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Paul Ignatius to Speak at Centennial Banquet in DC

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Old 04 Apr 15, 16:04   #1 (permalink)
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Post Paul Ignatius to Speak at Centennial Banquet in DC

“All Armenians mourn this most devastating tragedy,” said Paul Ignatius in a telephone conversation from his home in Washington, D.C. He will be one of the headline speakers at the Genocide Centennial Banquet in the nation’s capital on Saturday evening, May 9, at the Marriott Hotel.

Paul Ignatius

The stellar background of Paul Ignatius is studded with impressive positions, including Secretary of the Navy and Assistant Secretary of Defense under President Lyndon B. Johnson; Assistant Secretary of the Army under President John F. Kennedy; president of the Washington Post newspaper; and executive vice president of the Washington Post Co. Currently, he is a trustee of the George C. Marshall Foundation, and a member of the Federal City Council and Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs.

In 2013, the U.S. Navy announced that an Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer, called the USS Paul Ignatius, would be constructed and named for him.

Born in Glendale, Calif., on Nov. 11, 1920, to parents Eliza (nee Jamgochian) and Hovsep Ignatiosian, Ignatius recalled that during his youth, the atrocities of the 1915 Armenian Genocide, or of the 1995-96 Armenian Massacres that claimed the lives of members of his grandfather’s family in Agin, near Kharpert, were never spoken of in his household. His grandfather left Agin in 1892, going to Manchester, England, and his father came to the United States in 1904.

“I grew up in an American environment,” he recalled. There were essentially no Armenians in Glendale then, as there are now. But I met wonderful Armenian friends of my grandfather’s extended family. We celebrated many warm, festive occasions.” He proudly related that he was baptized in the Armenian church in Los Angeles.

In his book Now I Know In Part, published by NAASR, he has written, “There are quite a lot of stories about Armenia and my parent’s Armenian friends. I never thought much about all this when I was growing up, probably because it would make me seem to be different from my school mates, and I wanted to be like everyone else. Now I look with a different eye on my heritage. I have come to believe that I am a more interesting person to myself and to others because of this background.”

In another NAASR published book, Five By Three, Ignatius covers five books each of three legendary authors he knew well and admired greatly: William Saroyan, Zaven Surmelian, and Michael Arlen.

Trip to Historic Armenia

Paul Ignatius’s interest in Armenian affairs became vivid later in his life. In 2006, he took “a trip of a lifetime” with his daughter Sarah to Armenia and historic Armenia. The NAASR-sponsored trip also visited Kharpert. “It was an experience of many emotions. The churches, the missionary college, and everything were destroyed. One had the feeling of what a wonderful place it must have once been with its soaring mountains and beautiful valleys,” he noted.

“Sarah, who speaks some Armenian, became intensely emotional and came back with a life-long interest in her Armenian background,” he said. A lawyer specializing in immigration, Sarah has applied for a Fulbright grant to teach at the American University of Armenia for 2016. His wife Nancy (nee Weiser) visited Soviet Armenia with a group from the National Cathedral, and his son David, who is an editor and columnist for the Washington Post newspaper, has made two trips to Armenia.

During this year of the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide, Paul Ignatius declares that Turkey “must face the truth of its past. It is a time not only for mourning the huge dimension of the tragedy, but also of looking ahead, with some kind of resolution for the Turks.” He listed among these the restoration of church property and Armenian monuments.

Ambassador E. Djerejian, L. Setrakian also to speak

During the banquet on May 9, Ambassador Edward Djerejian, who served in eight U.S. presidential administrations from Presidents John F. Kennedy to William Clinton, will also be speaking. He has served as U.S. Ambassador to Syria and to Israel, and also held the positions of Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, and Special Assistant to the President.

He is the founding director of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University, a position he has held since August 1994, and is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He also serves on the board of trustees of the Carnegie Corporation. In 2013, he was elected “independent chairman” of Occidental Petroleum’s Corporation’s Board of Trustees, and is a managing partner of Djerejian Global Consultancies.

Also speaking at the banquet will be journalist Lara Setrakian who covered the 2011 Egyptian Revolution against Hosni Mubarak for Bloomberg television. Setrakian, who focuses on events in the Middle East, is a reporter for ABC News and a freelancer for Bloomberg TV. She created a single issue news website on the Syrian conflict in December 2012 called “Syria Deeply.” That same year, she was named as one of Marie Claire’s Top Women.

The post Paul Ignatius to Speak at Centennial Banquet in DC appeared first on Armenian Weekly.


“All Armenians mourn this most devastating tragedy,” said Paul Ignatius in a telephone conversation from his home in Washington, D.C. He will be one of the headline speakers at the Genocide Centennial Banquet in the nation’s capital on Saturday evening, May 9, at the Marriott Hotel. Paul Ignatius The stellar background of Paul Ignatius is studded with impressive positions, including Secretary of the Navy and Assistant Secretary of Defense under President Lyndon B. Johnson; Assistant Secretary of the Army under President John F. Kennedy; president of the Washington Post newspaper; and executive vice president of the Washington Post Co. Currently, he is a trustee of the George C. Marshall Foundation, and a member of the Federal City Council and Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs. In 2013, the U.S. Navy announced that an Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer, called the USS Paul Ignatius, would be constructed and named for him. Born in Glendale, Calif., on Nov. 11, 1920, to parents Eliza (nee Jamgochian) and Hovsep Ignatiosian, Ignatius recalled that during his youth, the atrocities of the 1915 Armenian Genocide, or of the 1995-96 Armenian Massacres that claimed the lives of members of his grandfather’s family in Agin, near Kharpert, were never [...]

The post Paul Ignatius to Speak at Centennial Banquet in DC appeared first on Armenian Weekly.


“All Armenians mourn this most devastating tragedy,” said Paul Ignatius in a telephone conversation from his home in Washington, D.C. He will be one of the headline speakers at the Genocide Centennial Banquet in the nation’s capital on Saturday evening, May 9, at the Marriott Hotel. Paul Ignatius The stellar background of Paul Ignatius is studded with impressive positions, including Secretary of the Navy and Assistant Secretary of Defense under President Lyndon B. Johnson; Assistant Secretary of the Army under President John F. Kennedy; president of the Washington Post newspaper; and executive vice president of the Washington Post Co. Currently, he is a trustee of the George C. Marshall Foundation, and a member of the Federal City Council and Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs. In 2013, the U.S. Navy announced that an Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer, called the USS Paul Ignatius, would be constructed and named for him. Born in Glendale, Calif., on Nov. 11, 1920, to parents Eliza (nee Jamgochian) and Hovsep Ignatiosian, Ignatius recalled that during his youth, the atrocities of the 1915 Armenian Genocide, or of the 1995-96 Armenian Massacres that claimed the lives of members of his grandfather’s family in Agin, near Kharpert, were never [...]

The post Paul Ignatius to Speak at Centennial Banquet in DC appeared first on Armenian Weekly.


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