29 Mar: Miaseen Hub Gala

On behalf of the entire event committee for Building Bridges: Empowering the Future of Kapan, we are pleased to invite you to a memorable evening dedicated to advancing Miaseen’s mission and celebrating the launch of our Miaseen Hub Kapan initiative.

Join us on March 29th at the Orinda Country Club for an evening of inspiration and impact.

Guest speakers including

Garo Paylan

Michael Goorjian

Sheila Paylan

Cheryl Edison

Hosted by Bay Area radio personality ‘St. John’ of 99.7 NOW.

Together, we will celebrate the shared vision of fostering opportunity and resilience among Armenia’s youth, and we will showcase the incredible progress already made through the Miaseen Hub Kapan initiative. It is with your steadfast support that this vision comes to life.

Silent auction items donated from The William Saroyan Foundation, Vahe Berberian, Ardean, Napastak Wineries, Roaming Goat and more!

https://www.miaseen.org/2025gala

3 Apr: Time and Place, Heaven and Eternity in the Odes of St. Nerses Shnorhali

4 p.m. 
Stephens Hall 270  UC Berkeley

Lecture Abstract

This lecture will introduce participants to the life and literary corpus of St. Nerses Shnorhali, Catholicos of the Armenian Church from 1166–1173 AD, with a focus on the saint’s liturgical odes (taghk). The first part of the lecture will provide an overview of Shnorhali’s life and context in medieval Cilicia during the age of the Crusades, before undertaking a survey of his vast literary, particularly poetic, oeuvre. The lecture will consider the works alongside the axes of tradition and innovation, seeing how Shnorhali both drew on the authors and genres that came before him, particularly St. Grigor Narekatsi and Gregory Magistros, as well as made innovations that had a lasting impact on the subsequent Armenian literary tradition. Special attention will be paid to the place of poetry in Armenian society and the vexed relationship between clerics like Shnorhali and the pre-Christian bardic (gusan) tradition, still an active presence in the twelfth century.

Speaker’s Bio

Dr. Jesse S. Arlen is the director of the Krikor and Clara Zohrab Information Center at the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern) and a postdoctoral research fellow at the Orthodox Christian Studies Center of Fordham University. He earned his Ph.D. in 2021 from UCLA under the supervision of Prof. Peter Cowe with a dissertation on Anania of Narek and 10th-century religious developments in Armenia. He has published a number of scholarly studies relating to Armenian monasticism, education, and religious literature. He has taught Classical Armenian at the University of Notre Dame, the Dumbarton Oaks and Hill Museum & Manuscript Library’s intensive summer school, and St. Nersess Armenian Seminary. At the latter institution, he has also given public lecture series on the Armenian medieval historical tradition and medieval Armenian poetry. With Matthew Sarkisian he founded Tarkmaneal Press in 2024 with the goal of publishing annotated texts and translations of Armenian Christian sources. The press’s first two volumes were released in 2024: (1) Matthew J. Sarkisian. An Early-Eighteenth-Century Hmayil (Armenian Prayer Scroll): Introduction, Facsimile, Transcription and Annotated Translation. Edited and with a Foreword by Jesse S. Arlen. Sources from the Armenian Christian Tradition, volume 1 (New York, NY: Tarkmaneal Press, 2024); (2) Matthew J. Sarkisian and Jesse S. Arlen. Odes of Saint Nersess the Graceful: Annotated Translation. Sources from the Armenian Christian Tradition, volume 2 (New York, NY: Tarkmaneal Press, 2024).

https://events.berkeley.edu/armenian/event/283915-time-and-place-heaven-and-eternity-in-the-odes-of

9 Apr: The Armenian Woman, Minoritarian Agency, and the Making of Iranian Modernity, 1860–1979

4 p.m. 
142 Dwinelle Hall, UC Berkeley

Lecture Abstract:

With their recent book, The Armenian Woman, Minoritarian Agency, and the Making of Iranian Modernity, 1860–1979 (Stanford University Press, 2025), Houri Berberian and Talinn Grigor offer the first history of Armenian women in modern Iran. Foregrounding the work of Armenian women’s organizations, the authors trace minoritarian politics and the shifting relationships among doubly minoritized Armenian female subjects, Iran’s central nodes of power, and the Irano-Armenian patriarchal institutions of church and political parties.

Engaging broader considerations around modernization, nationalism, and feminism, this book makes a conceptually rich contribution to how we think about the history of women and minoritized peoples. Berberian and Grigor read archival, textual, visual, and oral history sources together and against one another to challenge conventional notions of “the archive” and transform silences and absences into audible and visual presences. Understanding minoritarian politics as formulated by women through their various forms of public and intellectual activisms, this book provides a groundbreaking intervention in Iran’s history of modernization, Armenian diasporic history, and Iranian and Armenian feminist historiography.

