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Montreal Manuel Keusseyan Armenological Lecture Series in its 9th Ye

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  • Montreal Manuel Keusseyan Armenological Lecture Series in its 9th Ye

    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

    Friday, June 15, 2012

    The Montreal Manuel Keusseyan Armenological Lecture Series Enjoys
    Broad Appeal in its Ninth Year

    This spring, the AGBU Manuel Keusseyan Armenological Lecture Series,
    an initiative of the Armenological Studies Program in Montreal, added
    several distinguished speakers to its already impressive list of
    participants, who have made it the longest running project of its
    kind.

    Viken L. Attarian, Gargein Choogaszian, Dr. Movses Herkelian, Peter
    Hrechdakian and Rouben Malayan were some of the many distinguished
    guests featured in the 2012 lecture series, which was created by the
    AGBU Montreal Chapter in the fall of 2003. That year, the late Manuel
    Keusseyan, a literary expert, poet, and teacher, approached the
    then-Chairman of the Montreal Chapter, Paul Kichian, and AGBU patron
    Jirair Dervishian, with the idea of creating a public forum that would
    engage the Armenian community on various subjects ranging from the
    arts to politics and everything in between. Keusseyan began hosting
    the weekly events, occasionally joined by colleagues, and quickly
    gaining a core following of thirty to forty attendees every Wednesday
    evening for nine months out of the year.

    In November 2006, when Keusseyan was befallen by an illness that would
    take his life a year later, Chahé Tanachian, currently the Chairman of
    the Armenological Studies Program and Director of the AGBU Alex
    Manoogian School, assumed the responsibility of organizing the
    events. While the series' format changed - a different lecturer was
    invited each week - Tanachian has ensured that it maintains the spirit
    and energy that Keusseyan brought to it. As he commented, "this
    project's objective from day one has been to present the cornerstones
    of Armenian culture in order to strengthen the Armenian identity in
    the diaspora and to better educate about the richness of Armenian
    culture and heritage. As a nation, we must first appreciate our own
    rich culture in order to present it to other nations and share it with
    the world community." The series has helped share Armenian culture
    over the past nine years, producing more than two hundred and fifty
    presentations on numerous topics, at times drawing crowds exceeding
    one hundred.

    Both local speakers and those visiting from overseas have helped the
    lecture series remain varied and thought-provoking. Recent
    presentations include "The Armenian DNA Project" by Hrechdakian, who
    gave an overview of new resources that allow Armenians, especially
    descendants of orphans from the Genocide who are searching for
    relatives, to trace their genealogy. Shifting from the hard sciences
    to science fiction, in February 2012, Attarian, the former Chairman of
    the AGBU Montreal Chapter, discussed the obscure but highly
    interesting world of Armenian science fiction literature. A few weeks
    later, in March, Choogaszian led an informative talk on the legendary
    Armenian composers Komitas and Khachaturian.

    Armenian art has also been a recurring topic throughout the series,
    with Rouben Malayan joining the program in April 2012 for his
    presentation "Armenian Calligraphy as Art," and art critic and artist
    Herkelian preceding him. After receiving an AGBU scholarship,
    Herkelian pursued a successful career as an art critic, and pledged to
    give back to AGBU. Pieces from his own gallery, which he has donated
    to exhibition sales, have raised tens of thousands of dollars for the
    AGBU Lebanon Education Fund. During his lecture, Herkelian drew from
    his own experiences in the art world to highlight those of painters
    Arshile Gorky and Ivan Aivazovsky.

    Under the leadership of Tanachian, who has attended nearly every
    lecture in the series' nine year history, the Keusseyan Armenological
    Lecture Series is sure to continue to attract high-profile speakers,
    and a diverse audience, when it resumes this autumn. Established in
    1906, AGBU (www.agbu.org) is the world's largest non-profit Armenian
    organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU preserves and
    promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through educational,
    cultural and humanitarian programs, annually touching the lives of
    some 400,000 Armenians around the world.

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

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