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AGBU Donates Computers to Armenian Genocide Museum in Yerevan

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  • AGBU Donates Computers to Armenian Genocide Museum in Yerevan

    AGBU Press Office
    55 East 59th Street
    New York, NY 10022-1112
    Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
    Fax: 212.319.6507
    Email: [email protected]
    Website: www.agbu.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    Wednesday, November 28, 2007

    AGBU Donates Computers to Armenian Genocide Museum in Yerevan, Armenia

    In a ceremony that took place on November 22, 2007 at the Armenian
    Genocide Museum-Institute, AGBU donated computer equipment, including
    desktops, printers and scanners, worth approximately $11,000 (USD) to
    the Yerevan-based museum. The Genocide Museum, which is a leading center
    of Armenian Genocide research, will use the donation to digitize its
    extensive documentation on the Armenian Holocaust, mount professional
    displays and exhibitions of documentary materials, and place documents
    on the museum's four-month-old English-language website:
    www.genocide-museum.am.

    Museum Director Hayk Demoyan commented at the ceremony, "The museum was
    facing a huge problem. We had to digitalize the archives, otherwise we
    risk losing them." He was thankful of AGBU's donation and he said that
    the modern equipment was essential to carrying out the mission of the
    Genocide Museum, which is to document one of the 20th century's greatest
    crimes against humanity.

    Director of the AGBU Armenian Representation Ashot Ghazarian remarked,
    "I am glad AGBU could contribute to a mission of such importance." He
    also added that the organization is eager to assist the museum in the
    realization of various future projects.

    Demoyan pointed out that, every year, new sources of information about
    the Armenian Genocide surface. He also explained that there are so many
    undiscovered and unexamined archives that await careful examination and
    which will illuminate some of the lesser known aspects of the
    catastrophe. He is planning to send museum employees to Europe, Russia
    and the Middle East, with a promise to organize a display of all the
    materials culled from these new sources. Furthermore, in the coming
    months, the museum is planning to publish a 10-volume monograph, which
    will include new translations of rare documentary materials.

    The director pointed out that the number of visitors to the Armenian
    Genocide Institute's English-only website is doubling every month, and
    the site has plans to expand into a multilingual site, which will
    welcome Armenian, French, Russian and Turkish-language users.

    AGBU's recent donation is the latest in a series of contributions that
    began with the founding of the museum in 1995.

    For more information on AGBU and its worldwide programs, please visit
    www.agbu.org.
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