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Richard Dawkins to give away copies of The God Delusion in Islamic countries

March 20, 2018 By administrator

Richard Dawkins

Richard Dawkins

Author and the Centre for Inquiry planning free ebook versions of his books in Arabic, Urdu, Farsi and Indonesian following a ‘stirring towards atheism’ in some Islamic countries

Richard Dawkins is responding to what he called the “stirring towards atheism” in some Islamic countries with a programme to make free downloads of his books available in Arabic, Urdu, Farsi and Indonesian.

The scientist and atheist said he was “greatly encouraged” to learn that the unofficial Arabic pdf of the book had been downloaded 13m times. Dawkins writes in The God Delusion about his wish that the “open-minded people” who read it will “break free of the vice of religion altogether”. It has sold 3.3m copies worldwide since it was published in 2006 – far fewer than the number of Arabic copies that Dawkins believes to have been downloaded illegally.

The Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science recently merged with the Washington DC-based Center for Inquiry. Dawkins said the CFI decided on “a more systematic programme” of translating his work in ebook form following “stirrings toward atheism in Iran and other Islamic countries”. It will be the first time his work has been made available in Arabic, Urdu, Farsi and other languages of Islamic countries.

The first book to be translated will be River Out of Eden: A Darwinian View of Life, which tackles evolution and which is Dawkins’ shortest book. The Center for Inquiry hopes the new versions will be available on its website by the end of this year. It will steer clear of books that already have legitimately published translations.

“We are choosing languages, not counties,” said Dawkins. “The pdfs may, of course, be downloaded by anybody in any country, but we imagine most Urdu downloads will be in Pakistan, most Indonesian downloads in Indonesia and Malaysia, and most Farsi downloads in Iran.”

 

Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: book, Richard Dawkins

The Deep State: The Novel

March 10, 2018 By administrator

The Deep State: The Novel

The Deep State: The Novel

America’s top cop has always managed to hold a sterling reputation. One of honor and the utmost integrity, but when called upon by the ‘secret society’ to investigate a case based on a phony report and trumped up allegations manipulated by the best smear artists money can buy, he faces the most daunting task ever undertaken. Coming against the most powerful man in the free world. With pressure from all sides, he finds the world rapidly closing in on him. Powerful elite societies will accept nothing less than a clean take down.

Can he keep up the charade, or will he be forced to succumb to the greatest three dimensional chess player of all time?

Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: the deep state, The Novel

Alumna’s book shines light on forgotten history of #ArmenianGenocide

March 9, 2018 By administrator

Mouradian my mother voice

Mouradian my mother voice

By Cameron Vernali,

Kay Mouradian’s mother survived the Armenian genocide at the age of 14.

However, while Mouradian heard stories of her mother’s experiences as a child, the alumna wouldn’t really learn about the details of the horrific event until she began writing a book on the subject called “My Mother’s Voice” in her 50s.

The novel and accompanying documentary focus on her mother’s life during the Armenian genocide, which Mouradian researched for 10 years in libraries, book shops and other countries. Mouradian won the Armenian Genocide Awareness Legacy Award at the Armenian National Committee of America Western Region’s annual awards banquet on Feb. 24 for spreading awareness of the topic and said she hopes a personal focus on the Armenian genocide will help people, especially teachers, remember a part of history that is often forgotten.

Mouradian said the idea for the book first came from her mother, who was suffering from severe dementia. As her condition got worse, she told Mouradian to write a book about her life and the Armenian genocide. However, Mouradian was teaching throughout Los Angeles and had plans to go to Beijing to teach overseas at the time.

But her plans changed – Mouradian never went to Beijing and ended up writing the novel instead. Mouradian said she wanted to help the Armenian genocide retain its place in history, and as a former teacher, she wanted to give other educators a more accessible way of understanding the genocide.

The Armenian genocide began in 1915, during which the Ottoman Empire – which includes modern-day Turkey – committed genocide of more than 1.5 million Armenians residing in the empire. However, Mouradian said people sometimes are unaware of the mass killings since Turkey refuses to acknowledge the genocide, and the word “genocide” did not exist until 30 years after the Armenian genocide.

