“I don’t think it is worth undertaking anything less significant than that. Anyway it will be in the game industry,” Ara Adamyan said in an interview with Tert.am.
He added that the Apple Design Award, which the team won for the game Shadowmatic, brought the company an international recognition, opening more perspective for new interesting initiatives.
Asked about the Armenian IT products’ competitiveness on the world market, Adamyan said he very often finds them to be smart inventions, challenging for any user in any part of the world.
“On the international market, it doesn’t matter at all if the product is Armenian or Chinese. If it is a quality product, it is always praiseworthy. In Singapore, for instance, if someone wishes to sit back and enjoy a game, it is all the same to him or her whether that’s an Armenian or Scottish game. I think that the Armenian [IT] companies manage at times to realize challenging projects, though I would rather we heard more of that success in real life.”
Adamyan said he expects a stronger government attention to the sector to increase the advantages of IT companies, contributing to their further development.
“I would like the government to be more attentive and mitigate the legislation – especially the taxes – for IT companies. That would be part of the efforts to encourage more organizations to come into existence.”
Asked whether he finds the salaries of Armenian IT specialists satisfactory, Adamyan replied, “In developed countries, of course, the salaries are much higher, but being in Armenia, I think that those working in the IT sector earn enough to afford a high quality life. ”
Arrested Azerbaijani journalist Khadija Ismayilova wins US National Press Club award
RFE/RL Editor in Chief Nenad Pejic had nominated the Azerbaijani journalist Khadija Ismayilova for the US National Press Club’s Press Freedom Award, and she won it, Azerbaijani information agency Turan reports.
According to the report, the award ceremony was held in Washington on July 29. Journalists and editors in chief attended the annual ceremony to celebrate one of the most prestigious press freedom awards, and support their colleagues in jail. “We will not stop fighting for these journalists until they are free and able to do their jobs,” John Hughes, the president of the US National Press Club, said
Ismayilova has been held in pretrial detention in a Baku prison for 234 days on charges many observers link to her investigations of high-level corruption involving Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev, RFE/RL writes.
During the first trial on Ismayilova’s case on July 24, the judge rejected motions to dismiss the criminal case on charges of tax evasion and embezzlement, and to grant Ismayilova house arrest as a substitute for pretrial detention. In case Ismayilova is found guilty, she may face up to 19 years in prison, according to RFE/RL.
“Khadija is in prison because of her journalism…This award is an acknowledgement of her courage and her convictions, but it is also a call to all of us here tonight to condemn her imprisonment and demand her freedom,” Nenaj Pejic, RFE/RL editor in chief, said.
On 5 December 2014, the well-known Azerbaijani journalist Khadija Ismayilova was detained after being questioned at the prosecutor’s office. Baku Sabail District Court made a decision to detain her on charges of incitement to suicide. The arrest of Ismayilova has been followed by a wave of condemning statements by a number of international organizations and influential representatives from various states. Protests have been organized in her support in various countries; and prominent international outlets released articles covering the topic. However, on 13 February 2015, the Grave Crimes Investigation Department of Azerbaijan Prosecutor General’s Office charged the journalist under articles 179.3.2 (large-scale appropriation), 192.2.2 (illegal entrepreneurship with large income) and 308.2 (abuse of power with grave consequences) of Criminal Code of Azerbaijan. The journalist was fined while in jail. She faces up to 12 years in prison. In early April, Azerbaijani journalist Tural Mustafayev – under whose complaint Khadija Ismayilova had been arrested last December – wrote a letter to Zakir Garalov, the Prosecutor General of Azerbaijan, saying that he wanted to withdraw his appeal. When asked why he had lodged an accusation, Mustafa told the journalist that he was under emotional stress in that period.
Related:
Khadija Ismayilova from Baku court: Ilham Aliyev has personal dislike towards me
Azerbaijani journalist Khadija Ismayilova jailed for criticizing authorities wins Anna Politkovskaya Award
Jailed Azerbaijani journalist Khadija Ismayilova to get John Aubuchon Press Freedom Award
Azerbaijani journalist – whose complaint caused Khadija Ismayilova’s arrest – repents and wants to withdraw application
Turkish Journalist Fatih Yağmur receives EU journalism award for exposing MİT truck news
Fatih Yağmur was awarded the Best Investigative Report of 2014 at the EU Investigative Journalism Awards on Monday for his article exposing the guns and munitions sent to Syria by the National Intelligence Organization (MIT), which was published in the Radikal daily on Jan. 3, 2014.
Three journalists from Turkey were honored with awards at the first EU Investigative Journalism Awards that is funded by the European Union in conjunction with the South East European Network for Professionalization of Media (SEENPM). The aim of the awards is to reward the investigative journalistic work in seven EU-Enlargement countries: Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Turkey.
Original investigative reports in 2014 that had significant social impact in Turkey were awarded during the ceremony that was organized by the Platform for Independent Journalism (P24) in İstanbul and which was well attended by journalists, representatives of various media organizations, diplomats and academics.
In his opening remarks P24’s Andrew Finkel said: “All too often brave and courageous journalists in Turkey are punished. Tonight they are being rewarded.”
The awards were based on votes by an independent jury, chaired by Professor Yasemin İnceoğlu and comprising Professor Arzu Kihtir, Tuğrul Eryılmaz, Hasan Cemal and Cengiz Çandar.
The Best Investigative Report of 2014 award was given to Yağmur from Radikal as “the subject matter — trucks laden with weapons en route to Syria owned by the country’s national intelligence agency — continues to have repercussions. The story is the product of pure investigative journalism at the highest international standards,” the jury said.
Nurettin Kurt was awarded the Second Best Investigative Report of 2014 for his report “Official car [for Religious Affairs Directorate president] cost TL1 million,” published in Hürriyet on Dec. 13, 2014. The jury said that the fact that the official in question returned the vehicle allocated for his use following public discussion as a result of the article gives the report a unique value.
Third place for the Best Investigative Report of 2014 went to Tahir Alperen for his report titled “Bullets that killed two police not fired from weapons belonging to four people shot dead,” published on t24.com.tr on Nov. 4, 2014.
The report was on the murder of two police chiefs in the southeastern province of Bingöl in October of last year. Shortly after the attack, then-Interior Minister Efkan Ala announced that four of the alleged assailants were killed in clashes after the assault. However, it was later revealed that the killed suspects had nothing to with the killing of the two police chiefs in Bingöl.
“This story certainly deserves a prize as its writer has gotten hold of documents that will likely change the course of a criminal investigation regarding the murder of two police officers,” the jury stated in its rationale.
According to information on P24’s website, investigative stories that contribute to transparency and report on societal issues related to abuse of power and fundamental rights, corruption and organized crime that otherwise would not have been brought to the public’s attention qualify for the award.
Armenian Church of St. Giragos in Diyarbakir wins Grand Prix at Europa Nostra Awards
The Armenian Church of St. Giragos in Diyarbakir has won a Grand Prix of the European Union Prize for Cultural Heritage/Europa Nostra Awards.
In a ceremony in Oslo, Norway, the winners of the European Union Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Awards were celebrated and the winners of the Grand Prix and Public Choice Award were announced for the first time.
The Public Choice Award was chosen by an open online poll and the Grand Prix winners were selected by specialist juries. Grand Prix laureates receive a €10,000 prize.
Seven projects received the Grand Prix for outstanding efforts in the protection of cultural heritage:
- Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest, Hungary
- Salt Valley of Añana, Basque Country, Spain
- Armenian Church of St. Giragos in Diyarbakir, Turkey
- Wonders of Venice: Virtual Online Treasures in St. Mark’s Area, Italy
- The Rundling Association, Jameln, Germany
- Churches Conservation Trust, London, United Kingdom
- Programme for Owners of Rural Buildings in Estonia, Tallinn, Estonia
The European Heritage Awards Ceremony was hosted by Tibor Navracsics, European Commissioner for Education, Culture, Youth and Sport and opened by Fabian Stang, Mayor of Oslo.
