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Armen Marsoobian `The Story of an `Islamized' Armenian Family' in La

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  • Armen Marsoobian `The Story of an `Islamized' Armenian Family' in La

    PRESS RELEASE
    National Association for Armenian
    Studies and Research (NAASR)
    395 Concord Avenue
    Belmont, MA 02478
    Tel.: 617-489-1610
    Email: [email protected]


    ARMEN MARSOOBIAN TO PRESENT `THE STORY OF AN `ISLAMIZED' ARMENIAN
    FAMILY' IN LAS VEGAS LECTURE

    Prof. Armen Marsoobian will give an illustrated lecture
    entitled `Survival and Resistance in the Heart of Darkness: The Story
    of an `Islamized' Armenian Family in Marsovan, 1915-1919,' on Sunday,
    March 9, 2014, at 2:00 p.m. at St. Garabed Armenian Church, 2054
    E. Desert Inn Rd., Las Vegas, NV. The lecture is co-sponsored by
    St. Garabed Church, the Armenian American Cultural Society of Las
    Vegas, and the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research
    (NAASR).

    Prof. Armen Marsoobian will present the story of an `Islamized'
    Armenian family, the Dildilian-Der Haroutiounian family, from the time
    shortly before their conversion in August 1915 to the restoration of
    their Christian Armenian identity in the spring of 1919. Based upon
    extensive family memoirs, letters, photographs, and oral testimony, he
    describes what daily life was like for members of the family during
    this period.

    Of the approximately 12,000 Armenians living in Marsovan (Merzifon)
    and its associated villages, a small number remained behind at the
    conclusion of the deportations in August 1915. The heads of these
    households held occupations that were deemed essential to the economy
    of the city and were allowed to remain on the condition that they
    convert to Islam and adopt Turkish identity. Tsolag Dildilian was a
    military photographer and was given such an opportunity. He was thus
    able to save members of his immediate family in Marsovan.

    The family maintained a dual identity, living their Christian faith
    and Armenian identity at home but living as Muslim Turks in the
    community. Upon the conclusion of the war, the family played an
    important role in rescuing orphans and restoring the Armenian
    identities of the converts. With the rise of the nationalist
    movement, the family's activities in support of Armenian survival
    became suspect, forcing them to flee Turkey in 1922. The presentation
    will be richly illustrated with photographs.

    Armen Tsolag Marsoobian is Professor and Chairperson of Philosophy at
    Southern Connecticut State University in New Haven. He has twice been
    the Nikit and Eleanora Ordjanian Visiting Professor in Armenian
    Studies, Department of Middle East, South Asian, and African Studies,
    at Columbia University where he has taught a graduate seminar,
    `Memories of the Armenian Genocide: An Exploration through Memoir,
    Literature, and the Arts.' He has co-edited five books, including
    Genocide's Aftermath: Responsibility and Repair (with Claudia Card)
    (2007), The Philosophical Challenge of September 11 (2004), and The
    Blackwell Guide to American Philosophy (2004). He has published
    articles and book chapters in aesthetics, moral philosophy, genocide
    studies, and American philosophy. His essay, `Rescue in Marsovan: The
    Untold Story Behind a Photograph,' won the Hrant Dink Prize for
    Historical Research in 2011.



    From: Baghdasarian
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