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AGMA: Amb Morgenthau's Personal Library Donated To The AGMA

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  • AGMA: Amb Morgenthau's Personal Library Donated To The AGMA

    PRESS RELEASE
    For Immediate Release
    November 24, 2009
    Contact: Press Office
    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: (202) 383-9009


    AMBASSADOR MORGENTHAU'S PERSONAL LIBRARY DONATED TO THE ARMENIAN
    GENOCIDE MUSEUM OF AMERICA

    Washington, DC - The personal library of U.S. Ambassador Henry
    Morgenthau, renowned for his extraordinary efforts to bring American
    and international attention to the Turkish government's deportation
    and massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, has been donated to
    the Armenian Genocide Museum of America (AGMA) in Washington, DC.

    "We are extremely grateful to the Morgenthau family for entrusting
    this invaluable collection of books to the museum, which provides a
    window into the breadth and depth of the Ambassador's intellectual
    acumen and his humanitarian outlook," said Van Z. Krikorian, museum
    trustee and chairman of the project's Building and Operations
    Committee. "In the pantheon of heroes who have fought against
    genocide, the Morgenthau name is legendary. This collection is
    priceless and wonderful Thanksgiving news," added Krikorian.
    The gift of Ambassador Morgenthau's personal library, which has been
    privately held by his family since his death in 1946, comes to AGMA
    from Henry Morgenthau III, the son of Henry Morgenthau, Jr., and the
    grandson of the Ambassador. In making the gift to AGMA, Henry
    Morgenthau III said "I am only putting Ambassador Morgenthau's effects
    where they belong."

    Ambassador Morgenthau's personal library includes books he acquired
    during his term of service in the Ottoman Empire, and others obtained
    in preparation for his diplomatic posting to expand his knowledge of
    the region, its history and people. The collection also includes
    Ambassador Morgenthau's autographed copy of the official State
    Department publication "Instructions to the Diplomatic Officers of the
    United States," which he was provided upon his appointment.

    Krikorian said the Ambassador Morgenthau collection will be used by
    the research library, and to enhance the museum's exhibits depicting
    the Ambassador's life and work. Ambassador Morgenthau was a
    naturalized American from a German Jewish family and a successful
    lawyer active in Democratic Party politics. With the election of
    President Woodrow Wilson, he was appointed United States Ambassador to
    the Sublime Porte in 1913.

    "Ambassador Morgenthau played a central role in documenting the
    Armenian Genocide, and the items related to his diplomatic service are
    critical pieces of his life story," Krikorian said. "No one individual
    before Ambassador Morgenthau had so prominently alerted the
    international community to the consequences of the mass atrocities
    perpetrated against the Armenian population in Ottoman Turkey and
    analyzed the mechanisms of a state system devised to extinguish an
    entire people. Remarkably, the recent publication of Talaat Pasha's
    diary dispositively confirms what Ambassador Morgenthau reported and
    wrote at the beginning of the last century."

    While in Constantinople, Ambassador Morgenthau had personal contact
    with the Young Turk leaders of the Ottoman Empire and architects of
    the Armenian Genocide, especially the Minister of the Interior,
    Talaat. When news of the deportations and massacres began to reach
    the Embassy in April 1915, Ambassador Morgenthau attempted to
    intervene to alleviate the plight of the Armenian population. He
    forwarded to Washington the stream of alarming reports he received
    from U.S. consulates in the interior of the Ottoman Empire that
    detailed the extent of the measures taken against the Armenians.

    On July 16, 1915, Morgenthau cabled the U.S. Department of State his
    own dispatch whose alarm resonates to this day. He called the Young
    Turk policy of deportation "a campaign of race extermination." In
    effect, he became the first person to officially transmit to the
    American government news that a state-sponsored systematic genocide
    was underway.

    Drained by his disappointment in averting this disaster, Ambassador
    Morgenthau returned to the United States in 1916. For the remainder of
    the war years he dedicated himself to raising funds for the surviving
    Armenians. Ambassador Morgenthau was particularly instrumental in the
    founding of the Near East Relief organization which became the main
    U.S. private agency to deliver critical assistance to the survivors of
    the Armenian Genocide.

    To bring his case to the attention of the public, he published
    "Ambassador Morgenthau's Story" in 1918, a memoir of his years in
    Turkey in which he stressed the German influence and role in the
    Ottoman Empire. While he held Germany responsible for starting World
    War I, he placed the blame for the atrocities committed against the
    Armenians entirely upon the shoulders of the Young Turk Ittihadist
    cabinet which he characterized as a violently radical regime.

    Ambassador Morgenthau titled the chapter on the Armenians "The Murder
    of a Nation," and described the deportations and the atrocities as a
    "cold-blooded, calculating state policy." He avowed at the time "I am
    confident that the whole history of the human race contains no such
    horrible episode as this."

    Coinciding with the announcement of the gift to AGMA is the launch of
    a special exhibit titled "The Morgenthaus" A Legacy of Service," at
    the Jewish Heritage Museum in New York City. The exhibit features
    Robert M. Morgenthau, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., and Henry Morgenthau,
    Sr., three men who courageously spoke out against injustice when no
    one else would. They represent more than a century of one family's
    dedication to public service. Henry Morgenthau, Jr. served as
    Secretary of the Treasury on President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's
    cabinet during the Great Depression and World War II. As the
    longest-serving district attorney in New York City, Robert M.
    Morgenthau effected far-reaching change in the legal system, and
    inspired new generations of professionals and public servants. The
    exhibition explores the ways in which three generations of a family
    raised awareness of tragedy around the world, and in doing so changed
    the course of world events, American politics, and Jewish history.
    In her Pulitzer Prize-winning book A Problem from Hell: America and
    the Age of Genocide, Samantha Power, who currently serves as Director
    of Multilateral Affairs on President Barack Obama's National Security
    Council, wrote:

    "In 1915 Henry Morgenthau, Sr., the U.S. Ambassador in Constantinople,
    responded to Turkey's deportation and slaughter of its Armenian
    minority by urging Washington to condemn Turkey and pressure its
    wartime ally Germany. Morgenthau also defied diplomatic convention by
    personally protesting the atrocities, denouncing the regime, and
    raising money for humanitarian relief."
    Ambassador Morgenthau's personal library is the sixth significant
    collection of Genocide-era and post-Genocide-era materials which, in
    the past two years, have been donated or made available for use by
    AGMA. AGMA has been granted access to the archives of the Near East
    Foundation and the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute in Yerevan,
    Armenia.

    The Armenian Genocide Museum of America is an outgrowth of the
    Armenian Assembly of America and the Armenian National Institute
    (ANI), catalyzed by the initial pledge of Anoush Mathevosian toward
    building such a museum in Washington, DC.


    ###

    NR#2009-07
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