The Armenian Church of St. Giragos in Diyarbakir may have been of 17th century origin, although some contend that it was completely rebuilt in the 1880s. The building suffered from appalling deterioration late in the 20th century following the decline in the local population of Armenians. The roof collapsed and the structure became derelict.
Its restoration, which has involved a good deal of totally new building, began a few years ago, thanks to the efforts of the St. Giragos Church Foundation, non-governmental groups and concerned individuals.
The European Union Prize for Cultural Heritage, or the Europa Nostra Awards, highlight some Europe’s best achievements in heritage care, and showcase remarkable efforts made in raising awareness about our cultural heritage.
Source: armradio.am
Orange County: Zov’s to Receive California’s ‘Small Business of the Year’ Award
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.—The State of California boasts some 3.3 million small businesses but only 80 of them including one from OC will be recognized as “Small Business of the Year” at a ceremony to be held on Wednesday, June 10 in the State Capitol. Zov’s, which operates restaurants in Tustin, Newport Beach, Irvine, Anaheim and 2 at John Wayne Airport, is being hailed for its longtime commitment to excellence in the dining arena and actively serving the communities in which it boasts locations.
State Senator John Moorlach of the 37th District informed the company’s president and CEO Armen Karamardian of the honor, which coincides with 2015 California Small Business Day.
“Wow. This is truly an unexpected and much appreciated honor,” said Karamardian, whose mother, Zov, started the business in 1987 and was one of the county’s pioneers of fine dining and a nationally recognized chef/restaurateur.
“As many Orange Countians know, we are a family business and we work hard to put our seal on every project we launch and every meal that finds its way out of our kitchens. We are humbled and excited to accept this honor in our State’s Capitol,” added Karamardian.
In addition to her critically acclaimed restaurants, Zov authored two best-selling, hard-cover cookbooks, “Simply Zov” and “Zov: Recipes and Memories From the Heart,” each of which have sold 50,000+ copies. She credits her mentor and dear friend, Julia Child, with guiding her hand in completing these projects.
Her passion for the culinary arts extends to hosting cooking classes at the restaurants with guest chefs like Emeril Lagasse, Carla Hall, Michael Symon, Todd English and Anne Burrell. She has been honored by the James Beard Foundation and the International Association of Culinary Professionals, among countless others. She is also a frequent guest on television programs of the Food Network, CNN and others.
Report asbarez
Game by Armenian developers wins Apple Design Award
A 3D puzzle game developed Armenia-based Triado Studio has won Apple Design Award, the team wrote on Facebook.
The award was handed over during Apple’s World Wide Developers Conference in San Francisco on Monday.
Shadowmatic is an imagination stirring puzzle where you rotate abstract objects in a spotlight to find recognizable silhouettes in projected shadows, relevant to the surrounding environment.
“Selected as an Apple Design Award winner for it’s attention to detail, high-fidelity rendering, excellent execution, and perfect representation of Multi-touch game play, Shadowmatic challenges your spatial thinking with more than 80 puzzles in gorgeous atmospheric environments rendered with highly realistic textures and shadows,” says the statement on developer.apple.com.
Kim Kardashian to present media award to Instagram founder
Kim Kardashian revealed on Instagram on Tuesday that she will present Kevin Systrom, the founder of the social media platform, with The Media Award in Honor of Eugenia Sheppard.
Kardashian is a huge fan of Instagram. She has 33.3 million followers and just published a book of selfies, reports the Fashion Times.
News broke back in March that Instagram would received the CFDA Award for media. On Monday, some of the 2015 CFDA Award presenters were announced: Taraji P. Henson will present the accessories award, Amanda Seyfried will take the stage for womenswear and actor Joshua Jackson will present the awards for menswear.
The presenters for the Swarovski awards haven’t yet been finalized, according toWWD, and are expected to be revealed at a later date.
‘Orphans of the Genocide’ Nominated for Regional Emmy Award #ArmenianGenocide
“Orphans of the Genocide,” a documentary by Bared Maronian, has been nominated for a 2014 Regional Emmy Award by The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, Suncoast Chapter in the documentary – historical category. This is the 38th Annual Suncoast Emmy Awards, which three years ago nominated the 7-minute version of the Orphans of the Genocide for a Regional Emmy Award.
“Orphans of the Genocide” weaves historical archives with interviews and memoirs of Armenian orphans to establish irrevocable proof of the Armenian Genocide. An emotional, visual journey through never-before-seen archival footage and memoirs of orphans who lived through the last century’s first, fully documented and least recognized genocide in 1915, “Orphans of the Genocide” features insightful interviews with such prominent figures and scholars as British journalist Robert Fisk, Clark University’s Director of Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Professor Debora Dwork, and Armenian-American Dr. Jack Kevorkian among others.
Over the last two years, “Orphans of the Genocide” has been broadcast on PBS stations nationwide, reaching over 12 million viewers. Additionally, the documentary has been invited to participate at various events and film festivals throughout the U.S., Canada, Europe, as well as in the Middle East and South America, earning numerous awards.
Source asbarez
Veteran Turkish journalist Hasan Cemal receives prestigious journalism award
Turkish journalist Hasan Cemal who was named by Harvard University as its 2015 recipient of the Louis M. Lyons award for Conscience and Integrity in Journalism received the award at a ceremony at the university on Thursday. the author of book the Armenian Genocide,
Cemal was chosen by Harvard’s Nieman Foundation “in recognition of a long career dedicated to championing freedom of the press in Turkey and as a representative of all Turkish journalists working today under increasingly difficult conditions.” report todayzaman
In a statement, members of the Nieman Foundation said: “Hasan Cemal and Turkish journalists like him have shown great courage in upholding the importance of a free press in their native land. Bearing witness and speaking truth to power are more necessary than ever in Turkey and other places around the world where journalists face government hostility, harassment, and arrest.”
The full text of the speech Cemal delivered during the award ceremony is as follows:
I know you’ve all seen those Oscar ceremonies where the award winner weeps and struggles to find the right words.
Let’s face it; a journalist lost for words wouldn’t be much of a journalist.
The real danger is that by the time I’ve finished my speech, you might be wishing I were lost for words.
So I will try to be brief.
I said “try.”
I make no promises.
And even though my eyes are dry, I won’t begin to conceal that this is an emotional moment for me.
As journalists, we all share a secret. We are motivated by the impact we make, not the size of our monthly payslip. And there is no greater recognition than the respect of our own peers.
And which peers command more respect than the Nieman Fellows?
So let me begin by thanking you all so very much for this award. It means a great deal.
When I look at the list of people who have received this award in previous years, when I consider that I may be thought worthy to sit among such towering talents, as Edward R. Murrow, I think maybe I have done something with my life after all.
This award means much to me but I believe it means a great deal to the journalistic community in Turkey whom I represent – or at least those members of that community who are still prepared to listen to their conscience, who are still prepared to try to hold power accountable and who are still prepared to put their jobs, and even on occasion their own liberty on the line.
It was George Orwell who defined freedom as the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.
Please be assured: In Turkey there are still members of our profession who cherish that right and who are still prepared to defend that notion of freedom.
Let me tell you a little about them and about Turkey, the country where I have made my career.
I come from a country where a journalist was arrested and her mobile phone and computer seized because of a single tweet; a country where, for that single tweet, she faces five years in prison.
I come from a country where a prime minister has declared social media to be a social menace.
I come from a country where Twitter and YouTube were banned by government fiat.
I come from a country where all a prime minister has to do is pick up the phone for a news item to be spiked, or a journalists fired. This is a land where the prime minister can even decide who will or will not appear on a talk show.
I come from a country where a prime minister can scold a newspaper owner down the phone about an article he published to such an extent that he reduced the man to actual tears.
I know this because the boss was my boss -a man who made his fortune not through newsprint but through his business dealings with the government. So when the prime minister scolded he was in no position to answer back.
