Asbarez: Baku’s Claims of Armenians Transporting Arms to Artsakh Denied

A screen shot from a video released by Baku alleging Armenian arms transports to Artsakh


Azerbaijan claimed that an Armenian Army military convoy, accompanied by Russian peacekeeping units, had entered Karabakh on Friday, accusing Yerevan of transporting arms to Artsakh.

Armenia’s Defense Ministry, as well as Artsakh authorities slammed Baku for continuing its misinformation campaign and advancing its aggressive policies in the region.

“All claims by the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry regarding the transfer of personnel, weapons and military equipment of the Armed Forces of Armenia are also false,” Armenia’s defense ministry said in a statement.

Artsakh Interior Ministry called the Azerbaijani claims false and explained in a Facebook post that the movement depicted in a video posted by Baku depicted the transport of cargo internally within Artsakh, explaining that the only road connecting Artsakh to Armenia—the Lachin Corridor—remained blockaded since December 12.

“In the video published by them [Azerbaijan], a water truck can be seen, with which it is definitely not possible to transport weapons,” added the Artsakh statement.

“Thus, Azerbaijan is misleading the international community by representing the transportation of humanitarian goods and internal movements as the transportation of military equipment and ammunition,” said Artsakh’s Interior Ministry.

“On the other hand by violating the ceasefire almost every day, the Azerbaijani armed forces are opening fire even at civilians in Artsakh, halting all farming activities,” the Facebook message says.

AW: Literary Lights to feature American Wildflowers by Susan Barba

The International Armenian Literary Alliance (IALA), the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) and the Krikor and Clara Zohrab Information Center are happy to announce their next Literary Lights event, featuring Susan Barba, editor of American Wildflowers: A Literary Field Guide. The event will take place on May 17, 2023 at 7:30 p.m. at the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) in Belmont, Massachusetts. Barba will be joined by Dr. Jesse S. Arlen, the inaugural postdoctoral research fellow in Armenian Christian Studies and director of the Krikor and Clara Zohrab Information Center.

American Wildflowers, edited by Barba and illustrated by Leanne Shapton, is a literary anthology filled with classic and contemporary poems, essays and letters inspired by wildflowers—perfect for writers, artists and botanists alike.

Literary Lights is a monthly reading series, held from February to November in a mixed online and in-person format, featuring new works of literature by Armenian authors. Audience members are invited to read along with the series.

The International Armenian Literary Alliance is a nonprofit organization launched in 2021 that supports and celebrates writers by fostering the development and distribution of Armenian literature in the English language. A network of Armenian writers and their champions, IALA gives Armenian writers a voice in the literary world through creative, professional, and scholarly advocacy.


Genocide survivor testimonies now accessible at the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History

The Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection, one of the Zoryan Institute’s earliest and most transformative projects, has been added to the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History housed at the AGBU Papazian Library. The collection contains over 750 interviews of Armenians who survived the genocide, and these interviews are now accessible to students, faculty members or researchers at the American University of Armenia (AUA) and in Yerevan.

The Zoryan Institute entered into an agreement with the AUA in 2018 to establish the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History with the purpose of transcribing, translating and subtitling the interviews of the Institute’s Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection into English.

AGBU Papazian Library director Satenik Avakian played a major role in coordinating activities of the center since its inception. “As a member of the center’s development team from the outset, I am so excited to see the impact that the center and this collection will have on AUA students and researchers,” said Avakian. “I take great pride in being part of the establishment of this center, and I look forward to seeing the incredible work and research that comes out of this impressive collection of interviews.”

The majority of the interviews of the collection were conducted in the Armenian language, and with the support of AUA students working with the center, the Zoryan Institute aims to make these interviews accessible with English subtitles to a wide demographic of people who can learn from these first-hand accounts of survival.

Araz Margossian, the academic support librarian at AUA responsible for the on-site management and coordination of the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History, states, “The Zoryan Institute’s Armenian Genocide Oral Histories are the memories and testimonies of unique and individual human souls who witnessed, encountered and survived the atrocities of the Armenian Genocide. It is a great privilege and responsibility for the Zoryan Institute and AUA Center for Oral History to assume the role of housing, overseeing the transcription and translation of the collection, and coordinating access to these testimonies in Armenia.”

