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Armenia Has New Voice In Dearborn

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  • Armenia Has New Voice In Dearborn

    ARMENIA HAS NEW VOICE IN DEARBORN
    By David Crumm - Free Press Religion Writer

    Detroit Free Press, MI
    Oct 17 2006

    U-M research center appoints scholar as director

    Ara Sanjian, 38, of Dearborn speaks at the University of
    Michigan-Dearborn last week. His doctorate is in Middle Eastern
    history. "Armenia has centuries of experience to share with the world,"
    he says. (KATHLEEN GALLIGAN/Detroit Free Press) An internationally
    influential center for Armenian studies in Dearborn is changing
    the guard this week and installing only the second director in the
    center's nearly two decades of scholarship.

    This week, the Armenian Research Center's founder, Dennis Papazian,
    officially retires as he welcomes Ara Sanjian, an Armenian
    historian from Lebanon, to run the facility at the University of
    Michigan-Dearborn.

    "It's wonderful that we're finally making this move in a formal way,"
    Papazian, 74, said last week. "My wife and I moved to New Jersey
    two years ago and I've been running the center since then by e-mail,
    telephone and frequent visits. But now I'm formally leaving it to this
    first-class scholar who we actually searched around the world to find."

    Sanjian, 38, was born in the large Armenian community based in
    Beirut. He studied in Lebanon and Armenia, then earned a doctorate in
    Middle Eastern history from the University of London in England. He
    moved to Dearborn from Beirut earlier this year. He is fluent in
    English and also works professionally in Armenian, Arabic, Russian,
    Turkish and French.

    "In coming to the center, I do represent a kind of bridge in a number
    of ways," Sanjian said last week. He is settling into Dearborn,
    the heart of Michigan's Arab-Muslim community, already familiar with
    Middle Eastern issues from his many years in Lebanon. Plus, he has
    dedicated his scholarly life to bringing cross-cultural lessons from
    Armenian-Christian history to the larger world.

    "Armenia has centuries of experience to share with the world," Sanjian
    said. "Armenians have been around as an identity for more than 2,500
    years, as a Christian nation for 1,700 years and as a written language
    for 1,600 years."

    However, the future of Armenia was in doubt for much of the 20th
    Century from the Turkish government's massacre of Armenians in the
    early part of the century, through decades of domination by the
    Soviet Union.

    Papazian recalled, "When I founded the center for Armenian research
    in the late 1970s, I really was helping with the worldwide effort
    to preserve Armenian heritage and prepare for the day when Armenia
    could reemerge onto the stage of world history.

    "Since 1991, Armenia has been an independent state. Now, Armenia's
    economy is growing. We've just built a new American embassy in Armenia
    and it's become a very pleasant place for tourists."

    Plus, Papazian said, Armenia will continue to play a small but crucial
    role in global politics because "Armenia walks a tightrope between
    the United States, Russia and Iran."

    The country, which is about the size of Vermont, is on the eastern
    border of Turkey and the northern border of Iran. To the north of
    Armenia are Georgia and Russia.

    "We estimate there are about 1 million Armenians now living in the
    United States, most of them concentrated in California," Papazian
    said. "No one has an exact count in the Detroit area, but we think
    there are 30,000 Armenian Americans living there."

    More than 60 students have enrolled in history courses taught by
    Sanjian, including general Middle East history classes. But the center
    reaches scholars far beyond campus.

    At this point, Sanjian said, the center's nearly 40,000 books, maps,
    articles and artifacts related to Armenia are drawn upon by people
    around the world.

    Showing a visitor through the rows of steel bookshelves in the center's
    archive, Sanjian said, "People do come here regularly to do research
    in person. But constantly, we're also getting e-mail inquiries, too.

    "So, Armenia and our center now are an important part of the virtual
    world, too."

    http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/art icle?AID=/20061017/NEWS05/610170399
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