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ANI: Survivors of The Armenian Genocide: 31 Oral History Project Wit

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  • ANI: Survivors of The Armenian Genocide: 31 Oral History Project Wit

    PRESS RELEASE
    Date: April 20, 2015

    ARMENIAN NATIONAL INSTITUTE
    Contact: Press Office
    Telephone: (202) 383-9009
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: www.armenian-genocide.org


    SURVIVORS OF THE Armenian Genocide: 31 ORAL HISTORY PROJECT WITNESSES DEPICTED


    WASHINGTON, DC - On the occasion of the beginning of the week of
    centennial commemorations, the Armenian National Institute (ANI), Armenian
    Genocide Museum of America (AGMA), and Armenian Assembly of America
    (Assembly) announced the release of a one-panel exhibit titled `Survivors
    of the Armenian Genocide.'

    The exhibit features 31 survivors who participated in the Armenian Assembly
    of America Oral History Project in the 1970s and 1980s. The portraits were
    retrieved from the Assembly's archives and illustrates survivors from
    across the United States.

    Each individual is identified by name, place, year of birth, and their
    residence at the time of the interviews. They hailed from Afion-Karahissar,
    Aintab, Akshehir, Arabkir, Behesni, Charsanjak, Diayrbakir, Denizli,
    Hadjin, Harput, Kayseri, Kamakh, Keghi, Khjilar, Malatia, Manissa, Sivas,
    Tomarza, and Van.

    These survivors were living in California, Colorado, Connecticut,
    Pennsylvania, Illinois, Indiana, Massachusetts, Maryland, Ohio, and
    Wisconsin. They had been born in Armenia and Anatolia and became the
    founders of the Armenian American diaspora.

    `We remember and pay tribute to the survivors who participated in the
    Armenian Assembly of America Oral History Project,' reads the inscription
    on the panel, which goes on to explain that the portraits of the 31
    survivors are representative of the hundreds who were interviewed and gave
    oral testimony.

    `We cherish and honor their memory for taking the time to provide permanent
    witness to the fate of their friends and families, and for sharing their
    recollection of historic Armenia before its destruction in 1915,' the
    inscription concludes.

    As with the four exhibits previously released jointly by ANI, AGMA, and the
    Assembly, titled Witness to the Armenian Genocide: Photographs by the
    Perpetrators' German and Austro-Hungarian Allies; The First Refuge and
    the Last Defense: The Armenian Church, Etchmiadzin, and The Armenian
    Genocide; The First Deportation: The German Railroad, the American
    Hospital, and the Armenian Genocide; and Iconic Images of the Armenian
    Genocide; `Survivors of the Armenian Genocide' is also being issued in
    digital format for worldwide distribution free of charge on the occasion of
    the centennial of the Armenian Genocide.

    Founded in 1997, the Armenian National Institute (ANI) is a 501(c)(3)
    educational charity based in Washington, DC, and is dedicated to the study,
    research, and affirmation of the Armenian Genocide.

    ###

    ANI NR#: 2015-06

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