The Armenian Genocide Oral History Project, launched in 1983, was initiated by the Zoryan Institute when it became evident that time was running out for the generation of Armenians who had firsthand accounts of the genocide. It is now the largest audio-visual collection of its kind.

Over the years, the collection has proven to be a very valuable resource for researchers, scholars and filmmakers, given scientific approach used for the interview process, and for its visual component. A detailed questionnaire was developed with 90 questions organized under four broad headings: City/Village Life in the Armenian Homeland; Massacre and Deportation from the Armenian Homeland; Experiences as an Immigrant; and Attitudes and Interpretation. This questionnaire was carefully crafted by multi-disciplinary specialists, including anthropologists, sociologists and psychologists. The questionnaire was not only meant to elicit information about the Genocide, but also provide details and valuable insights into the life of the Armenian people preceding the Genocide and the trends that various disciplines can extract from the collection.

Mari Hovhannisyan, executive administrator of the Zoryan Institute Armenia, speaks to the tremendous benefits that this collection has for researchers. “As a researcher myself, I find the Zoryan Institute’s Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection incredibly valuable. Using first-hand testimonies in research contributes to various viewpoints and perspectives that fill in the gaps in documented history. With the support of the collection’s detailed catalogue, I can listen to these testimonies and piece together a common understanding of the people from that region at a specific moment in history, which is truly exceptional. I am elated that through the joint efforts of the Zoryan Institute and AUA, we can make these interviews accessible to researchers around the world.”

In addition to its academic strengths and value, the collection’s visual component has also caught the attention of a number of filmmakers over the years. The Zoryan Institute interviews with Armenian Genocide survivors were the inspiration behind two feature-length films. The 1988 PBS hit “An Armenian Journey” by filmmaker Theodore Bogosian, referenced the interview of Mariam Davis, the very first interview conducted for the collection. The 2022 multiple award-winning animated film by Inna Sahakyan of Bars Media “Aurora’s Sunrise” was based on and features the Institute’s interview of Armenian Genocide survivor Aurora Mardiganian.

The collection offers a visually captivating and emotionally impactful element to historical research. The interviews also provide a more comprehensive and nuanced perspective on past events, illuminating how individuals and communities experienced them. “As part of the work being done at the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History, AUA students have embarked on transcribing and translating the interviews of the refugees, soldiers and witnesses of the 44-Day Artsakh War Oral History Project,” said Margossian. “Here again, this work is being done with the objective of making these interviews available in English to scholars and researchers around the world.”

Zoryan Institute and its subsidiary, the International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies, is a non-profit organization that serves the cause of scholarship and public awareness relating to issues of universal human rights, genocide, and diaspora-homeland relations. This is done through the systematic continued efforts of scholars and specialists using a comparative and multidisciplinary approach and in accordance with the highest academic standards.


AW: AMAA opens new center in Berd

Opening of AMAA Berd Center

On Friday, April 14, 2023, the inauguration, and opening ceremony of the Armenian Missionary Association of America’s (AMAA) new Center was held in Berd, a city located in the Tavush region of Armenia. Among attendees at the ceremony were high-ranking officials including the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, leaders of Mission Possible and Diakonia organizations that co-financed the project, representatives from municipal and regional administrations, heads of other organizations operating in Berd, and directors of local schools.

AMAA’s new Berd Center houses a day center for 30 children and a soup kitchen for 60 adults. The day center provides comprehensive education, personal growth and development programs for children with difficult life situations.

Children aged 6-12 attend the center every day after school and receive healthy food, participate in Armenian language and mathematics classes, as well as painting, artwork, English language groups and social work group meetings, where they learn about life skills.

At the soup kitchen, adults enjoy hot meals every weekday, and the center regularly organizes an entertaining environment and warm atmosphere for them with games, movies and activities.

The construction of this modern and comfortable building makes the services provided by AMAA even more inspiring for the beneficiaries and the employees.

“AMAA continues to expand its mission of ‘goodness’ all across the Armenian landscape, with special emphasis on border villages,” said AMAA executive director and CEO Zaven Khanjian.

