This is an in-person lecture by Dr. Anna Aleksanyan, a Postdoctoral Fellow of the Armenian Genocide Research Program within the Promise Armenian Institute at UCLA, that will be recorded and posted on the Ararat-Eskijian YouTube channel.
This event is organized and sponsored by the Armenian Genocide Research Program of the Promise Armenian Institute at UCLA, the Ararat-Eskijian Museum and the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR).
Saturday, April 12, 2025
4:00 PM - 6:00 PM (Pacific Time)
Ararat-Eskijian Museum
Sheen Chapel
15105 Mission Hills Road
Mission Hills, CA 91345


Like Armenians across the Ottoman Empire, Trabzon (Trebizond) Armenians received an official
order of deportation in June 1915. However, approximately 3,000 children (girls up to 15 years
old and boys up to 10) and several dozen women remained in the city. Those Armenians were
placed in special institutions, subjected to neglect, starvation, murder, and institutionalized
rape. Sexual violence was a tool to foster submission and terror, humiliation, self-hate, and
stigmatization. After four years, all male children disappeared, and the girls who mainly
survived did so in Turkish households, to which they were given as gifts or sold to serve as
servants or sex slaves.
In 1919, the Turkish Courts-Martial brought the perpetrators of the Trabzon Armenian Genocide
to trial in Constantinople. The charges against them included organizing and implementing the
massive annihilation of the Trabzon Armenians, the plunder of their property, the rape and
murder of Armenian women and children, and the drowning of around 50 pregnant women in
the Black Sea. This lecture will discuss the anatomy of the Trabzon Armenian genocide and how
sexual violence was one of the main components of it.
Anna Aleksanyan earned her Ph.D. at the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies
(History Department), Clark University. Her work explores gendered aspects of the Armenian
Genocide in the experiences of its victimized females (1914-1918). Before starting her Ph.D., she
worked at the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute as a researcher for seven years. Ale-
ksanyan received her BA and MA in History at Yerevan State University. From the fall of 2019 to
the fall of 2022, she worked as an adjunct lecturer at the American University of Armenia.
Currently, Aleksanyan is a postdoctoral fellow at the Armenian Genocide Research Program of
the Promise Armenian Institute at UCLA.
Sponsor(s): Armenian Genocide Research Program, The Promise Armenian Institute, Ararat-Eskijian Museum, National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR)