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Genocide Recognition, Turkey-Armenia Relations, Role of the Diaspora

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  • Genocide Recognition, Turkey-Armenia Relations, Role of the Diaspora

    PRESS RELEASE
    ARPA Institute
    18106 Miranda St. Tarzana, CA 91356
    Contact: Hagop Panossian
    Tel: (818) 586-9660
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.arpainstitute.org/

    ARPA Institute presents the Lecture/Seminar:
    `Massacres, Resistance, Protectors of the Armenians
    and Assyrians in the 1915 Genocide" " by Dr. David
    Gaunt, on Friday, May 11, 2007 at 7: 30 PM at the
    Merdinian School auditorium.

    The Address is 13330 Riverside Dr., Sherman Oaks, CA
    91403. Directions: on the 101 FWY exit on Woodman, go
    north and turn right on Riverside Dr.

    Abstract: The lecture will discuss what happened to
    the Armenian and Assyrian populations living in the
    provinces of Diyarbakir, Bitlis, Van and Iranian
    Azerbaijan during World War I. This will be based on
    extensive use of primary sources in Turkish, Russian,
    Iranian as well as Western archives. Also previously
    unused witness testimonies and oral history will be
    used. This is a region where Armenians and Assyrians
    lived side by side in the cities and had rural
    villages close to each other. Often the Armenians
    would be seized first and the Assyrian sources explain
    what happened, then came the turn for the Assyrians.
    In some places both groups put up a common defense,
    for instance Antranik's volunteer brigades had
    Assyrians fighting side by side with the Armenians.
    Some Assyrian tribes joined the Russian army that was
    on its way to relieve Van and fought with the Turks.
    The greater part of the massacres, ethnic cleansings
    and other atrocities occurred between May and
    September of 1915, and the extent of population loss
    was close to 90% in the Diyarbakir province. The
    latter was also used as killing fields for deportation
    caravans coming from the north. The lecture will be
    based on the recent book Massacres, Resistance,
    Protectors: Muslim-Christian relations in Eastern
    Anatolia during World War I (Piscataway, N. J.:
    Gorgias Pres 2006).

    David Gaunt is professor of history at Södertörn
    University College in Stockholm, Sweden. This
    university is in the midst of one of the largest
    Assyrian Diaspora communities in the world. He is a
    social historian and has previously written primarily
    on the Scandinavian workers movement, and family
    history. A few years ago he began with genocide
    studies and edited Resistance and Collaboration in the
    Holocaust: Belarus, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania (Bern
    2004).

    For more Information Please call Dr. Hagop Panossian
    at (818) 586-9660
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