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Visiting Professor to Explain WWI Armenian Genocide

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  • Visiting Professor to Explain WWI Armenian Genocide

    Targeted News Service
    March 20, 2015 Friday 2:44 AM EST

    Visiting Professor to Explain WWI Armenian Genocide

    SLIPPERY ROCK, Pa.


    Slippery Rock University issued the following news release:

    Steven Usitalo, associate professor of history at Northern State
    University, will present "The Armenian Genocide: Origins, Nature and
    Consequences" at 6 p.m., March 26, in Slippery Rock University's Smith
    Student Center Ballroom.

    The presentation is part of the SRU history department's yearlong
    examination of World War I at its 100th anniversary.

    Usitalo, a Russian history expert, authored the 2013 "The Invention of
    Mikhail Lomonosov: A Russian National Myth." He co-edited "Russian and
    Soviet History." His doctorate degree in Russian history is from
    McGill University.

    The genocide, traditionally called the "great crime" by Armenians, was
    the Ottoman government's extermination of its minority Armenian
    subjects living within the present-day Turkey. The total number of
    people killed has been estimated at 1 and 1.5 million, according to
    Wikipedia.

    "During the First World War, the leadership of the Ottoman Empire
    executed a series of decisions that resulted in the deaths of more
    than a million Armenians-many deaths also occurred among other subject
    peoples of the empire," Usitalo said. "This was the first
    state-organized genocide. It resulted directly from the rise in
    organic nationalism, and population engineering that made the First
    World War a watershed in ushering in a era of state sponsored,
    popularly-driven and supported ethnic cleansing by regimes of targeted
    populations."

    Historians consider April 24, 1915, as the start date of the Armenian Genocide.

    Ottoman authorities arrested 240 Armenian intellectuals in
    Constantinople. According to Wikipedia, the killing of people was
    carried out during World War I in two phases. Men were massacred in
    forced labor camps. Women, children and the elderly were marched to
    their deaths in the Syrian Desert.

    At the height of its powers, in the 17th-century, the Ottoman Empire
    contained 32 provinces in southeast Europe, Southwest Asia (Anatolian
    peninsula), the Caucasus, the Arab Middle East, and North Africa. The
    empire collapsed during World War I and its aftermath and dissolved in
    1922.

    Usitalo also teaches on the history of science and film.

    Usitalo's presentation is the second focusing on the political
    activities of the Ottoman Empire. An earlier speaker explained how
    World War I ended the empire. Other guest professors have talked about
    black soldiers in the war.

    World War I, centered in Europe, resulted in 10 million military
    personnel deaths and seven million civilians, according to Wikipedia.

    Usitalo's lecture is made possible by the Campus Outreach Lecture
    Program of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum's Jack, Joseph and
    Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, support by the
    Jerome A. Yavitz Charitable Foundation, Inc. and Arlyn S. and Stephen
    H. Cypen.

    Contact: K.E. Schwab, 724/738-2199, [email protected]

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