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NAASR Launches Leadership Circle in Southern California

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  • NAASR Launches Leadership Circle in Southern California

    NAASR Launches Leadership Circle in Southern California

    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2013/05/21/naasr-launches-leadership-circle-in-southern-california/
    COMMUNITY | MAY 21, 2013 4:30 PM

    LOS ANGELES - The National Association for Armenian Studies and
    Research (NAASR) launched a campaign for its Leadership Circle of
    membership in the Southern California Armenian community on April 13,
    at the Pasadena home of David and Margaret Mgrublian.

    The evening was organized by NAASR's Southern California Board members
    Bruce Roat and Dr. Gregory Ketabgian, working closely with a dedicated
    committee.

    Following a buffet dinner, the nearly 100 individuals present gathered
    to listen to remarks by Master of Ceremonies Paul Ignatius, a dialogue
    between Dr. Carla Garapedian and Prof. Peter Balakian, and comments by
    members of the NAASR leadership.

    `Fifty-five years ago my father got the bug for NAASR to help them set
    up endowed chairs at Harvard and UCLA in Armenian studies,' said MC
    Paul Ignatius. Ignatius served as Assistant Secretary of Defense and
    Secretary of the Navy during the Kennedy and Johnson presidential
    administrations. His father, Hovsep, an immigrant from Kharpert, was
    involved in many Armenian causes including efforts at the inception of
    NAASR to keep Armenian history alive for future generations. Ignatius,
    in his concise and witty opening remarks, emphasized that NAASR
    continues to be a uniquely important organization that needs to be
    supported by all who value scholarship and increased knowledge about
    Armenian subjects.

    Ignatius introduced acclaimed documentary filmmaker Garapedian and
    writer and scholar Balakian, who engaged in a half-hour-long
    discussion on the topic of `Scholarship and the Pursuit of Justice.'

    Garapedian and Balakian discussed the fraudulent academic apparatus
    supported by the Turkish government to further their project of denial
    of the Armenian Genocide. Balakian spoke of the need to counter this
    campaign both through scholarship and through the kind of informed
    activism that scholarship makes possible. He pointed to the example of
    the exposure and shaming of Princeton's Heath Lowry by Robert Jay
    Lifton in the 1990s, when it was found that Lowry was working closely
    with the Turkish Embassy in Washington, DC, as a key moment in
    demonstrating the relationship between academia and the Turkish state.
    The publicity surrounding this affair had brought the denial issue out
    in the open in the mid-1990s.

    Although - or perhaps because - the Armenian Genocide today receives
    far greater coverage in scholarly work, on television, and in social
    media than in previous decades, denial persists. The discussion turned
    to Turkey's attempt to pressure the Rwanda Genocide Museum to remove
    materials on the Armenian Genocide. A last-hour effort by genocide
    scholars and writers, including Balakian, who had gathered there to
    give a symposium helped to block that effort.

    Similarly, in 2005 there was a Turkish-supported attempt in England to
    have the Parliament officially repudiate the authenticity and validity
    of the Bryce/Toynbee Blue Book (aka The Treatment of Armenians in the
    Ottoman Empire 1915-1916). This effort ultimately failed and led to
    noted British human rights lawyer Geoffrey Robertson writing a report
    titled `Was There an Armenian Genocide?' which was highly critical of
    Turkish-led denial and British acquiescence.

    Revisionist historiography by Turkish and Azeri scholars has picked up
    speed and needs a large number of trained scholars to answer their
    claims. Garapedian and Balakian stressed the need for financial
    support of institutions such as NAASR to enable increased grants to
    deserving researchers and scholars, and the importance of continued
    `cultural production' in various media and forums in order keep
    Armenian history and culture alive and moving forward.

    As Balakian stated at the conclusion: `We need to move into a much
    higher level of professionalism, it needs to involve creative thinking
    and needs to be proactive. It should be emerging as we walk out
    tonight.'

    After a lively question-and-answer session, representatives from the
    NAASR Board's Executive Committee were introduced to provide an update
    to the audience concerning the present status and future goals of
    NAASR. Raffi Yeghiayan, NAASR Board Chairman, welcomed the guests and
    introduced Marc Mamigonian, NAASR Director of Academic Affairs, who
    briefly reviewed the history of NAASR since its inception in 1955 and
    its early efforts to establish the first chair in Armenian Studies at
    Harvard and subsequently the second at UCLA. Taking special note of
    NAASR's renewed high level of activity in Southern California, thanks
    to the efforts of current board members Roat and Ketabgian, as well as
    former board member Dr. Rubina Peroomian, Mamigonian also pointed to
    the close working relationship with the Ararat-Eskijian Museum in
    Mission Hills, whose director, Maggie Mangassarian-Goschin, serves on
    NAASR's Southern California committee.

    Next, he detailed some of the tasks that NAASR performs at the
    present, including organizing and collaborating on lectures and other
    public programs; providing research/publication grants; maintaining an
    extensive library; functioning as a communication hub for scholars;
    assisting researchers; distributing books on Armenian subjects;
    publishing; and organizing heritage trips to Historic Armenia led by
    prominent scholars. As did Garapedian and Balakian, he emphasized that
    it is crucial that NAASR substantially increase its capacity to
    provide grants and support for scholars and vital projects.

    He was followed by Yervant Chekijian, who explained the establishment
    of the Leadership Circle as an upper level of annual support, which
    will allow NAASR to expand upon the work it currently performs.
    Chekijian emphasized the importance of members of the community
    showing leadership by taking responsibility for the strengthening of
    institutions such as NAASR that support scholarship and preserve
    Armenian history and culture.

    The evening came to an end with former Chairman Nancy Kolligian
    thanking the speakers, the MC and the host, as well as the organizing
    committee. After dessert as the guests were leaving, each received a
    signed copy of The Burning Tigris by Balakian.


    From: Baghdasarian
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