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USC exhibition Documents Armenian Relief Efforts

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  • USC exhibition Documents Armenian Relief Efforts

    PRESS RELEASE
    University of Southern California Libraries
    Contact: Tyson Gaskill, 213.740.2070 or [email protected]
    Susan L. Wampler 213.821.1639 or [email protected]

    October 22, 2004

    Exhibition Documents Armenian Relief Efforts


    LOS ANGELES - Decades before the Holocaust, the genocide of the Armenian
    people effectively destroyed an entire nation, leaving more than 1.5
    million dead and millions displaced from a homeland they had occupied
    for nearly 3,000 years. A new exhibition at the University of Southern
    California's Edward L. Doheny Jr. Memorial Library documents the massive
    relief efforts of the Near East Foundation to help survivors of the
    atrocities.

    In conjunction with the opening of the display, the USC Libraries, the
    Institute of Armenian Studies and the Armenian Student Association will
    host a reception and book signing in Doheny Library on Friday, November
    11, at 11 a.m., featuring Professor Peter Balakian (Colgate University),
    author of the recent bestselling book The Burning Tigris. The reception
    is free and open to the public.

    The genocide of the Armenian people, perpetrated by the Ottoman Turkish
    government while most other nations were occupied by the events of World
    War I, has been condemned as a crime against humanity yet remains a
    largely forgotten part of history.

    On the night of April 24, 1915, Armenian political, religious,
    educational, and intellectual leaders in Constantinople (now, Istanbul)
    were arrested and murdered when a triumvirate of extremist Turkish
    nationals took control of the region in an effort to eliminate the
    Armenian people and create a Pan-Turkic empire that spread to Central
    Asia.

    In the years that followed, the Turkish government ordered the deaths or
    deportation of Armenians to `relocation centers' in the barren deserts
    of Syria and Mesopotamia. The greatest torment was reserved for women
    and children run ragged for months over mountains and across deserts.
    Hundreds of thousands died of starvation and exposure to the elements.

    In the decade following the genocide, the New York-based Near East
    Relief (since renamed the Near East Foundation) raised more than $100
    million to help the surviving Armenians, Assyrians, Syrians, Greeks and
    other victims of the Ottoman Turks' depredations. The Near East
    Foundation has since grown into a major international development
    organization with projects in dozens of countries.

    This exhibition documents the relief efforts of the foundation through
    letters, posters, books and other rare artifacts, along with a
    multimedia presentation showing some of the few known photographs of the
    Armenian genocide, taken by the German army officer Armin T. Wegner.

    The exhibition continues in the ground floor rotunda of Doheny Library
    through Sunday, January 30, 2005; admission is free.


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