Opening of AMAA Berd Center

The Armenian Missionary Association of America (AMAA) was founded in 1918, in Worcester, MA, and incorporated as a non-profit charitable organization in 1920 in the State of New York. We are a 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization. Our purpose is to serve the physical and spiritual needs of people everywhere, both at home and overseas. To fulfill this worldwide mission, we maintain a range of educational, evangelistic, relief, social service, church and child care ministries in 24 countries around the world.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/21/2023

                                        Friday, 


Armenian Border Area ‘Still Occupied By Azeri Troops’

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

A new Azerbaijani army position outside the Armenian village of Tegh, March 31, 
2023.


Residents of an Armenian border village insisted on Friday that contrary to 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s upbeat statements Azerbaijani troops have not 
withdrawn from any of their community lands occupied three weeks ago.

Azerbaijani army units redeployed on March 30 to more parts of the Lachin 
district sandwiched between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, completing a change in 
the route of the Lachin corridor which began last August. Armenia’s National 
Security Service (NSS) said hours later that they advanced up to 300 meters into 
Armenian territory at five border locations adjacent to the village of Tegh.

Local government officials and farmers said Tegh lost a large part of its 
agricultural land and pastures. Some of them said that the Azerbaijani military 
made bigger territorial gains than is admitted by official Yerevan. They 
dismissed the NSS’s April 1 claims that the situation in that border area 
“improved significantly” as a result of negotiations held by Armenian and 
Azerbaijani officials.

Tensions there escalated on April 11 into a skirmish between Armenian and 
Azerbaijani forces which left at least seven soldiers from both sides dead.

“The Azerbaijanis haven’t retreated a single inch from Tegh’s lands,” one local 
resident told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Friday. “They are continuing 
fortification works.”

He was perplexed by Pashinian’s comments made on Thursday. The prime minister 
told reporters that the “problematic section” of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border 
around Tegh was 5 kilometers long and that the Armenian and Azerbaijani sides 
“ascertained” 1.4 kilometers of it after the deadly fighting.

“That means Armenian border guards are deployed at a certain distance from that 
border and Azerbaijani border guards are deployed at a certain distance from 
that border,” he said.

Pashinian did not clarify whether the Azerbaijani troops withdrew from that 
1.4-kilometer stretch or whether Yerevan does not consider it Armenian territory 
anymore as a result of the unofficial border delimitation.

“Again, they haven’t retreated a single inch,” countered the Tegh farmer, who 
did not want to be identified. “What has been ascertained?”

Tegh residents are still awaiting concrete actions by the Armenian government, 
he said, warning that their patience is running out.

The governor of Armenia’s Syunik province encompassing Tegh said earlier this 
week that the government will compensate villagers for the loss of their land 
holdings and main source of income.

The Armenian opposition blames Pashinian for the fresh territorial gains made by 
Azerbaijan. Opposition leaders say he should have ordered the Armenian army or 
border guards to take up positions along the Armenian side of the Tegh border 
section ahead of the Azerbaijani advance.




Armenia To Introduce Voluntary Military Service For Women

        • Susan Badalian

Armenia - Female military personnel.


The Armenian government announced on Friday plans to introduce voluntary 
military service for women.

A relevant bill approved by the government is part of its declared defense 
reforms and a gradual transition to a “professional army” promised by Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian.

Under the bill drafted by the Armenian Defense Ministry, the six-month service 
will become obligatory for young women once they are formally drafted by the 
country’s armed forces.

They will serve in military training units for six months and then have the 
option of becoming contract soldiers eligible for combat duty. Also, every 
female conscript will be paid 1 million drams ($2,600) after completing the 
service.

“It will be a normal service, not a stroll through barracks,” Pashinian said 
during a cabinet meeting in Yerevan.

The bill will likely be approved by the Armenian parliament. In that case, the 
military will be able to start enlisting women for the six-month duty already 
this fall.

The Armenian army already has female soldiers and officers within its ranks. 
Their current number is not revealed by the Defense Ministry.

It stood at over 1,400 in 2013 when Armenia’s two military academies began 
admitting women as cadets. The vast majority of the female personnel held 
clerical positions in the Defense Ministry, army detachments and other military 
structures.

There was also a growing number of women performing combat roles. They 
participated in the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh and subsequent fighting on 
Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan. Five Armenian women were killed during last 
September’s large-scale border clashes.




