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  • He Shared Others' Pain

    HE SHARED OTHERS' PAIN
    by Vahan Arzumanyan

    KarabakhOpen
    03-05-2007 10:37:14

    The Armenian community of Kaunas district (Lithuania) decided to
    erect a monument to the famous explorer and humanist Fridtiof Nansen
    in gratitude for his aid to the Armenians saved from the Genocide in
    1915-1922 in Turkey. In 1925 the League of Nations instructed Nansen
    to study the possibilities of the problem of Armenians who ran from
    Turkey after the Genocide. Thanks to him several dozens of thousands
    of Armenians settled down in East Armenia and Syria.

    In July 2006 in the town of Bergen Vahan Arzumanyan, the head of the
    community, and the director of the Rekstensamlingene museum Espen
    Selvik signed an agreement on placing a monumental khachkar to Nansen
    in the yard of the museum. The museum is located in a picturesque
    district of Bergen, opposite the residence of the royal family of
    Norway. The sponsors of this project were Spartak Ter-Avetisyan, the
    head of the Armenian community Havatk in Lithuania, and the head of
    the Armenian community Garun in Vilnius Oleg Isayev.

    In January 2007 in Kaunas the Lithuanian sculptor Gvidas Shvenchenis
    started the creation of the monument designed by Vahan Arzumanyan. The
    monument carved of light green Swedish granite was opened on April
    21 in the framework of the Norwegian-Russian-Armenian celebrations
    in Bergen dedicated to Nansen.

    Representatives of Norwegian NGOs, the Russian delegation, the
    representatives of the Armenian Diaspora to Norway took part in the
    opening ceremony.

    Professor Arnljot Strømme Svendsen, Rekstensamlingene museum,
    addressed the opening ceremony. The grandson of Fridtiof Nansen Eigil
    Nansen said Nansen condemned the European policy of the declarative
    condemnation of the Genocide.

    Addressing the League of Nations, he called for placing universal
    values at the basis of the policy.

    He dedicated the monument after the address. Then the children's
    choir of Bergen sang the anthems of Armenia, Russia and Norway.

    The president of the Nansen Foundation, Vahan Arzumanyan, Spartak
    Ter-Avetisyan, and Oleg Isayev also addressed the ceremony. The
    director of the museum Espen Selvik said in an interview with the
    correspondent of the Public TV of Armenia in Karabakh Narine Aghabalyan
    although Norway, the homeland of the great humanist, has not recognized
    the genocide, the monument will mark the start of this process.

    Three days later on April 24 the corner of Armenia was opened
    at the museum and an evening of remembrance of the victims of
    the Armenian Genocide in Turkey was held. The photographs of the
    Canadian photographer were displayed, a film on Armenia was shown. The
    participants got acquainted with the documentary film on the events
    of 1992 in the village of Maragha, Karabakh, when within 4 hours the
    Azerbaijani OMON slaughtered almost the entire population of the
    village of Maragha. The film was created by the Tsir Katin Studio
    (director Narine Aghabalyan). All the four families of Bergen were
    present in the evening.

    --Boundary_(ID_UOG3K+JUqa5WL6/8FPmQOg)--
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