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Sonoma State University Center for the Study of Holocaust & Genocide

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  • Sonoma State University Center for the Study of Holocaust & Genocide

    Armenian National Committee - Western Region
    104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200
    Glendale, California 91206
    Phone: 818.500.1918
    Fax: 818.246.7353
    [email protected]
    www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    November 24, 2008
    Contact: Ani Garabedian



    Sonoma State University Center for the Study of Holocaust and Genocide
    Promotes Armenian Genocide Awareness
    What began twenty-six years ago as a lecture series to promote
    understanding and awareness of the Holocaust has been transformed into
    a series on all genocides that have affected people from all over the
    world, from all walks of life and with a special awareness of the
    Armenian Genocide.

    In Rohnert Park, California, about a one-hour drive north of the
    Golden Gate Bridge, Sonoma State University's (SSU) Center for the
    Study of the Holocaust and Genocide recognized the powerful impact
    that this lecture series has had on students and the wider community.
    That effort has manifested into a tangible, one of a kind project
    that will bring a new dimension and sensitivity to the North Bay of
    the greater San Francisco area.

    SSU is facilitating the establishment of a Holocaust and Genocide
    Memorial Grove on the campus, a multi-genocidal monument which will
    honor and memorialize all those who have suffered and have been
    victimized as a result of genocide. Funds for the establishment of
    the grove are in the process of being raised from private citizens
    with in-kind donations from several, mostly local businesses. No
    public money is being spent on this project.

    The lecture series, which was established by the SSU Center for the
    Study of Holocaust and Genocide, has become a university staple over
    the past 26 years - a class for students and the community alike. SSU
    Dean of Social Sciences, Elaine Leeder, PhD who plays an active role
    not only with the Memorial Grove but also with the Armenian, Cambodian
    and Rwandan communities, says that over the years the lecture series
    has broadened to envelop other genocides beyond the Holocaust and now
    brings a greater diversity and awareness to the universality of
    suffering. The lecture series seeks to study the nature of hate and to
    prevent the escalation of prejudice into genocide. This change from
    being focused on the Holocaust to all genocides stemmed from the
    interest and the desire to end this relentless cycle.

    Six years ago, SSU Director for the Center of the Holocaust and
    Genocide, Myrna Goodman, PhD, engaged Bay Area Armenian-American
    Christyne Davidian with the Center after learning Ms. Davidian was
    involved with establishing a local grassroots community organization
    called Armenians of the North Bay. Ms. Davidian has since provided a
    significant role in broadening an Armenian focus during the lecture
    series. Ms. Davidian founded the Armenian Genocide Memorial Lecture
    Fund at SSU to ensure that the Armenian Genocide was included annually
    in the lecture series. This fund has supported notable scholars,
    including Robert Krikorian, PhD, Robert Hewsen, PhD, and Richard
    Hovanessian, PhD, to lecture about the atrocities endured by the
    Armenian people committed by the Ottoman Empire.

    Genocide memorials have sprung up all over the world. None are as
    distinctive as the one being built on the SSU campus due to the
    efforts by Dr. Leeder, the SSU Center and the lecture series. The
    installation and sculpture component of the memorial grove will
    provide students and the community a venue to come together to honor
    the lives lost in genocide, beginning with the Native American
    genocide to present day Darfur.

    The Grove will provide a compelling context in which participant
    groups, including Armenians, Cambodians, Native American, Rwandans,
    and those from the Holocaust, can honor and recognize friends,
    ancestors and villages, providing a secular setting for closure and
    remembrance.

    Created by Associate Professor of Sculpture Jann Nunn, the sculpture's
    design consists of two 40-foot-long railroad tracks. The converging
    steel lines meet at a ten-foot tall glass tower, which will be
    internally illuminated from dawn to dusk. In the eyes of the artist,
    the illuminated tower represents the hope that through the efforts of
    education and tolerance such as those taught at SSU, that the
    incidents of genocide will diminish as society moves forward into the
    21st century.

    Five hundred and twenty [520] ivory colored memorial bricks will be
    placed in the position of railroad ties relative to the steel tracks.
    Each brick will be laser-inscribed with selected genocide logos,
    names, and memorial expressions.

    The Armenian Genocide Memorial Bricks will include an Armenian logo
    image adapted from an ancient Armenian symbol representing "eternal
    life" found on ancient churches, khatchkars (cross stones), and
    graves. This brick logo was rendered from the symbol etched on the
    eternal flame at Tsitsernakaberd, the Armenian Genocide monument in
    Armenia. The 12 swirls represent the 12 lost provinces where the
    Armenians lived before the Genocide took place.

    Proceeds from brick donations will be placed in the Armenian Genocide
    Memorial Lecture Fund at SSU. Donations to this project are carried
    out under the auspicious of a 501(C)(3) and may be deductible for tax
    purposes.

    Members and friends of the Armenian Community are encouraged to
    participate in this project by purchasing a brick inscribed to loved
    ones, with expressions, or for organizations. Two sizes are available:

    At the $100 level -- 4"x8" with up to three rows of engraving, each
    row containing up to 20 characters

    At the $250 level -- 8"x8" with up to six rows of engraving, each row
    containing up to 20 characters.

    Brick orders placed by November 30, 2008 are guaranteed to be included
    in the sculpture which is scheduled for dedication in Spring 2009.
    Brick installments will continue after opening ceremony based on
    minimum order lots.

    A video on the project may be viewed at the link:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=12BhX_oMQhw.

    For Armenian Genocide Brick Orders forms and more information, please
    visit the Holocaust and Genocide Memorial Grove Project link at:
    http://www.sonoma.edu/holocaust/center.htm.

    T he Armenian National Committee - Western Region is the largest and
    most influential Armenian American Grassroots advocacy organization in
    the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of
    offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States
    and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANC-WR advances
    the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of
    issues.
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