Armenian Genocide Museum Of America Announces Major Research Library

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM OF AMERICA ANNOUNCES MAJOR RESEARCH LIBRARY DONATION

armradio.am
09.10.2008 14:45

Two donors, who presently wish to remain anonymous, have gifted
the Armenian Genocide Museum of America (AGMA) with an exceptional
collection of books and other printed material focused on the Armenian
Genocide and its documentation.

The collection of several thousand rare and out-of-print books and
other documents is slated for transfer to the AGMA in time for the
opening of the museum in 2010. AGMA will include a complete facility
to support ongoing research at the museum.

The remarkable collection contains many valuable items including maps,
photographs, and other historical evidence reflecting acquisitions,
research, and exploration across numerous archives.

In making their gift to AGMA, the two donors stated: "Indeed, the
very raison d’être of this collection is that everyone needs to know
that there is a massive amount of documentation on what happened
to the Armenians. At the same time, there is also ample testimony
that they were able to overcome the attempt to annihilate them and
to recover from such unprecedented adversity. And, all this with a
great deal of help from the U.S.A. What better place to show this
than in Washington, DC?"

The donors hope that the gift will serve as an incentive for others
to contribute relevant works as well. Collection development is a
major objective of=2 0the AGMA library. Accepting the donation,
AGMA Trustee and Building and Operations Committee Chairman Van
Krikorian, said: "We are thrilled to receive this astounding gift of
an entire library of specialized publications concentrating on the
Armenian Genocide. The donors’ monumental achievement in creating
this collection and tremendous generosity in choosing the AGMA as
the home for the collection represent a true match made in heaven."

Krikorian went on to say: "This collection of works ranging in their
coverage from the mid-1800s to the present has personal meaning
for a variety of reasons. First, this specialized Armenian Genocide
collection is destined to constitute the foundation of the museum
library. Second, the donation of this entire pre-existing collection,
along with our own Assembly and ANI materials, and in light of the
help we are getting from the Near East Foundation and the Armenian
Genocide Museum in Yerevan, and others, immediately puts AGMA out
front in Washington for running the type of research center that we
plan and need to support the museum, its exhibits and activities. Our
donors have established a standard of sharing with this extraordinary
donation in the same community-minded spirit of Anoush Mathevosian,
Hirair Hovnanian, and the Kechejian family, which we hope others
will emulate."

The library donors are scientists with advanced degrees, one with
Armenian roots and the other with no such roots but with a20fervent
interest in human rights, peace, and social justice. The gift is being
made in memory of the parents of one of the scientists. They were from
the same small mountain village in the Kharpert region of Armenia. One
was a Genocide survivor; the other was a "gamavor" or volunteer from
America who served in the Armenian Legion or Legion d’Orient.

This special collection will significantly expand the holdings of
the Armenian National Institute (ANI), which has been serving as
the research facility of the AGMA. ANI is already the beneficiary
of the oral history project conducted by the Armenian Assembly of
America in the 1980s, which also sponsored in the 1990s, the first
comprehensive collection of 37,000 pages of U.S. documents from the
National Archives issued on microfiche with a 476-page guide to the
documents, both published by Chadwyck-Healey, Inc.

Over the years, ANI has also acquired important archival holdings
from around the world.

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