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Richard Hovannisian And Elie Wiesel In Conversation On Genocide

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  • Richard Hovannisian And Elie Wiesel In Conversation On Genocide

    RICHARD HOVANNISIAN AND ELIE WIESEL IN CONVERSATION ON GENOCIDE

    http://asbarez.com/109752/richard-hovannisian-and-elie-wiesel-in-conversation-on-genocide/
    Wednesday, May 1st, 2013

    Richard Hovannisian and Elie Weisel (Photo by Jeanine Hill, Chapman University)

    BY JANO BOGHOSSIAN

    ORANGE, Calif.-On April 17, Professor Richard Hovannisian, First Holder
    of the AEF Chair in Modern History at UCLA and Distinguished Visiting
    Scholar at Chapman University and the University of California,
    Irvine, engaged in "Conversation" with Dr. Elie Wiesel, Nobel Laureate
    and Holocaust survivor, regarding the moral obligation of mankind to
    honor and preserve the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide
    and the Holocaust by documenting and preserving witness and survivor
    testimonials, advocating for recognition, and promoting education.

    Before a capacity audience in the Wallace All Faiths Chapel, the
    scholars touched upon their unique individual experiences and that of
    their communities while dealing with concepts of truth and justice in
    the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust. Hovannisian
    posed the question of whether there can ever be real justice for
    Holocaust victims, even with the countless monuments and reparations
    they have received, to which Wiesel simply said "no". Hovannisian added
    that the Armenians, on the other hand, have not even been given the
    satisfaction of a modicum of formal recognition by the Republic of
    Turkey. He wondered about Dr. Wiesel's view of the Holocaust being
    beyond the bounds of history and therefore incomparable and argued
    instead that the Holocaust, like the Armenian Genocide, could be
    contextualized and historicized without making either of them seem
    rational.

    Dr. Elie Wiesel spoke of the Armenians' "passion for memory" and for
    preserving every detail of a calamity that marked and traumatized
    all subsequent generations of Armenians both in homeland and Diaspora.

    Wiesel then described how the Armenian cause "eventually became my
    cause," and discussed the importance of remembrance and what might
    happen once the last witness eventually passes away.

    Dr. Hovannisian emphasized that selectivity of memory poses a challenge
    for those not connected to an event, as the Holocaust has been
    universalized, while Armenians still struggle with denial. "The history
    is not just our history, but mankind's history," said Hovannisian, and
    stated that memory must not just be linked to a single victim group.

    There currently exists two institutions in Los Angeles that preserve,
    digitize, index and utilize survivor testimonials from the Armenian
    Genocide and the Holocaust-UCLA's Armenian Oral History project
    led by Hovannisian, and the Shoah Foundation's much more extensive
    collection at the University of Southern California. Hovannisian began
    the UCLA program in the 1970s by having students interview survivors
    of the Armenian Genocide. The interviews were later transcribed and
    translated by a subsequent generation of students.

    "Elie Wiesel and Richard Hovannisian in Conversation" was moderated
    by Chapman University History Department Chair Jennifer Keene and was
    part of the University's week-long events featuring Elie Wiesel and
    organized by the Rodgers Center of Holocaust Education headed by Dr.

    Marilyn Harran.

    In the days prior to the Chapman program, Professor Hovannisian
    lectured in Yerevan, Armenia; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Montevideo,
    Uruguay; Berlin, Germany; and Scottsdale, Arizona. On April 21, he
    was the keynote speaker of the annual commemoration of the Armenian
    Genocide at St. Mary Church in Costa Mesa, California, and on May 1-2
    returned to Chapman University on May 1-2 for guest lectures in two
    Holocaust classes. He will make a presentation on the destruction of
    Smyrna/Izmir in a communitywide program at St. Leon Church in New
    Jersey on May 17, and will be the featured speaker in Montreal on
    May 25 on the occasion of the 95th anniversary of the founding of
    the Armenian republic.

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