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USC Shoah Honors George Clooney With Ambassador For Humanity Award

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  • USC Shoah Honors George Clooney With Ambassador For Humanity Award

    USC SHOAH HONORS GEORGE CLOONEY WITH AMBASSADOR FOR HUMANITY AWARD

    ByStaff
    - Posted on October 12, 2013Posted in: Appo Jabarian

    By Appo Jabarian
    Executive Publisher / Managing Editor
    USA Armenian Life Magazine

    October 12, 2013

    George Clooney was honored by film director and USC Shoah Foundation's
    founder Steven Spielberg, his co-star in the new movie "Gravity,"
    Sandra Bullock, and Jon Stewart of "The Daily Show" in New York city
    last week.

    Clooney's humanitarian work around the globe, especially in the Darfur
    region of Sudan brought the Hollywood heavyweights together at a
    major fundraising gala in the expansive "Whale Room" at New York's
    Museum of Natural History.

    Clooney was presented with Ambassador for Humanity Award by USC
    Shoah Foundation.

    Spielberg who gave Clooney his big break on the TV show "ER," said:
    "George is the best kind of humanitarian ... The humble humanitarian,"
    calling Clooney "an unparalleled example of action over apathy."

    Clooney told the audience members that "Our job is to make it hard
    for the bad guys to do what they're doing, and for the good guys
    to ignore it. ... We have to be able to keep a record of what the
    powerful can do to the powerless"

    The actor also praised Spielberg for his foundation's work in creating
    and preserving video testimonies of Holocaust victims for future
    generations to learn from.

    The gala marked the 20th anniversary of Spielberg's Oscar Award-winning
    Holocaust movie "Schindler's List," that according to Spielberg,
    gave him the idea to start a foundation that would record interviews
    with Holocaust survivors. To date, the foundation, founded in 1994
    and based since 2006 at the University of Southern California, has
    collected nearly 52,000 eyewitness testimonies on video - reportedly
    the largest digital collection of its kind in the world.

    In an Associated Press interview before the gala, Spielberg explained
    that a new, broader phase of the foundation's work, begun recently,
    involves collecting video testimonies from survivors of genocide
    in places like Rwanda, Cambodia, and Armenia. "The origins of hatred
    haven't gone away," the director said. The foundation has already begun
    its work with testimony from Rwanda. The other countries will follow.

    Spielberg said the only obstacle to further broadening the foundation's
    work is funding. It was announced during the event of around 800
    guests that nearly $3.7 million were raised.

    He noted that Holocaust survivors are fast dying out, an even more
    important reason to preserve their life stories on video - video that
    can be catalogued and indexed for easy access, which now makes up for
    much of the foundation's work. "The survivor community is vanishing,"
    he said. "Soon, it will only exist in cyberspace. But it's a powerful
    community. We hope that through these testimonies, the survivors can
    live forever," reported AP.

    As for the survivors of Armenian Genocide, they have all but vanished.

    But thanks to few dedicated filmmakers their testimonies have been
    recorded. 400 of those were successfully and single-handedly done by
    Armenian Film Foundation's founder J. Michael Hagopian.

    In April 2010, Dr. Hagopian and his wife, Antoinette, entered into an
    agreement with the USC Shoah Foundation to license the 400 testimonies
    to Shoah's Visual History Archive. Next month, Shoah will receive the
    digitized interviews from The Armenian Film Foundation. Upon delivery,
    these eyewitness accounts will be incorporated into the USC Shoah
    Foundation's Visual History Archive.

    In accepting the award, Clooney said the USC Shoah Foundation is
    doing an important job in keeping global atrocities in the spotlight.

    "Our job is to try to make it hard for the bad guys to deny they
    are doing what they're doing. ... It's really hard for bad things
    to happen in bright light. ... "It would be nice to make what we're
    doing here obsolete," he said.

    During a private pre-event conversation with Clooney and Spielberg I
    said: "Mr. Clooney, I'm a lifelong fan of your artistic achievements
    but most importantly, as an anti-genocide activist, I'm eternally
    grateful for and empowered by your contributions to the cause of all
    genocide victims."

    Turning to Spielberg, I said: "Mr. Spielberg, I applaud your
    groundbreaking work on behalf of survivors through USC Shoah
    Foundation; and as an Armenian American, I would like to thank you
    for the unique opportunity for cooperation between the USC Shoah
    Foundation and Armenian Film Foundation."

    "Thank you, Mr. Jabarian," kindly answered Spielberg.

    In his remarks to the audience, Clooney stressed that while the work
    Shoah does is important, the world would be a better place if such
    organizations didn't need to exist.

    Sadly humanity still hasn't eliminated the scourge of genocide. Even
    though 98 years have passed since the 1915 Armenian Genocide at the
    hands of Turkey; another 69 years since the Jewish Holocaust; another
    38 years since the 1975 Genocide in Cambodia; another 19 since the
    Rwanda Genocide, the international community still witnesses crimes
    against humanity - Genocide in Darfur.

    Spielberg also talked about the need to fight against the lull that
    can occur when time passes. "We've all heard the expression, 'Time
    heals all wounds,'" he said. "I don't like that expression. Time
    can sometimes let us forget that some people are slower to heal,
    they have sadness, still grieve and still have incredible loss."

    Sadness, grief and incredible loss, the survivors have - generation
    after generation.

    During several public appearances as a speaker or a panelist, I have
    asked members of second, third and even fourth (millennial) generation
    survivors of the genocide: "Who amongst you remembers the fact of
    being a child of victim people without experiencing grief and anger?

    Please raise your hands." Nobody does!

    I know firsthand that among Armenian Americans, the pain and suffering
    of being a child, a grandchild or a great grandchild of genocide
    survivors is omnipresent.

    Shoah is actively engaged in an international fund-raising campaign
    to ensure completion of the integration of the Armenian testimonies so
    that they can be presented to the world in time for the commemoration
    of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, in April 2015.

    "It's crucial that we take the vital and precious words of those
    who went through the Armenian Genocide and make their testimonies
    available for students, educators and scholars so that they can learn
    directly from these eyewitnesses of history," said Stephen Smith,
    executive director of the USC Shoah Foundation who this week was
    named the inaugural holder of the UNESCO Chair on Genocide Education.

    USC President C. L. Max Nikias noted that "[The testimonies] teach
    us that when vigilance fades, intolerance follows ... My university
    will forever safeguard the precious, life-affirming testimonies of
    the Visual History Archive. We shall not fail. We shall not falter. We
    shall not forget."

    During my conversation with Clooney and Spielberg, I added: "By the
    way, I'm a third generation survivor of the Armenian Genocide."

    Clooney responded: "So you know exactly what's going on!"

    "Absolutely!" was my answer.

    Of course my response could not be any different than literally
    millions of my Armenian peers worldwide - and for that matter, any
    peoples that have been struck by the calamity of genocide.

    http://www.armenianlife.com/2013/10/12/usc-shoah-honors-george-clooney-with-ambassador-for-humanity-award/

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