And the reason the prime minister was angry enough to make the man cry was because of something I wrote.
Allow me the luxury of quoting from myself:
“Producing a newspaper is one thing; running a country is another. Nobody should confuse the two, nor feel entitled to cross the line.
I know the line is a thin one, which is why in democracies all hell sometimes breaks loose.
Look at the outcry caused in America by the Bay of Pigs Invasion, the Vietnam War, the Pentagon Papers and the Watergate Scandal, and look at how many times valued members of the journalist profession in America were accused of treason by presidents and those who govern.
But history has always been on the side of those newspapers and journalists who, through news and editorials, stood up for peace, democracy and freedom of the press.”
I continue to quote:
It was back in the early 1990s. I was editor in chief of a newspaper called Cumhuriyet . One of the big names of the Turkish business community asked for my advice as he intended to launch a newspaper.
I asked him:
“Why do you intend to launch a newspaper? Do you want to have a ‘successful newspaper’ alongside a successful fridge and a TV factory and a successful bank? Or do you want to launch a newspaper to leverage political influence that will be greater than your rivals and competitors? Do you want to get into the newspaper business or use the newspaper to protect your real business?”
That question is more than valid today.
It is at the heart of the corrupt and unwholesome relation between those in power and those whose business it is to make power accountable.
But not only that.
It explains why a journalist elite in Turkey fail to do their jobs. Editors and leading columnists fail to defend journalism against those in power because they are unable to protect journalism from their bosses. The profession is divided and weak.
In order for the relationship between media and government to acquire public legitimacy, in order for the relationship between journalism and owners to obey ground rules built on respect, it goes without saying that journalists themselves must recover their own sense of integrity.
We cannot sit back as if our hands were tied. Our inaction marks the death knell of democracy and an end to the rule of law.
The column was never published in the newspaper I had worked for 15 years.
It was enough to get me fired.
But of course I had it published on the same day, at the on line newspaper T24, where I have been writing for the last two years.
Let me tell you a few other things about the country where I come from. It is a place where, during an election rally, the prime minister provokes the crowd to jeer at journalists– threatening women journalists in particular.
I come from a country where a prime minister declares those who hold different opinions from his own to be traitors.
In Turkey the prime minister appointed as Minister of the Interior his own undersecretary, a man who gave the order to a local governor to, [and I quote] “Break down that journalist’s door and throw him in jail… If the prosecutor complains, throw him in jail too…”
I come from a country where a prime minister’s undersecretary can say, “Shut down that journalist’s website! So what if there’s no court order? We’re the ones who make the laws, my friend.. I’m talking about the will of a party that received 50 percent of the vote. Don’t worry about it; excuse my language but screw the lot of them…”
I come from a country where the prime minister has ensured that the profits from the large government tenders he controls, are used to create media empires under his influence; where he has the final say on the appointment of editors-in-chief and columnists, and on basic editorial issue.
Not surprisingly this has resulted in a one-sided media totally under his control.
I wish I could stop here. I know I promised to try to be brief.
But there’s more.
I live in a country where there is an abuse of power and a media that is too intimidated to write about those abuses.
The result is no great secret– it is the degradation of rule of law.
We have seen the prime minister can get his own Minister of Justice to use his influence in the Supreme Court to overturn the acquittal of an important media tycoon;
…Where he can withdraw a large government tender from a group he dislikes and award it to a group that he favors…
Where a prime minister can, at a moment’s notice, remove judges and police officers from their posts in order to cover-up claims of corruption and theft that reach as far as his own family…
Instead of ‘rule of law’ we have a ‘police state’.
We have come to understand that a police state is one where the police do not obey the orders of the public prosecutor.
It is one where those who defend the rule of law – including the head of the Constitutional Court are attacked for opposing the rule of the majority – even when that means shutting down Twitter and YouTube.
In Turkey, the head of the country’s largest business organisation is labelled a traitor for defending the rule of law as essential to business confidence.
The prime minister has even accused the Central Bank governor of treason for not lowering interest rates.
