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Amb. Djerejian To Speak At 'Najarian Endowed Lecture' In Boston's Fa

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  • Amb. Djerejian To Speak At 'Najarian Endowed Lecture' In Boston's Fa

    AMB. DJEREJIAN TO SPEAK AT 'NAJARIAN ENDOWED LECTURE' IN BOSTON'S FANEUIL HALL

    Armenian Weekly
    September 26, 2012

    The third annual K. George and Carolann S. Najarian, M.D. Endowed
    Lecture on Human Rights will be held on Thurs., Oct. 25 at 7 p.m. at
    Boston's historic Faneuil Hall. Free and open to the public, the
    lecture is an endowed public program of the Armenian Heritage
    Foundation, the sponsor of the Armenian Heritage Park on Rose
    Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway in Boston.

    Ambassador Edward P. Djerejian In celebration of the opening of the
    Armenian Heritage Park and of the central theme of the Greenway-the
    immigrant experience-it is fitting that this year's speaker is
    Ambassador Edward P. Djerejian, the founding director of the James
    A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy and a former U.S. ambassador
    to Israel and the Syrian Arab Republic.

    A first generation Armenian-American and the son of survivors of the
    Armenian Genocide. Djerejian is an outstanding example of the kind
    of achievement, leadership, public service, and commitment to human
    rights. Djerejian has also worked to assist Armenia and Artsakh in
    their transition to democracy and peace.

    Djerejian served in the U.S. Foreign Service under eight presidents,
    from John F. Kennedy to William J. Clinton (1962-94). Prior to his
    nomination by Clinton as U.S. ambassador to Israel (1993-1994), he
    was assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs in both
    the George H.W. Bush and Clinton Administrations (1991-93). He was
    the U.S. ambassador to the Syrian Arab Republic (1988-91) and also
    served as special assistant to President Ronald Reagan and deputy press
    secretary for foreign affairs in the White House (1985-86). After his
    retirement from government service in 1994, he became the founding
    director of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at
    Rice University.

    His book, Danger and Opportunity: An American Ambassador's Journey
    Through the Middle East, was published by Simon & Schuster in September
    2008. Djerejian has been awarded the Presidential Distinguished
    Service Award, the Department of State's Distinguished Honor Award,
    and numerous other honors, including the Ellis Island Medal of Honor
    and the Anti-Defamation League's Moral Statesman Award.

    He is also a recipient of the Association of Rice Alumni's Gold Medal,
    the group's most prestigious award, for his service to Rice University.

    In 2011, Djerejian was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of
    Arts and Sciences, and named to the Board of Trustees of the Carnegie
    Corporation of New York by its president, Dr. Vartan B. Gregorian.

    "We are honored and pleased that the ambassador has accepted our
    invitation to speak in this inaugural year of Armenian Heritage Park,"
    said Dr. Carolann S. Najarian, who with her husband George endowed
    this lecture series in honor of her father, Avedis Abrahamian.

    The lecture series was inspired by the New England women and
    men-intellectuals, politicians, diplomats, religious leaders, and
    ordinary citizens-who, beginning in the 1890's at Faneuil Hall, heard
    the eye-witness accounts of the atrocities taking place against the
    Armenian minority of the Ottoman Empire during World War I and were
    called to action. Distinguished Bostonians, among them Julia Ward Howe,
    Clara Barton, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, and Alice Stone Blackwell,
    heard these accounts and were moved to assist the Armenians. As
    a result, the American Red Cross launched its first international
    mission with Clara Barton bringing aid to the Armenians.

    Philanthropists nationwide raised over $100 million in aid. This was
    America's first internationally focused human rights movement. Peter
    Balakian's The Burning Tigris (HarperCollins, 2003) made many aware
    of this New England history.

    The lecture is being offered in partnership with historical and
    academic institutions, and human rights organizations. The purpose of
    the endowed series is to advance understanding of human rights issues
    and the societal abuses faced by millions today, and to increase
    awareness of the work of individuals and organizations dedicated to
    eliminating these injustices so that we are all more actively engaged.

    Governor Deval L. Patrick and Mayor Thomas M. Menino are honorary
    chairs.

    Co-chairs representing their participating organization are Charlie
    Clements, executive director, Carr Center for Human Rights Policy,
    Harvard Kennedy School of Government; Martha F. Davis, Ph.D., faculty
    director, Northeastern School of Law, Human Rights, and the Global
    Economy; David Hollenbach, S.J., director, Boston College Center
    for Human Rights and International Justice; Michael A. Grodin,
    M.D., and George J. Annas, JD and MPH co-directors, Global Lawyers
    and Physicians Working Together for Human Rights, Boston University
    School of Public Health; Shant Mardirossian, chairman of the Board,
    Near East Foundation; Margot Stern Strom, founder/executive director,
    Facing History and Ourselves; Adam Strom, director of research
    and development, Facing History and Ourselves; Deborah W. Nutter,
    Ph.D., senior associate dean, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy,
    Tufts University; Balakrishnan Rajagopal, Ph.D., acting director,
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology Human Rights and Justice; and
    Joshua Rubenstein, northeast regional director, Amnesty International
    USA.

    The lecture's inaugural speaker in 2010 was Kerry Kennedy, founder
    of the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights based in
    Washington. The 2011 speaker was Paul Rusesabagina, the real-life hero
    of the acclaimed film "Hotel Rwanda" and the president and founder
    of the Hotel Rwanda Rusesabagina Foundation.

    The endowed lecture is a public program of the Armenian Heritage Park
    on the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway in Boston, a gift to the City
    of Boston and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts from the Massachusetts
    Armenian-American community. The park commemorates lives lost during
    the Armenian Genocide of 1915-23 and all genocides, and celebrates
    the immigrant experience and contributions made to American life
    and culture.

    Serving on the Lecture Committee are Dr. Carolann Najarian, George
    Najarian, Dr. Joyce Barsam, Phyllis Dohanian, Dr. Linda Kaboolian,
    Audrey Kalajian, and Barbara Tellalian.

    The Armenian Heritage Foundation, sponsor of the Armenian Heritage
    Park, is a non-profit organization founded to secure the designation
    and to raise funds to design, develop, and construct the park
    and endow its public programs, including this annual lecture,
    the reconfiguration of the park's sculpture, and its ongoing care
    and maintenance. The Board is comprised of representatives from
    13 parishes and 25 cultural organizations within the Massachusetts
    Armenian-American community. Honorary chairs of the foundation are
    Sheriff Peter Koutoujian and Registrar Rachel Kaprielian; the president
    is James Kalustian.

    For more information on the Armenian Heritage Park and its program,
    visit www.ArmenianHeritagePark.org.

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