“I thought to myself, ‘How do I make it easy for teachers to get a grasp of what happened in 1915 to make their job easier and to get their interest involved?’” Mouradian said.

Mouradian researched the genocide using a variety of sources including the history and memoir sections in used bookstores and international trips. At the bookstores, Mouradian would open books to the table of contents and buy them if she saw the word “Constantinople” in it. She also went to UCLA libraries for books on World War I and got in touch with the Library of Congress manuscript division for 10 microreels.

During three trips to Turkey and two to Syria, she searched for her mother’s rescuers, whose descendants remembered her mother decades after the end of the genocide, she said. She also traveled the routes her mother took from her village to Aleppo and through the Syrian desert.

However, Mouradian added to the complexity of “My Mother’s Voice” when she decided to create a documentary with the same name and focus as the novel. Mouradian said she wanted to create the documentary to help students understand the Armenian genocide via a more accessible medium.

Mark Friedman, a sound designer for Moriah Films, helped Mouradian make the documentary after meeting her through mutual friends. The documentary features Mouradian’s voice over archive footage and photographs, as well as live footage of Mouradian herself. Friedman said the focus on Mouradian’s mother’s life created an opportunity for viewers to personally connect with the story.

“When you tell (people) that a million and a half people were murdered (in the Armenian genocide) … that number is so large that they can’t identify with it,” Friedman said. “But when you follow somebody’s life specifically, I think it has a lot of meaning and really affects people in the way we wanted them to be affected.”

Mary Mason, the director of teaching and learning in Glendale, met Mouradian while working with her on the Genocide Education Project training committee for district teachers. Mason said she thinks the documentary is a useful educational tool because it is personal and appropriate for kids to watch and talk about but does not oversimplify the topic.

“It puts a very real face on something that happened 100 years ago, and I think that’s important in the bigger context,” Mason said.

“My Mother’s Voice” is currently pending approval of the curriculum review committee of Glendale, which would result in the distribution of class sets for middle schools. Mouradian said integrating her work into educational systems is the most important aspect of her work because it ensures future generations will learn about events that are currently left out of textbooks.

“The Armenian genocide does deserve its rightful place in history,” Mouradian said.

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: #armenianGenocide, Kay Mouradian’, mother

Switzerland’s Humanitarian Contribution during the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire 1894−1923

March 3, 2018 By administrator

Bearing Witness to Humanity

Bearing Witness to Humanity

Book Bearing Witness to Humanity

Commemorating the 100th Anniversary of the Genocide

Manoukian, Abel

This book seeks to pay tribute to the Swiss people’s unprecedented solidarity with the Armenians in their most trying times. After providing a comprehensive overview of Armenian history and the events leading to the massacres and genocide perpetrated against the Armenians, the author explains how it came to be that the Swiss people took a stand alongside their Armenian brothers and sisters in the Christian faith. The period under consideration ranges from the time of the first American Protestant missionaries in the orient to the assumption and continuation of their work by Swiss missionaries.

A stark contrast emerges between the merciless policy of annihilation implemented by the Ottoman Empire and the shining examples of selflessness provided by aid workers from Switzerland, who – as doctors, nurses and educators – gave the Armenian people formidable assistance in the most adverse of circumstances. Their efforts were supported by an unabating flow of monetary donations from many people in their home country, including those who were less wealthy. This surge in people’s willingness to help was made possible and sustained by a massive solidarity movement in Swiss society.

Two examples, among many, should be mentioned – Sister Beatrice Rohner (1876–1947), from Basel, who suffered a mental breakdown following all the horror she experienced as a teacher and director of an orphanage, and Jakob Künzler (1871–1949), from Walzenhausen, a cabinet-maker by profession, who – driven by profound faith – worked tirelessly, first as a medical orderly, then subsequently as an ingenious general practitioner and highly inventive organiser, from 1899-1922 in Turkey and thereafter in Lebanon. Having been acquainted with Künzler, while Swiss vice-consul in Jaffa, Carl Lutz found him to be a great inspiration for his own heroic efforts saving Jews in Budapest in 1944.