We have witnessed a prime minister become so insensitive that he encourages his supporters to boo the mourning mother of a 15-year-old boy who was killed by police during a protest…
…a prime minister that meddles in people’s private lives, who pronounces on everything from the length of girls’ skirts, to the number of children a family should have.
I know this is beginning to sound personal. So let me name names. I am talking about Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, prime minister for over a decade and since August, the Turkish president.
He is moving Turkey towards what he calls a presidential system but which is tantamount to one man-rule.
He has no respect for the rule of law.
He has no concern for the independence of the judiciary.
He does not recognize the separation of powers.
He believes that democracy simply means a majority at the ballot box.
He has not learned that getting the most votes is not a license to violate democratic values, nor to force the surrender of the judiciary, nor to ignore the separation of powers, to trample on freedom of expression, to destroy free and independent media, nor to subjugate civil society.
If he hasn’t learned this by now, the chances are he never will.
He is a man who could have led Turkey into the family of democracies, but who is now leading it back to the wilderness.
We are moving from a system of ‘military bureaucratic tutelage’ to a system of ‘civilian despotism’.
And all this is called by his partisans, the new Turkey and even a ‘people’s revolution’.
Today, the choice Turkey faces is whether it can still embrace fundamental values that turn the illusion of democracy into real democracy.
In Turkey I am known for having coined the expression “gazeteci milleti” or the “journalist nation.”
The main qualification for citizenship of this nation is the ability to ask questions.
Questioning is a way of life for us. And for this reason we are not particularly popular.
And those who require not just 99 per cent but 100 per cent submission, don’t really like the “journalist nation.”
For example, in Turkey, President Erdoğan refuses to meet with journalists who may ask him any uncomfortable questions.
It has been years since he held a real press conference.
He can only be in the presence of journalists whom he knows will play by his rules. If, by chance, someone finds the opportunity to rear their head and ask a real question, they will find themselves on the receiving end of a severe dressing-down.
But journalists will continue to ask questions.
No dictator can divest journalists of this democratic right.
There will always be those who, for the right reason not just the wrong, want to leave the Journalist Nation. There always have been and there always will.
But there will always be those who have no choice. We are creatures of the Journalist Nation. It is the only place we can still breathe.
The following words by the Peruvian novelist Vargas Llosa stick in my mind:
“The situation of the writer is one of constant rebellion, the role of devil’s advocate.”
He continues:
“… just as we did today and yesterday, we must continue to move forward in society, saying “no”, rebelling, demanding the recognition of our right to think differently…
… showing that dogma, censorship and arbitrary rule are the mortal enemies of progress and human dignity…
Yes, we must continue moving forward.
But for how long?
I am 71 years old.
I have been an active journalist for 46 years. I have never worked in any other job.
During the 2006 World Cup in Germany, I spent a month writing about that leather ball. I remember one particular day very clearly. I was taking a train to Berlin for a match. While browsing the Daily Telegraph, I read an interview with a journalist who was celebrating his 75th year in the job.
Next to the article was a black-and-white photograph of the journalist sitting by the window of a train, writing. During the celebratory dinner someone asked him:
“Why, at the age of 93, do you still switch on your computer every day?”
He answered by quoting the famous Housman poem:
“Up, lad; when the journey’s over, there’ll be time enough to sleep.”
I hope not all of you are asleep. I really am nearly done.
I have told you about the country I come from. But I know full well there are many countries whose journalists could stand here and make a similar speech. And it is not only journalists who suffer oppression.
There are many others who live under the pressure of dictatorship.
So if you ask me, what journalists do that makes them different, it is that we are the voice of those who have no voice.
We cry out where others cannot.
And we make the whole world hear the cry that would otherwise remain lodged in the people’s throat.
What I am describing is not just true of underdeveloped countries. As a profession, we must find ways to make ourselves heard – to shout with an ever firmer voice.
I have devoted my life to this profession, and there have been times when I have asked myself whether it was worth it; and frankly sometimes I had to answer “no”.