Speakers’ Bios

Houri Berberian is Professor of History, Meghrouni Family Presidential Chair in Armenian Studies, and Director of the Center for Armenian Studies at the University of California, Irvine. Her research focuses on late nineteenth/early twentieth-century Armenian history, especially revolutionary movements and women and gender. Her books include Armenians and the Iranian Constitutional Revolution of 1905-1911: “The Love for Freedom Has No Fatherland” (2001); and the multiple award-winning Roving Revolutionaries: Armenians and the Connected Revolutions in the Russian, Iranian, and Ottoman Worlds (2019); and Reflections of Armenian Identity in History and Historiography (2018), coedited with Touraj Daryaee. Her most recent book, for which she has received grants from the Persian Heritage Foundation, the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, and the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research, is The Armenian Woman, Minoritarian Agency, and the Making of Iranian Modernity (2025), coauthored with Talinn Grigor.

Talinn Grigor is Professor of Art History in the Department of Art and Art History at the University of California, Davis. Her research focuses on 18th- to 20th-century architectural and art histories through postcolonial, race, feminist, and critical theories grounded in Iran, Armeno-Iran, Armenia, and Parsi India. Her books include the winner of the Saidi-Sirjani Book Award, The Persian Revival (2021), Contemporary Iranian Art (2014), Building Iran (2009), and Persian Kingship and Architecture (2015), coedited with Sussan Babaie. Grigor has received fellowships from the National Gallery of Art, Getty Research Institute, Cornell’s Humanities Center, Princeton’s Persian Center, MIT’s Aga Khan Program, SSRC, and Persian Heritage and Calouste Gulbenkian foundations. Her last book is coauthored with Houri Berberian, The Armenian Woman, Minoritarian Agency, and the Making of Iranian Modernity, 1860–1979(2025). Her current book project, The Hyphenated Architect, examines the pivotal role of ethnically Armenian architects and artists in the proliferation of the Modern Movement in West Asia.

https://events.berkeley.edu/armenian/event/283966-the-armenian-woman-minoritarian-agency-and-the

26 Apr: Armenian Genocide Commemoration

Keynote Speaker
Michael Rubin

Michael Rubin is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where he specializes in Iran, Turkey, and the broader Middle East.

A former Pentagon official, Dr. Rubin has lived in post-revolution Iran, Yemen, and both pre- and postwar Iraq. He also spent time with the Taliban before 9/11. For more than a decade, he taught classes at sea about the Horn of Africa and Middle East conflicts, culture, and terrorism, to deployed US Navy and Marine units.

Dr. Rubin is the author, coauthor, and coeditor of several books exploring diplomacy, Iranian history, Arab culture, Kurdish studies, and Shi’ite politics, including “Seven Pillars: What Really Causes Instability in the Middle East?” (AEI Press, 2019); “Kurdistan Rising” (AEI Press, 2016); “Dancing with the Devil: The Perils of Engaging Rogue Regimes” (Encounter Books, 2014); and “Eternal Iran: Continuity and Chaos” (Palgrave, 2005).

Dr. Rubin has a PhD and an MA in history from Yale University, where he also obtained a BS in biology.

Saturday, April 26
6 PM

St. Andrew Armenian Church
1370 S Stelling Rd, Cupertino, CA 95014

Armenian Needlelace: Poetry in Thread

Our upper-floor, northwest gallery exhibit, Armenian Needlelace: Poetry in Thread, is now open for tours by appointment. Tours with curator Elise Youssoufian are conducted Monday, Friday, and some Saturdays.
     Our permanent collection is home to thousands of precious textile works of art, but perhaps most remarkable and splendid of them all are the many delicate Armenian needlelace circles. We invite you to join us in celebrating their makers’ immense skill and handiwork, their exuberant creativity, and their exceptional persistence.

Beginning August 16th, exhibit tours will be available most Mondays, Fridays, and Saturdays at 1pm or 3pm, by appointment. All Lacis exhibit tours are free for museum members with up to four guests; otherwise, they are $3 per person. To book a tour, please call Lacis at 510.843.7290 or email info@lacismuseum.org.

Opening night is on August 9, 2024 from 6-8 pm.

You must make an appointment to visit the exhibit after August 9, Tour appointment Call (510-843-7290)

Hamazkayin SF Nigol Aghpalian chapter is proud to sponsor this beautiful event.

https://lacismuseum.org/exhibits.html