Opposition Lawmaker Risks Losing Parliament Post

        • Gayane Saribekian

Armenia - Taguhi Tovmasian, chairwoman of the parliament committee on human 
rights, speaks during a news conference, October 10, 2022.


Nearly three dozen lawmakers from the ruling Civil Contract party have moved to 
dismiss their opposition colleague Taguhi Tovmasian as chairwoman of the 
Armenian parliament’s standing committee on human rights.

Tovmasian was forcibly removed, together with several other opposition deputies, 
from the parliament’s main auditorium on Thursday after occupying its rostrum in 
protest against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s latest statements on the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. She condemned the use of force, ordered by speaker 
Alen Simonian, as illegal.

Hovik Aghazarian, a controversial Civil Contract deputy, announced shortly after 
the incident that he is collecting signatures in support of stripping Tovmasian 
of her post. At least 28 other pro-government parliamentarians signed the 
initiative by Friday afternoon.

The ruling party’s parliamentary group is expected meet in the coming days to 
decide whether to oust Tovmasian.

The official rationale for the proposed dismissal is not Thursday’s incident but 
the April 4 meeting of the parliament committee on human rights which discussed 
two candidates for the then vacant post of Armenia’s human rights defender.

The meeting chaired by Tovmasian was marred by verbal abuse and threats shouted 
by some Civil Contract deputies at the candidate nominated by the Armenian 
opposition. One of those deputies publicly pledged to “cut the tongues and ears 
of anyone” who would make disparaging comments about the 2018 “velvet 
revolution” that brought Pashinian to power.

Despite a resulting uproar, law-enforcement authorities declined to investigate 
the threats. Nor did Pashinian’s party take any disciplinary action against its 
lawmakers involved in the ugly scenes.

The party is now considering instead ousting Tovmasian, who is affiliated with 
the opposition Pativ Unem bloc. Aghazarian blamed her for the chaotic committee 
meeting, saying that she should have interrupted it.

Tovmasian countered that she did so after the unusually aggressive behavior of 
Aghazarian’s pro-government colleagues. “There are no grounds for discussing my 
dismissal,” she said, accusing the authorities of putting “political pressure” 
on her.

Tovmasian, who is a former journalist and newspaper editor, is the last 
remaining oppositionist holding a leadership position in the National Assembly.

One of the parliament’s three deputy speakers, Ishkhan Saghatelian, and the 
chairman of the parliament committee on economic affairs, Vahe Hovsepian, were 
ousted last July after weeks of anti-government protests organized by their 
Hayastan alliance and Pativ Unem. Another Hayastan deputy, Armen Gevorgian, 
immediately resigned as chairman of a committee dealing with “Eurasian 
integration” in protest. Tovmasian pointedly declined to follow suit.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Armenians of Massachusetts honor those lost during the genocide

Massachussettes –
MASSACHUSETTS

BOSTON (WWLP) – A solemn event at the State House Friday for the commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.

April 24, 1915, marked the start of the Armenian Genocide, and 108 years later, Armenians from around the state gathered to honor those lost. In 1915, the Ottoman Turkish government arrested and executed around 200 Armenian leaders, this marked the beginning of the genocide.

Ultimately, 1.5 million Armenians died during the genocide and many more were displaced from their homelands.

Armenian museum reopens in Jerusalem’s Old City

Today, lawmakers, clergy, and members of the Armenian community filled the House Chamber to not only remember this tragic event but to also honor their culture and express appreciation.

“If the Armenians forget, then we can’t expect anyone else to remember either so, first and foremost, the Armenians of Massachusetts and of the entire United States have to make it a point to remember and to really not only remember but to give thanks to the country which really received many Armenian immigrants, which came to America with really mostly nothing.”

“They suffered a lot, they didn’t speak about it a lot, that generation, because they didn’t want to burden the next generation with those sad memories. So it’s up to the next generation and these generations, to remember this, never let the world forget what happened to the Armenians from 1915 through 1922.”

Thirty-two countries, including the United States, have recognized the Armenian Genocide, Turkey still refuses to accept any responsibility.

During the event, a proclamation from the governor was read marking April 24, 2023 as Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day in the Commonwealth.

https://www.wwlp.com/news/massachusetts/armenians-of-massachusetts-honor-those-lost-during-the-genocide/

Armenian Genocide Commemoration Set For Saturday in Montebello

A commemoration will be held in Montebello Saturday to mark the 108th anniversary of the start of the events that are widely viewed by scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century.

