, Manoogian of course knew that he had spent
    considerable time at the Jerusalem library and in fact had a dedicated
    space there.

    Others who have used the library are Robert Thompson (Calouste
    Gulbenkian Armenian Studies Scholar at Oxford), Bedros Der Matossian
    of the University of Nebraska, and Michael Stone, Director Emeritus
    of the Armenian Studies Program at Hebrew University.

    Manoogian has reviewed the library's visitors log [Vosgemadian,
    "Golden Book"], which reflects the influence of political events over
    the decades and the global importance of its collections. She has
    made 23 trips to Jerusalem since 1992 on her mission to revitalize
    and internationalize the library as an important resource center for
    the Armenian world.

    Manoogian is celebrating much more than completion of her doctoral
    degree this year. She was instrumental in encouraging colleagues to
    write the proposal nominating Yerevan as the 2012 UNESCO World Book
    Capital. This undertaking required significant government support,
    and a year-long commitment which began on the eve of this year's
    genocide commemoration, April 23, and extends to April 22 of 2013. It
    also coincides with the 500th Anniversary of the Armenian Printed Book
    (1512-2012).

    Manoogian and I discussed all this and much more on the steps of the
    Glendale Central Library. She is working a book project to commemorate
    the work of her human rights activist father Shahan Natalie. She
    attended the May 19 AIWA/Los Angeles symposium on the evolving role
    of media and told me the guest speaker, journalist Silva Sevlian,
    had several insights on how globalization and public diplomacy
    are affecting the Armenian Diaspora (a theme of her own on-going
    research). The Glendale Public Library itself had just hosted a May
    19 day-long ARPA conference on current issues facing Armenia and
    the Diaspora.

    Although she understands the value of digitization for preservation
    purposes, and for offering resources to the far reaches of the
    Diaspora, Manoogian also strongly values the physical aspect of books
    and other printed information available in libraries. On the cusp of
    big changes at UCLA, she was offered the choice of her doctoral title.

    Whereas now UCLA enrolls doctoral candidates in "Information Sciences"
    she asked that her degree be awarded in "Library and Information
    Sciences."

    Libraries are where cultural resources are primarily preserved,
    studied, and available to all. "Digital and economic trends indeed
    seem to dominate the global library scene these days, but libraries
    and librarians as we know them still have critical roles to play,"
    emphasizes Manoogian. Her continuing mission with Armenian libraries
    here and abroad is to get involved with programming for youth that
    educates, enlightens, informs, and makes them proud of their culture
    and heritage.

    As for Facebook, the IPO, and the many other electronic businesses
    compiling social and even educational resources: these have been
    established primarily for profit, not cultural enrichment. Their tools
    have made it easier for people like me and Sylva Manoogian to connect,
    but they are no substitute for the enduring public trust embodied in
    the mission of libraries from Glendale to Jerusalem to Yerevan.

    Elise Kalfayan is a Glendale resident, a native Southern Californian,
    and a combined first/second generation Armenian-American. She has
    produced or edited print and online pieces on topics ranging from
    urban development to Armenian Church history. She is the publisher
    of a Glendale community news blog, and works as a contract writer,
    editor, and publishing consultant for clients including businesses,
    entrepreneurs, nonprofits, and memoirists.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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