The Author of this book endows his Swiss ‘witnesses for humanity’ with a lively voice, without any loss of scholarliness, as is demonstrated by copious footnotes and references. His extremely wide-ranging research integrates previously unseen material from Swiss archives for the first time and forms the basis of this comprehensive work, which constitutes a significant enrichment of the subject

HARDCOVER

ISBN: 978-3-402-13314-9

Size: 15,5 x 23 cm

606 Pages

Illustrations: 82

Weight: 950 gm

Published: February 2018

Publisher: Aschendorff Verlag GmbH & Co. KG

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: Bearing Witness, Humanity, Switzerland’s Humanitarian Contribution

Journey through Genocide: Stories of Survivors and the Dead Paperback “Book”

February 22, 2018 By administrator

Journey through Genocide

Journey through Genocide

by Raffy Boudjikanian (Author)

Powerful accounts by genocide survivors; a journalist seeking to bear witness to their pain.

Darfuri refugee camps in Chad, Kigali in Rwanda, and the ruins of ancient villages in Turkey — all visited by genocide, all still reeling in its wake. In Journey through Genocide, Raffy Boudjikanian travels to communities that have survived genocide to understand the legacy of this most terrible of crimes against humanity.

In this era of ethnic and religious wars, mass displacements, and forced migrations, Boudjikanian looks back at three humanitarian crises. In Chad, meet families displaced by massacres in the Darfur region of neighbouring Sudan, their ordeal still raw. In Rwanda, meet a people struggling with justice and reconciliation. And in Turkey, explore what it means to still be afraid a century after the author’s own ancestors were caught in the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

Clear-eyed and compassionate, Boudjikanian breathes life into horrors that too often seem remote.

Product details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Dundurn (April 21 2018)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1459740750
  • ISBN-13: 978-1459740754
  • Product Dimensions: 12.7 x 2.5 x 20.3 cm

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: Genocide, Journey, Through

Did you know that the very first book in Armenian was born in Venice in 1512?

February 8, 2018 By administrator

Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: Armenian, book, Venice in 1512

Killing Orders book Talat Pasha’s Telegrams and the Armenian Genocide “PRE-ORDER your copy today”

January 26, 2018 By administrator

Authors: Akçam, Taner

  • Verifies archival evidence previously dismissed as being ‘fake’ in order to refute the on-going denial of the Armenian Genocide
  • Argues that the sanctioning of the genocide can finally be proven through official documents
  • Summarises meticulous research undertaken by one of the most respected, award-winning names in the field

The book represents an earthquake in genocide studies, particularly in the field of Armenian Genocide research. A unique feature of the Armenian Genocide has been the long-standing efforts of successive Turkish governments to deny its historicity and to hide the documentary evidencesurrounding it. This book provides a major clarification of the often blurred lines between facts and truth in regard to these events. The authenticity of the killing orders signed by Ottoman Interior Minister Talat Pasha and the memoirs of the Ottoman bureaucrat Naim Efendi have been two of the most contested topics in this regard. The denialist school has long argued that these documents and memoirs were all forgeries, produced by Armenians to further their claims. Taner Akçam provides the evidence to refute the basis of these claims and demonstrates clearly why the documents can be trusted as authentic, revealing the genocidal intent of the Ottoman-Turkish government towards its Armenian population. As such, this work removes a cornerstone from the denialist edifice, and further establishes the historicity of the Armenian Genocide.

to Order: http://www.palgrave.com/us/book/9783319697864

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, book, Killing Orders

Armenian Genocide history lecture coming to Ohio Wesleyan University

January 24, 2018 By administrator

Historian Ronald Grigor Suny, Ph.D

Historian Ronald Grigor Suny, Ph.D

Historian Ronald Grigor Suny, Ph.D., will discuss the World War I-era Armenian Genocide when he speaks next month at Ohio Wesleyan University, OWU website reveals.

The presentation represents Ohio Wesleyan’s biennial Robert Kragalott Lecture on Genocide, Mass Atrocity, and Human Rights.

Suny’s books include “ ‘They Live in the Desert But Nowhere Else’: A History of the Armenian Genocide,” released in paperback in May.

Describing Suny’s book, reviewer Norman Naimark states: “I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to say that there is no one else in the world who is better able than Ronald Suny to provide a one-volume history of the Armenian Genocide. This is the best book we have on the subject. The narrative is fluid, the writing is crystal clear and engaging, and the scholarship is impeccable. Scrupulously fair-minded, Suny deepens our understanding of the causes of the genocide without, however, rationalizing it.”

