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  • USC Shoah Foundation Showing Testimony From Armenian Genocide For Mo

    USC SHOAH FOUNDATION SHOWING TESTIMONY FROM ARMENIAN GENOCIDE FOR MONTH LEADING TO 100-YEAR ANNIVERSARY

    PR Newswire
    April 1 2015

    LOS ANGELES, April 1, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- To commemorate
    the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in April, USC Shoah
    Foundation - The Institute for Visual History and Education will debut
    a month-long series of testimony clips from survivors and witnesses
    of the 20th century's first genocide.

    One clip a day are being released on the Institute's website at
    sfi.usc.edu through the last day of April, which is Genocide Awareness
    and Prevention Month. Included on the month-long timeline will be
    the April 24 anniversary of the Armenian Genocide's onset.

    The clips will showcase some of the more than 400 testimonies from the
    Armenian Genocide that will be integrated into the Institute's Visual
    History Archive, which contains 53,000 testimonies from survivors
    and witnesses of the Holocaust and other genocides.

    To help put the clips into perspective, experts steeped in knowledge
    about the Armenian Genocide will introduce each one. The presenters
    will also recommend additional resources for those who would like to
    learn more.

    Professor Richard Hovannisian, one of the world's leading scholars
    on the Armenian Genocide, will introduce the first five clips.

    Hovannisian is professor emeritus of history at UCLA and an adjunct
    professor at USC.

    "This project will help preserve evidence of a genocide that must be
    acknowledged," said USC Shoah Foundation Executive Director Stephen
    Smith. "It will honor the memory of those whose lives were taken,
    and it will ensure that future generations are able to learn from
    individuals who experienced the Armenian Genocide firsthand."

    In addition to the web series, USC Shoah Foundation will also
    commemorate the 100th anniversary through the following events:

    The Institute's Center for Advanced Genocide Research will take
    possession of its first major donation since it was announced in April
    2014 by USC Shoah Foundation founder Steven Spielberg and USC President
    C. L. Max Nikias. The donation from attorney Vartkes Yeghiayan pertains
    to the historic agreement reached with New York Life in 2004 that
    resolved more than 2,000 insurance claims against policies issued
    by New York Life to Armenians in the Turkish Ottoman Empire before
    1915. The 40-plus boxes of materials mark the first major acquisition
    by the Center, which is seeking private papers, documents, photographs
    and films pertaining to genocides to expand the university's position
    of being the only world-renowned private research institution with
    substantial original primary-source material from genocides.

    On April 8, the Center for Advanced Genocide Research will hold a
    lecture with Ugur Umit Ungor, Ph.D., associate professor of history
    at Utrecht University and research fellow at the Institute for War,
    Holocaust, and Genocide Studies in Amsterdam. His topic will be
    "The Kurds and the Armenian Genocide: Collaboration and Resistance."

    Presented in cooperation with USC Institute of Armenian Studies and
    DEFY: USC Shoah Foundation Student Association. Lecture will be at
    4 pm, Tutor Campus Center Room 450--The Forum.

    On April 10, Hayk Demoyan, director of the Armenian Genocide
    Museum-Institute in Yerevan, Armenia, will visit the Institute to sign
    a memorandum of understanding between the two organizations that will
    bring the Visual History Archive to the museum, as well as develop
    research programs that increase awareness and deepen knowledge and
    understanding of the Armenian Genocide and its consequences. This
    includes exploration of future opportunities to design, support or
    organize academic programs to advance international research on the
    Armenian Genocide.

    On April 24, a contingent from USC Shoah Foundation -- including Prof.

    Hovannisian, Executive Director Stephen Smith, and Wolf Gruner,
    director Center for Advanced Genocide Research -- will travel to
    Yerevan, Armenia, to participate in official commemoration ceremonies,
    and to further work on bringing the Visual History Archive to that
    country.

    On April 26, Smith will join thousands of Armenians commemorating the
    100th anniversary with a special observance at the annual Armenian
    Genocide Commemoration in Times Square New York.

    The 400 Armenian testimonies being integrated into the Visual History
    Archive were filmed by J. Michael Hagopian and the Armenian Film
    Foundation between 1972 and 2004 when most of the survivors were in
    their 70s and 80s. Testimonies in the collection, the largest archive
    on film of Armenian Genocide interviews in the world, were recorded
    in 10 countries and 10 languages, including English, Armenian, Arabic,
    Kurdish and Turkish.

    "Thanks to the foresight of Dr. Hagopian, the stories of the Armenian
    Genocide cannot be denied," said Dr. Carla Garapedian, who is leading
    the Armenian Film Foundation's work to preserve and integrate the
    collection into the Visual History Archive. "These survivors all
    have important stories to share, and now they will reach a far wider
    audience."

    The Armenian testimonies were first delivered to the Institute in
    April 2014 to begin the integration process into the Visual History
    Archive, which included indexing all the testimonies. At the core of
    USC Shoah Foundation's indexing system is a one-of-a-kind thesaurus,
    which includes over 62,000 terms that describe genocide-related
    concepts and experiences that cover the Holocaust, Rwandan Genocide
    and Nanjing Massacre, all experiences reflected in the Visual History
    Archive. Indexing allows students, teachers, professors and researchers
    to search the Visual History Archive by specific terms.

    Hagopian was an Emmy-nominated filmmaker who made 70 educational
    documentaries. Seventeen of his movies centered on Armenian culture and
    history, including an epic trilogy on the Armenian Genocide composed
    of "Voices from the Lake," "Germany and the Secret Genocide," and
    "The River Ran Red." He was a survivor of the genocide that killed
    an estimated 1.5 million people in Turkey from 1915-23. In 1979, he
    founded the Armenian Film Foundation, a Thousand Oaks, California-based
    nonprofit dedicated to documenting Armenian heritage.

    Hagopian died in December 2010 at age 97.

    About USC Shoah Foundation USC Shoah Foundation -- The Institute for
    Visual History and Education is dedicated to making audio- visual
    interviews with survivors and other witnesses of the Holocaust and
    other genocides, a compelling voice for education and action. The
    Institute's current collection of more than 53,000 eyewitness
    testimonies contained within its Visual History Archive preserves
    history as told by the people who lived it, and lived through
    it. Housed at the University of Southern California, within the
    Dana and David Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, the
    Institute works with partners around the world to advance scholarship
    and research, to provide resources and online tools for educators,
    and to disseminate the testimonies for educational purposes.

    Contact: Josh Grossberg 213-740-6065 [email protected] Rob Kuznia
    213-740-0965 [email protected]

    Logo - http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20131213/DC32956LOGO

    SOURCE USC Shoah Foundation

    http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/usc-shoah-foundation-showing-testimony-from-armenian-genocide-for-month-leading-to-100-year-anniversary-300059801.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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