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Launching of the publication of the English translation of Hrant Guz

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  • Launching of the publication of the English translation of Hrant Guz

    Armenian Missionary Association of America
    Louisa Janbazian PR/Communications Coordinator
    31 West Century Road
    Paramus, NJ 07652
    www.amaa.org
    Cell: 201.745.7496


    Launching of the English Translation of Hrant Guzelian's Book
    The Youth Home of Istanbul: A Story of the Remnants'
    By Elzie Kalfayan

    GLENDALE, April 7, 2015 - The Youth Home of Istanbul: A Story of the
    Remnants' Homecoming release in English on the cusp of the Armenian
    Genocide Centennial fittingly honors author Hrant Guzelian's battle
    against the last stages of Genocide. Guzelian rescued hundreds of
    Armenian youth decades after the genocide, including a young protégé
    Hrant Dink, who became a fearless journalist in Turkey.

    The book's publication by the Armenian Missionary Association of
    America (AMAA) was made possible by a donation from Dr. H Steven and
    Julie Aharonian and Dr. Vicken and Sossy Aharonian, in loving memory
    of their father Rev. Dr. Hovhannes Aharonian, who was a staunch
    supporter of Hrant Guzelian's mission and Godfather to the name `Youth
    Home of Istanbul.'

    `Reading this book in 2007, I was convinced that there was an
    obligation to share it beyond an Armenian readership,' said Zaven
    Khanjian, Executive Director/CEO of the AMAA. `Scholars and historians
    should read Guzelian's eye-witness account of cultural destruction in
    the countryside of Western Armenia, encounters with inhumane Turkish
    officials bent on denial and oppression, and conviction and action in
    countering an existential threat.'

    The Joint Armenian Genocide Centennial Committee of the AMAA and the
    Armenian Evangelical Union of North American launched the English
    translation of the book in a program attended by close to 200 people,
    held at The Armenian Society of Los Angeles April 7. Hasmig Baran,
    Ed.D., served as the Mistress of Ceremonies.

    The program's speakers stressed three themes: ACT, PACT, and
    IMPACT. ACT, covered by Edwin Minassian, Esq., Chair of the Istanbul
    Armenians Board of Trustees and Executive Board Member of the Armenian
    Bar Association, set the scene for Guzelian's work. Turkey in the
    1940s and 50s oppressed minorities with high taxes, property seizures,
    and police state surveillance. `Right after pogroms targeting
    Armenians and Greeks in the mid-50s, Guzelian launched his mission,
    despite the environment. He had resolve, and strong faith that his
    mission was essential. He knew that this was an existential struggle.'
    Minassian noted, `There's a lot in the book about how Guzelian dealt
    with his arrest in 1980, and about Hrant Dink.'

    PACT, explained by Rev. Vatche Ekmekjian, AEUNA representative on the
    Syrian Armenian Relief Fund and Member of the AEUNA Armenian Heritage
    Committee, describes an interaction between two parties. `Hrant
    Guzelian entered a pact of grace with God. He knew he was the weaker
    party, and faith is the most elemental aspect of this kind of
    pact. Guzelian countered the `Turkification' of Armenian youth; he was
    fighting against the forcible transfer of children away from their
    ethnic identity [defined in Article 2 of the Geneva Convention as a
    genocidal act]. He went to search for the lost and the hopeless,
    paralleling the gospel story.'

    Ekmekjian told the audience that his short encounter with Guzelian, in
    Yerevan in 2006, had `a magnificent psychological and emotional impact
    on me. Even before my encounter with him, my reading of his book in
    Armenian was a blessing, and I had encountered many people who had
    been blessed and served by his ministry.'

    Zaven Khanjian summarized Guzelian's IMPACT. He recited a passage in the
    memoir:
    `The state has been unfair, evil, oppressive, unfeeling and
    biased. Envying our mores, instead of following with virtuous
    jealousy, learning and attaining high level, the Turk wanted to
    annihilate us, usurping, appropriating, insulting, and depriving us of
    our most basic rights, the language, the faith, the culture=85I
    thought, what can I do in some measure to do my share and be useful to
    the remnants of my nation?'

    `Useful, he was!' said Khanjian. `The impact this man had was
    tremendous, not only on the life of a few thousand Armenian youngsters
    who passed through the gates of The Youth Home of Istanbul, but on
    Turkish society and politics, the reverberations of which will
    continue for times unknown.'
    Khanjian noted that Guzelian took Hrant Dink, whose parents were
    divorced and whose father's whereabouts were unknown, into the Gedik
    Pasha Armenian Evangelical School's Youth Home of Istanbul at the age
    of seven. For twenty years, 1961-1981, Dink was under the patronage of
    Guzelian, and for five additional years, he carried the torch of the
    church and the mission. Dink became editor-in-chief of the bilingual
    Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos;
    advocated for human and minority rights in Turkey; and criticized
    Turkey's denial of the Armenian Genocide. His assassination in 2007 in
    Istanbul outraged many Turkish citizens, caused widespread protests,
    and brought world-wide attention to continuing persecution of
    minorities in Turkey.

    Of the book, Khanjian noted, `Narrated by Guzelian in simple language
    and a humble Christian spirit, it is not literary nor is it written in
    glowing style.' These limitations are more than balanced out by the
    power of Guzelian's memories. He captures the Catch-22 tenor of
    confrontations with intolerant officials, inspires the reader with
    frequent references to scripture as his primary guide to action, and
    shows great insight on ways to `fly under the radar' in a hostile
    political environment.

    The AMAA was a long-standing supporter of The Youth Home of Istanbul,
    and in the book Guzelian credits its leaders, as well as leaders of
    the Union of the Armenian Evangelical Churches in the Near East, for
    their faithful and generous support of the Home and of the summer camp
    he established in Tuzla.

    The Joint Armenian Genocide Centennial Committee celebrates the life
    and work of a worthy, unsung Armenian Evangelical hero with the
    publication of this book in English and has succeeded in bringing the
    story of his fight against the genocidal crimes of Turkey to the
    attention of the world.

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