Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian museum's planners fight donor

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian museum's planners fight donor

    Daily Breeze, CA
    Oct 13 2007


    Armenian museum's planners fight donor

    Organizers of U.S. genocide memorial say backer interfered. He says
    he was forced out.

    By Stephen Manning
    The Associated Press

    WASHINGTON - As diplomatic tensions flare over a House committee's
    approval of a resolution labeling the World War I-era killings of
    Armenians in Turkey as genocide, another dispute has roiled plans to
    build a museum and memorial to the victims.

    In a series of lawsuits, the Armenian Genocide Museum and Memorial
    and its backers are wrestling with a major donor over control and
    finances of the long-planned project honoring the hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians who died between 1915 and 1917. The memorial
    would be the first permanent exhibit dedicated to the subject outside
    of Armenia.

    Museum organizers say the litigation won't affect the redevelopment
    of a former bank just a few blocks from the White House. First
    conceived in the 1990s, the museum recently signed contracts for
    design and planning of the 35,000-square-foot facility.

    But a major funder, retired Armenian-American publisher Gerard
    Cafesjian, has filed several lawsuits that seek to reclaim much of
    the $15 million in money and property he donated. Cafesjian claims
    the museum has forced him out of the project and significantly scaled
    it down.

    "Mr. Cafesjian is the museum," said his attorney, Tim Thornton.
    "Gerry Cafesjian is 90 percent responsible for everything the museum
    has."

    The museum has countersued, claiming Cafesjian is meddling with real
    estate titles for the bank and other property to be used for the
    museum. The museum argues Cafesjian has tried to use the nonprofit
    venture for personal gain, and is trying to get his contributions
    back to cash in on a big increase in the property's value.

    "He has done everything he can to scuttle the building of the
    genocide museum," said Arnold Rosenfeld, an attorney for the
    nonprofit group behind the project.

    The museum is intended to memorialize and study the killings of
    Armenians in the Turkish Ottoman Empire during World War I. Armenians
    claim it was a systematic genocide that killed 1.5 million people;
    Turkey says the death totals are inflated and that the killings were
    largely the result of internal civil strife, not organized mass
    murder.

    Earlier this week, the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed a
    resolution labeling the killings as genocide despite opposition from
    President Bush and Turkish-American groups. Turkish officials
    condemned the vote and Turkey's ambassador to the United States
    returned to Ankara this week for consultations.

    The Bush administration, worried about alienating a strategically
    important U.S. ally, is trying to patch up diplomatic relations with
    Turkey and has warned against passage of the resolution by the full
    House.

    Plans for the museum came out of the Armenian Assembly of America, a
    Washington-based advocacy group that helped push for the
    congressional resolution. According to court papers, assembly leaders
    in the 1990s approached Cafesjian, who agreed to use his foundation
    to help buy the bank for $7.25 million. Plans initially called for
    the museum to open by 2002 at a cost of $40million.

    Cafesjian, born to Armenian parents in the United States, came from a
    family that lost numerous relatives during the killings, according to
    Thornton. He was a top executive for Minnesota-based legal publisher
    West Publishing, retiring after it was sold to Thompson Corp. in
    1996.

    Cafesjian, born to Armenian parents in the United States, came from a
    family that lost numerous relatives during the killings, according to
    Thornton. He was a top executive for Minnesota-based legal publisher
    West Publishing, retiring after it was sold to Thompson Corp. in
    1996.
Working...
X