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Armenian Study Center To Debut At UCLA

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  • Armenian Study Center To Debut At UCLA

    ARMENIAN STUDY CENTER TO DEBUT AT UCLA

    Glendale News-Press (California)
    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
    June 12, 2013 Wednesday

    Kelly Corrigan, Glendale News-Press, Calif.

    June 12--An allotment of Armenian books and cultural artifacts linked
    to the country's history and diaspora following the 1915 genocide will
    debut at UCLA in the first permanent research program of its kind
    at any major American university dedicated to Armenian archaeology
    and ethnography.

    The collection was given to UCLA with a $2-million gift from Zaruhy
    Sara Chitjian to establish a research program that will serve as a
    major resource for scholars around the world on Armenia's cultural
    heritage, stakeholders announced this week.

    Chitjian's gift will pave the way for more research projects related
    to Armenian history and anthropology and fund public lectures and
    graduate-student conferences.

    "Studying the ethnographic artifacts of recent age is an important
    means of understanding the past of this still thriving culture,"
    Chitjian said in a statement.

    Named after Chitjian's parents, the Hampartzoum and Ovsanna Chitjian
    collection features letters and artifacts that will be housed at
    UCLA's Cotsen Institute under director Charles Stanish.

    "Each acquisition not only provides insight into a small portion of
    this tragic but heroic drama, but also provides a window into dozens
    of new questions and areas of inquiry," Stanish said in a statement
    announcing the program.

    Roughly 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks during
    the Armenian genocide from 1915 to 1923 -- an event that destroyed
    cities and cultural artifacts.

    Chitjian's father survived the Armenian genocide, eventually making
    his way to safety by walking through eastern Turkey.

    "With the work at the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, the Armenian
    identity and Armenian people -- past and present -- can be respected
    and appreciated for the contributions of their 3,000-year history,"
    Chitjian said.

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