In the book, Suny draws on archival documents and eyewitness accounts, creating what his publishers deem “an unforgettable chronicle of a cataclysm that set a tragic pattern for a century of genocide and crimes against humanity.”

Suny currently is working on a co-authored history of Russia titled “Russia’s Empires,” a two-volume biography of Stalin, and a series of historiographical essays on Soviet history.

He has served as a chairman of the Society for Armenian Studies and on the editorial boards of Slavic Review, International Labor and Working-Class History, International Journal of Middle East Studies, and The Armenian Review among others. He has appeared on the MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour, CBS Evening News, CNN, Voice of America, and National Public Radio, and has written for The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, and other newspapers and journals.

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Historian Ronald Grigor Suny

Taner Akçam’s new book includes ‘smoking gun’ of Armenian Genocide “Killing Orders”

January 22, 2018 By administrator

 “Killing Orders: Talat Pasha’s Telegrams and the Armenian Genocide,”

“Killing Orders: Talat Pasha’s Telegrams and the Armenian Genocide,”

By Angela Bazydlo

In his groundbreaking new book, “Killing Orders: Talat Pasha’s Telegrams and the Armenian Genocide,” due out in March, Clark University historian Taner Akçamdestroys the Turkish government’s denial strategy. Akçam includes a recently discovered document — a “smoking gun” — that points to the Ottoman government’s central role in planning the elimination of its Armenian population. Furthermore, he successfully demonstrates that the killing orders signed by Ottoman Interior Minister Talat Pasha, which the Turkish government has long discredited, are authentic.

Akçam, described as “the Sherlock Holmes of Armenian Genocide” in a New York Times article in April 2017, made these landmark discoveries in a private archive. He argues that the documents he uncovered remove a cornerstone from the denialist edifice and definitively prove the historicity of the Armenian Genocide.

“Successive Turkish governments have gone to great lengths to ensure that evidence of the intent to extinguish the Armenian people could not be located,” Akçam says. “These findings are ‘an earthquake in the field of genocide studies.’ They will make it impossible for the Turkish government to continue to deny the Armenian Genocide.”

Dirk Moses of the University of Sydney in Australia, says the book is “essential reading for all those interested in genocide and human rights studies.”

Akçam holds the Robert Aram and Marianne Kaloosdian and Stephen and Marian Mugar Chair in Armenian Genocide Studies at Clark’s Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies. An internationally recognized human rights activist, Akçam was one of the first Turkish intellectuals to acknowledge and openly discuss the Armenian Genocide.

Akcam has lectured widely and published numerous articles and books, translated into many languages. His 2012 book, “The Young Turks’ Crime Against Humanity: The Armenian Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing in the Ottoman Empire,” was co-winner of the Middle East Studies Association’s Albert Hourani Book Award and one of ForeignAffairs.com’s “Best Books on the Middle East.”

Akçam’s many honors include the Hrant Dink Spirit of Freedom and Justice Medal from the Organization of Istanbul Armenians and the Hrant Dink Freedom Award from the Armenian Bar Association (both in 2015), and the “Heroes of Justice and Truth” awarded at the Armenian Genocide Centennial commemoration in May 2015. The Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern) recognized him as a Friend of the Armenians in 2016.

In May, he will receive the 2018 Outstanding Upstander Award from the World Without Genocide organization.

Filed Under: Books, Interviews, News Tagged With: Killing Orders, Taner Akçam

LA Times journalist writes book about Kirk Kerkorian

January 15, 2018 By administrator

kirk kerkorian book

kirk kerkorian book

The US-based National Association for Armenian Studies and Resrearch is going to host a presentation of a book dedicated to Kirk Kerkorian.

The author of the biographical novel is William Rempel, a veteran journalist of The Los Angeles Times, who described the casino tycoon as a a controversial personality who was genious without having education and ready for  business ties and risky affairs despite being shy, Rusarminfo.ru reports.

Kerkorian, traditionally referred to as the Las Vegas King, died on June 16, 2015

Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: book, Kirk-Kerkorian

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