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  • Winning Hearts and Minds, One Person at a Time

    Winning Hearts and Minds, One Person at a Time

    http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/09/24/wi nning-hearts-and-minds-one-person-at-a-time/
    By Florence Avakian - on September 24, 2009

    SLEEPY HOLLOW, N.Y. - Azadouhi (named freedom) was an emaciated infant
    near death when she was rescued by the Near East Relief during the
    Armenian Genocide. Five years later, she had blossomed into a robust,
    intelligent, and playful child due to the dedicated care of this
    benevolent organization.

    Azadouhi was one of thousands of Armenian children rescued and cared
    for by the Near East Relief, which today is the worldwide
    philanthropic organization, the Near East Foundation (NEF). Currently,
    it actively operates in eight countries, including Armenia, Jordan,
    Morocco, Palestine, Sudan, and Syria.

    On Sat., Sept. 12, the Near East Foundation hosted a gala reception at
    the Rockefeller Archive Center in Sleepy Hollow to raise funds for its
    large collection of archival material spanning 94 years of
    philanthropic history. The collection includes documents, reports,
    photos, negatives, and even clothing, flags, and lace doilies made by
    the orphans. John D. Rockefeller was the first of many famous American
    donors to the Near East Relief even before it was founded, having
    supported Armenians during the 1896 Hamidian massacres.

    The Rockefeller Archive Center, located in the Sleepy Hollow
    Rockefeller estate surrounded by a bucolic and picturesque landscape,
    includes some 60 million documents, half a million photos, and 2,000
    films in 11 temperature-controlled vaults covering several
    20th-century philanthropies, including those from the Near East
    Foundation.

    The gathering included representatives from Armenia Fund USA, Ararat
    Import Export LLC, Museum of Jewish Heritage, Armenian Diocese
    (Eastern), Armenian Prelacy (Eastern), Armenian General Benevolent
    Union, Armenian Missionary Association of America, Armenian Assembly,
    Armenian Genocide Museum and Memorial, Armenian National Committee of
    America, Krikor and Clara Zohrab Information Center, St. Gregory the
    Enlightener Armenian Church of White Plains, Tufenkian Foundation,
    Rockefeller Archive Center, several board members of the Near East
    Foundation, and its president, Alexander Papachristou.

    World's Leading Archives

    Welcoming the more than 70 guests who had enjoyed a cocktail reception
    with music by the Musica Bella Orchestra was James Allen Smith, the
    vice president and director of research and education at the
    Rockefeller Archive Center. He termed the Rockefeller collection as
    the `leading archives in the world covering civil society and
    philanthropy in the last 140 years.' Annually, some 200 to 300
    scholars do research in institutional memory and critical evaluation.

    NEF chairman Shant Mardirossian called the day a `family reunion' and
    related that it marked the 94th anniversary of the NEF's founding. He
    paid special tribute to the many outstanding American families
    associated with the Near East Relief, including the Rockefellers,
    Dodges, Clevelands, Bartons, and Morgenthaus, among many others. He
    pointed out that the AGBU inherited many of the Near East Relief
    orphanages and schools throughout the Middle East, and revealed that
    the current headquarters of the Catholicos of Cilicia sits on the site
    of property donated to the church by the Near East Relief.

    In one of the most touching segments, David Mann, the son of Nellie
    Miller Mann, a Near East Relief worker in Beirut, and Martha Gurahian,
    the daughter of Siranoush Davitian, a Near East Relief orphan in the
    legendary Bird's Nest Orphanage, both read excerpts from their
    mothers' letters and diaries, detailing heartfelt occurrences from the
    daily lives of the orphans, who ranged in age from infancy to 17.

    An Oasis in the Desert

    These children had witnessed the horrors during the death marches, had
    suffered from starvation, illness, trachoma, bleeding feet, poor
    hygiene, and many other critical conditions, before arriving at the
    Near East Relief orphanages. In a dramatic gesture, Gurahian held up a
    grammar book her mother had saved from her days in the Bird's Nest. `I
    will always keep this treasured book,' she said with obvious emotion.

    Henry `Ben' Morgenthau IV, the great grandson of U.S. Ambassador to
    Turkey Henry Morgenthau, noted that he had grown up surrounded by
    Armenian families. He related that Ambassador Morgenthau, `in public
    life acted as an ambassador, but behind the scenes, confronted the
    Turks continually, appealing to the State Department and the American
    people to stop the atrocities.'

    Due to the ambassador's tireless efforts, the American Committee for
    Syrian and Armenian Relief was formed - the precursor to the Near East
    Relief. Ben Morgenthau reported that $117 million was raised, saving
    the lives of 132,000 orphans. He also reported that the Morgenthau
    family commemorates April 24th every year, and that when he visited
    Armenia with his father and brother in 1999, he participated in
    several events, including the dedication of the `Morgenthau School' in
    Yerevan, and placing soil from the grave of Ambassador Morgenthau in
    the `Wall of Heroes.'

    In his remarks, former U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Marshall Evans,
    who like Ambassador Morgenthau displayed courage and integrity in his
    position, emphasized the crucial need for preserving these historical
    records. He revealed that the oldest archival and first fireproof
    building in the western hemisphere is in Williamsburg, Va. He pointed
    out that there has always been `an impulse to alter public records. In
    the old days, they burned them. Now they shred them. Public records
    are treasures of our democracy and human history. We should not leave
    this task to governments.'

    In spite of many archival records, the U.S. government still does not
    recognize the genocide, he stated. `Archives are absolutely necessary
    and important to understand our past, but they are not
    sufficient. Join me in applauding the Rockefellers, the Dodges, the
    Bartons, etc. These valuable records in the Rockefeller Center must be
    preserved and safeguarded!' he declared with emphasis.

    During the event, written remarks by Carnegie Corporation president
    Dr. Vartan Gregorian were read, and two films were shown, one by Zareh
    Tjeknavorian, entitled, `Lest They Perish,' paying tribute to the
    founders of the Near East Relief, and another by the Near East
    Foundation, depicting its current projects throughout the Middle East
    and Africa. Mardirossian also gave a detailed presentation of the
    NEF's current micro-economic development project in rural Armenian
    villages, which it is conducting in partnership with Armenia Fund USA.

    The evening concluded with symbolic words from the film: `Our past is
    a reflection of who we are today, winning hearts and minds...one
    person at a time.'
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