When that happens, “Hasan CemaI,” I tell myself, “You never had a choice. What other job could you do?”
That was before I got fired. But when I did get fired I did what any member of the Journalist Nation would do.
I started all over again.
In my case it was T24 one of Turkey’s new and brave on line newspaper.
A few days after I was told to put down my pen, I walked up a mountain on the Turkish Iraqi border with retreating Kurdish guerrillas. I went into the field to report and to write.
And when I got home, I began devoting time to founding an organization called P24, a civil society organization which encourages editorial independence and quality journalism.
How do we do that?
The first step is not to give up.
That too is not always easy.
But on a day like today, standing before an audience of distinguished colleagues, witnessing solidarity and friendship, I realize that my modest struggle is shared. So ask me on a day like today whether devoting an entire life to journalism was worth it.
This award is the answer.
Yes, it was worth it.
Thank you all for this day, for this prize and for your attention.
NYTimes: Armenian Leaders Establish Rights Award to Commemorate Centenary of Genocide
By RICK GLADSTONE
March 10, 2015
Leaders in the Armenian diaspora, preparing to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, have collaborated with Hollywood celebrities and human rights advocates to create a prize to be awarded annually to those who put themselves at risk to ensure that others survive. NYT
The humanitarian prize, to be announced on Tuesday in New York, is part of an expansive effort by prominent Armenians to ensure that the history of the genocide by Turkish Ottoman troops, which is still disputed by Turkey’s government, is documented and archived through the stories of survivors and their saviors, in ways similar to the chronicling of the Jews’ suffering in the Holocaust.
The effort, the Armenian sponsors said, will emphasize how survivors of the genocide — people who in some cases were protected by sympathetic Turks — went on to lead successful lives as they and their descendants spread throughout the world, many of them relocating to Russia and the United States.
About 1.5 million Armenians died from 1915 to 1923 in what is widely acknowledged as the 20th century’s first genocide. About 500,000 survived, many because of interventions by foreign individuals and institutions. The official commemoration of the genocide in Armenia begins next month.
“The humanity, generosity, strength and sacrifice shown by those who saved so many Armenians compels us to tell these stories,” said Ruben Vardanyan, an Armenian investment banker and philanthropist who grew up in Russia and is a co-sponsor of the commemoration effort, known as the 100 Lives Initiative.
“My grandfather was saved by a missionary,” Mr. Vardanyan said in an interview, crediting his existence today to that event.
Along with commemorating the survivors and those who saved them, the effort will establish a $1 million award, to be called the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity, to be given starting next year. The winners will not keep the money, instead presenting it to the organizations that they identify as the inspirations for their work.
The award is named after a survivor of the genocide, Aurora Mardiganian, who as a child was forced to witness the deaths of family members. She devoted her life to raising awareness of the genocide and starred in a 1919 film called “Ravished Armenia.”
Mr. Vardanyan and his associates collaborated with Not On Our Watch, an organization founded by George Clooney and other celebrities — including Don Cheadle, Matt Damon and Brad Pitt — that seeks to prevent mass atrocities. Its principal undertaking in the past few years has been to document, through satellite imagery, evidence of possible atrocities in parts of Africa; the effort is known as the Satellite Sentinel Project.
In a statement, Mr. Clooney said his group shared a common goal with the Armenian sponsors, “to focus global attention on the impact of genocide as well as putting resources toward ending mass atrocities around the world.”
Members of the selection committee for the prize, which has yet to be finalized, resembles a Who’s Who of personalities in human rights advocacy and Armenian success. They include Mr. Clooney as well as the Nobel Peace Prize winners Elie Wiesel and Óscar Arias; Mary Robinson, a former United Nations high commissioner for human rights; Gareth Evans, an adviser to the United Nations on genocide prevention; and Vartan Gregorian, an Iranian-born American academic who is president of the Carnegie Corporation of New York.
Mr. Clooney is to award the inaugural prize at a ceremony to be held in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, on April 24, 2016, the sponsors said in a statement.