The commemoration at the Montebello Armenian Genocide Monument in Bicknell Park will begin at 11 a.m. and include a religious ceremony, cultural program, speeches by elected officials and placement of flowers.

The event is organized by the United Armenian Council of Los Angeles.

A rally seeking an immediate end to Azerbaijan’s blockade of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region is planned for 6 p.m. Sunday outside the Azerbaijan Consulate in Brentwood, organized by Unified Young Armenians, which is also organizing an “Armenian Genocide Commemorative Rally for Justice” at 10 a.m. Monday at the intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Western Avenue in Little Armenia.

Glendale will conduct its 22nd annual Armenian Genocide Commemorative Event at 7 p.m. Monday at the Alex Theatre, with the theme, “The Armenian Experience Through the Lens,” celebrating the 100th anniversary of Armenian cinema.

On April 24, 1915, Ottoman authorities arrested Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople, leading to an estimated 1.5 million people being killed. Turkey denies the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll has been inflated and that those killed were victims of civil war and unrest.

Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day


New York –


BINGHAMTON, NY (WIVT/WBGH) – Monday the 24th, is and members of the local Armenian community gathered outside of Binghamton City Hall this morning to raise the tri-color flag as a sign of hope.

The Armenian Genocide, often referred to as the first genocide of the 20th century, occurred from 1915 to 1923.

Binghamton Mayor Jared Kraham says that today’s flag raising honors the over one million Armenians that were killed due to religious persecution and is meant to spread awareness the forgotten tragedy.

The Pastor at Saint Gregory the Illuminator Church, Kapriel Mouradjian says that the flag represents the hard work and determination of his ancestors to escape religious persecution.

Pastor at Saint Gregory the Illuminator Church, Reverend Kapriel Mouradjian says, “In the upcoming days, when this flag flies high outside Binghamton City Hall, there will be people with Armenian roots who will drive by and otherwise maybe not look at City Hall, but will see that flag, will recognize what the tri-colored flag represents and give thanks.”

Mayor Kraham presented Mouradjian with a proclamation that declares Monday, April 24th as in the City of Binghamton.

He calls on residents to commemorate and remember the tragedy and to acknowledge the contributions of Armenian community here locally, and across the country.

Istanbul governor bans Armenian Genocide commemoration event on April 24

Kurdish Press –

“The Governor's Office has clearly shown that it is against the dynamics of democratization by banning our commemoration event,” said the April 24 Commemoration Platform, calling on the Governor's Office to abandon this decision.

The Istanbul Governor's Office has banned the commemoration event of the Armenian Genocide planned to take place in the Kadıköy district.

The April 24 Commemoration Platform stated that the reason for the ban was that it was “deemed inappropriate to hold the event.”

Last year's commemoration was also banned by the governor, and in the two previous years, the event was held online due to the pandemic.

The genocide is remembered every year on April 24, which marks the arrest of more than 200 intellectuals in Istanbul in 1915, widely considered as the start of the genocide.

The April 24 Commemoration Platform, which has organized remembrance events since 2010, criticized the governor's ban, stating that the commemoration events have always been held without any issues despite being targeted by various powers since 2010, according to Bianet.

"There is no reasonable reason for our commemoration event to be banned this year, as it was last year. In a climate where racist meetings and demonstrations are freely organized, where those who continue to demonize the descendants of the Armenians and Assyrians who were killed in 1915 and continue to alienate minority communities with racist hate speech are walking around freely, the ban on this event, which we respectfully and calmly remember those we lost in 1915, is unacceptable.

Confronting 1915 is a necessary step to build democracy, equality, and peaceful coexistence on solid foundations today. Without this confrontation, no democratic move can be permanent, and no social relationship can be egalitarian.

The Governor's Office has clearly shown that it is against the dynamics of democratization by banning our commemoration event. We call on the Governor's Office to abandon this decision."

Federal and State Parliamentarians to Join Australian National Armenian Genocide Commemoration at Chatswood Concourse

Friday,

SYDNEY: The National Armenian Genocide Commemoration Evening on Monday 24th April 2023 – which will honour the 108th anniversary of the 1.5 million Armenians, as well as the 1 million Assyrians and Greeks, who were massacred by Ottoman Turkey in 1915 – will feature strong representation from Federal and New South Wales parliamentarians, reported the Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-AU). 

