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Armenian Genocide Monument To Be Built On CSUF Campus, Fresno

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  • Armenian Genocide Monument To Be Built On CSUF Campus, Fresno

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MONUMENT TO BE BUILT ON CAMPUS

    US Fed News
    May 22, 2014 Thursday 11:44 AM EST

    FRESNO, Calif., May 22 -- California State University Fresno issued
    the following press release:

    A monument will be built on the California State University, Fresno
    campus to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
    in April 2015.

    The Campus Planning Committee approved the monument, which will
    be funded through private contributions to the Armenian Genocide
    Centennial Committee, an umbrella association established to plan a
    variety of commemorative events for the anniversary.

    The monument will be erected near the east end of the campus Rose
    Garden. Designed by Fresno architect Paul Halajian, its principal
    components will be nine columns arranged in a circular pattern and
    angled inwards. The nine pillars represent the six provinces of
    historic Armenia, Cilicia, the Diaspora and the Republic of Armenia.

    The columns will gradually descend in height around the circle, with
    the first measuring 19 feet high and the last 15 to underscore the
    significance of the year 1915. An incomplete halo will be set above
    the columns, symbolizing both the fracture left by the Genocide and
    the unity of the Armenian people.

    The material used will be beton brut, an architectural concrete left
    unfinished or roughly-finished after pouring, and an indigenous stone
    from Armenia called tufa.

    Fresno State Armenian Studies Professor Barlow Der Mugrdechian said
    the memorial and the Centennial observance have three themes:

    Commemoration and remembrance of the Armenian Genocide.

    Education about genocides throughout the world.

    Inspiration from the lives of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide
    have inspired future generations with their contribution to the
    countries where they took refuge.

    Dr. Sergio La Porta, Fresno State Armenian Studies professor and chair
    of the Genocide Centennial Committee, said the 100th anniversary is
    a significant moment for Armenians all around the world.

    "As Fresno is one of the largest and most active Armenian communities
    in the Western Hemisphere, I think it resonates particularly strongly
    here," said LaPorta. "It is home to a proud and resilient Armenian
    community and is an especially poignant place to commemorate those
    who died in the Genocide and those who toiled afterwards to insure
    that we would have a much better world to live in."

    As many as 1.5 million Armenians lost their lives in the period
    1915-1923 at the hands of the Ottoman Turkish government.

    For more information, contact the centennial committee at
    [email protected]



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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