Federal Parliamentarians, Jerome Laxale MP – Member for Bennelong and Chair of the Australia-Armenia Inter-Parliamentary Union; Paul Fletcher MP – Member for Bradfield and Vice Chair of the Australia-Armenia Inter-Parliamentary Union and Kylea Tink MP – Member for North Sydney will lead the list of Federal representatives at the commemoration.

Laxale and Tink will be attending their first National Commemoration as Federal Members of Parliament since their election to the House of Representatives in May 2022.

Steve Kamper MP – Member for Rockdale and NSW Minister for Multiculturalism – will attend his first National Armenian Genocide Commemorative event, and will be joined by NSW state parliamentary colleagues, including Hugh McDermott MP – State Member for Prospect; Tim James MP – State Member for Willoughby, Mark Coure MP – State Member for Oatley, Jordan Lane MP – State Member for Ryde, Matt Cross MP – State Member for Davidson and Michael Regan MP – State Member for Wakehurst.

There will be several elected officials from the Willoughby, Ryde, Northern Beaches and Fairfield local governments also in attendance, led by the Mayor of the City of Willoughby, Tanya Taylor and Mayor of the City of Ryde, Armenian-Australian Sarkis Yedelian OAM.

“Many of our political guests will be joining us for the first time for an in-person commemoration to honour our fallen ancestors and pay tribute to their memory. It is an honour to have them join us for such a solemn occasion marked on the calendar of all Armenian-Australians,” said Kolokossian.

Middle East studies historian Dr. Ümit Kurt, who is an ethnically Kurdish citizen of Turkey, will keynote the first in-person National Armenian Genocide Commemoration evening since the Covid pandemic.

Dr. Kurt, is a historian of the modern Middle East. His research is on the social, cultural, and economic history of the late Ottoman Empire and the early Turkish Republic in the 19th and 20th centuries, with a special focus on the Armenian Genocide and dispossession of Ottoman Armenians at large, imperial interests, ethnic politics, forced migrations and infrastructural transformations.

Dr. Kurt completed his dissertation in the Department of History at Clark University in the United States in 2016. He has since held several postdoctoral positions at the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University, and the Polonsky Academy in the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute, and worked as a Visiting Assistant Professor in Armenian Studies Program at California State University (CSU) in Fresno. 

Currently, Dr. Kurt is an Assistant Professor in the School of Humanities, Creative Industries and Social Sciences (History) at the University of Newcastle, Australia. He has also been serving as a Vice Executive Secretary for the International Network of Genocide Scholars (INoGS) since March 2020, and is the author of several books, including "The Armenians of Aintab: The Economics of Genocide in an Ottoman Province" and “Antep 1915: Genocide and Perpetrators” (2018).

He is also the co-author of “The Spirit of the Laws: The Plunder of Wealth in the Armenian Genocide” (Berghahn, 2017), the co-editor of "Armenians and Kurds in the Late Ottoman Empire" (The Press at California State University, Fresno, 2020), "The Committee of Union and Progress: Founders, Ideology, and Structure" (The Press at California State University, Fresno, 2021), and "The State of the Art of the Early Turkish Republic Period: Historiography, Sources and Future Directions" (The Press at California State University, Fresno, 2022).

The event is organised by the Armenian Genocide Commemorative Committee, under the auspices of His Eminence Archbishop Haigazoun Najarian, the Armenian Apostolic Church, the Armenian Catholic Church, and the Armenian Evangelical Church.

The member organisations of the Armenian Genocide Commemorative Committee are the Social Democrat Hunchakian Party, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, the Armenian Democratic Liberal Party, the Armenian General Benevolent Union, the Armenian Missionary Association of Australia, Hamazkaine, Nor Serount, Homenetmen, Tekeyan, Armenian Relief Society, Dkhrouni, AGBU Youth and the Armenian Youth Federation.

https://www.anc.org.au/news/Media-Releases/MONDAY-24-APRIL–Federal-and-State-Parliamentarians-to-Join-Australian-National-Armenian-Genocide-Commemoration-at-Chatswood-Concourse