Born in Aleppo, Syria, Sassounian immigrated to the United States in 1969, earning a Master’s degree in international affairs from Columbia University in New York in 1975, and after moving to Los Angeles , he earned an MBA from Pepperdine University in 1977, while working for Bank of America.[2] Fluent in five languages, including Armenian, Arabic, Turkish, and French, he has built a career centered on Armenian advocacy, serving as a non-governmental delegate on human rights at the United Nations in Geneva for a decade.[1][2] His syndicated opinion columns, which address topics such as the Armenian Genocide and geopolitical challenges facing Armenia, are reprinted in numerous outlets worldwide and have positioned him as a prominent voice in Armenian media.[3]Sassounian’s humanitarian efforts include presiding over the United Armenian Fund, and subsequently, the Armenia Artsakh Fund which together raised $1.1 billion of aid to Armenia and Artsakh from 1979 to 2026. He also held a vice chair role at the Lincy Foundation, contributing $242 million in Armenian infrastructure projects.[1][2] In recognition of his journalistic impact, he received Armenia’s Golden Pen Award—the nation’s highest journalism honor—in 2016, and he authored The Armenian Genocide: The World Speaks Out, 1915-2015: Documents and Declarations to compile historical evidence on the topic.[1] In 2024, he digitized The California Courier, expanding its reach to daily updates and a global online audience without subscriptions.[3]
Early Life and Background
Childhood and Family
Harut Sassounian was born in 1950 in Aleppo, Syria, to Armenian parents within a diaspora community shaped by the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide, as some of his grandparents’ relatives had survived the Ottoman-era massacres.[4] Aleppo hosted one of the largest Armenian populations outside Armenia, fostering institutions for cultural preservation, language maintenance, and communal solidarity amid historical displacement and minority status in the region.[5]Sassounian later recalled a happy childhood in this environment, free from overt discrimination during his early years in Syria, which allowed immersion in Armenian traditions and family narratives of resilience.[4] These familial ties to genocide survivors instilled an early awareness of Armenian historical trauma and the imperatives of cultural continuity in exile.[6]In 1965, at age 15, Sassounian’s entire family departed Aleppo for Beirut, Lebanon, reflecting broader patterns of Armenian migration amid regional instabilities.[2] He immigrated to the United States independently in 1969, arriving at age 18, with his family reuniting and settling in California in the following years, marking the transition from Middle Eastern diaspora life to American integration.[2]
Education
Sassounian completed his secondary education at Sofia Hagopian Armenian High School in Beirut, Lebanon, an institution emphasizing Armenian language, history, and culture alongside standard curricula, which cultivated his early proficiency in Armenian studies and multilingualism.[7][8]He then earned a Master’s degree in International Affairs from Columbia University in New York City, between 1973 and 1975. This graduate-level training focused on global political dynamics, diplomacy, and international relations, equipping him with analytical frameworks for examining ethnic conflicts and state policies.[9][5][10][2]Subsequently, Sassounian obtained a Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Pepperdine University’s Graziadio School of Business and Management in Los Angeles, where coursework in business strategy, management, and operations provided practical skills in organizational leadership and media economics.[9][5][10]
Professional Career
Journalism and The California Courier
Harut Sassounian assumed the role of publisher of The California Courier in 1983, taking over from its original founders, George Mason (Elmassian) and Reese Cleghorn, who had established the English-language weekly newspaper in Fresno, California, in 1958 to serve the Armenian-American community, particularly those less fluent in Armenian.[11] Under Sassounian’s leadership, the newspaper relocated its operations to Los Angeles in 1988 to better reach the expanding Armenian diaspora in the region, which had become the largest outside Armenia.[11]The publication grew from an initial base of approximately 700 subscribers, primarily in Glendale and Fresno, by serving as a dedicated platform for diaspora news, community achievements, and non-partisan discourse on Armenian matters.[10] Under Sassounian’s management, the newspaper evolved into a consistent voice for English-speaking Armenians across California and beyond, reflecting the community’s demographic shifts from the Central Valley to urban centers.[11]Editorially, The California Courier under Sassounian prioritized factual reporting and open discussion of social, cultural, civic, and political issues affecting Armenians, with a commitment to countering distortions of historical events such as the Armenian Genocide.[12] This approach included dedicated coverage of genocide recognition efforts and regional conflicts involving Armenia, emphasizing vigilance to preserve accurate narratives amid denialist claims.[12] The newspaper maintained a non-partisan stance, fostering debate without endorsing specific political factions, which helped solidify its role as a milestone in Armenian-American journalism.[11]
Syndicated Column and Media Presence
Harut Sassounian authors a weekly syndicated column originating in The California Courier, distributed to Armenian-American publications including the Armenian Weekly.[13][14] The column emphasizes detailed examinations of Armenian diplomatic and security matters, drawing on verifiable reports and historical records to support its assessments.[15] Its syndication extends Sassounian’s commentary to broader diaspora audiences, with contributions also appearing in outlets like LA Progressive.[16]In addition to print syndication, Sassounian serves as a frequent television commentator on Armenian networks, providing analysis during key events in regional politics.[17] He has appeared on programs such as Horizon TV, offering insights into diaspora organizational efforts.[18]Sassounian also engages in audio media, guesting on podcasts including the Armenian News Podcast and WiseNuts, where episodes focus on historical philanthropy and community structures without delving into partisan endorsements.[19][20]Sassounian is among the most widely circulated writers addressing Armenian topics internationally, attributing this to the column’s consistent publication since 1983 and its reliance on documented evidence over unsubstantiated narratives.[3] This reach positions his work as a staple reference for diaspora readers seeking fact-based perspectives on geopolitical developments.[21]
Other Professional Roles
Sassounian served as an international marketing executive for Procter & Gamble in Geneva, Switzerland, from 1978 to 1982, focusing on business development in a multinational corporate setting.[17] This early role involved applying strategic marketing principles across global operations, distinct from his later media endeavors.[22]Leveraging his MBA from Pepperdine University’s Graziadio School of Business, Sassounian has held CEO positions emphasizing media production and operational scaling, including leadership in entities that expanded fundraising and infrastructure initiatives.[9] These experiences highlight his entrepreneurial approach to business growth.[17]In addition to executive roles, Sassounian chairs the Board of Directors for HyeID, a diaspora-focused organization, where he directs strategic governance and development efforts.[23] This position underscores his involvement in leadership structures beyond publishing, prioritizing organizational trusteeship and policy direction.[19]
Activism and Philanthropy
Armenian Genocide Advocacy
Harut Sassounian has utilized his platform as publisher and columnist for The California Courierto advocate for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, emphasizing historical evidence from Ottoman-era telegrams, U.S. diplomatic records, and eyewitness accounts that document systematic deportations and massacres resulting in approximately 1.5 million Armenian deaths between 1915 and 1923.[24] In his columns, he critiques Turkish denialism as a state-funded effort to distort primary sources, such as German and Allied archival materials confirming Ottoman orders for extermination, arguing that these policies causally led to the near-total eradication of Armenian populations in Anatolia, with pre-war numbers exceeding 2 million dropping to under 100,000 by 1922.[24] [25] Sassounian attributes denial to political expediency rather than evidentiary disputes, citing scholarly consensus and U.S. acknowledgments, including a 1951 State Department filing to the International Court of Justice and Ronald Reagan’s 1981 proclamation referencing the genocide.[24]As a former United Nations human rights delegate, Sassounian led the lobbying effort for the 1985 recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the U.N. Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities, which adopted a report affirming the Armenian Genocide by the overwhelming vote of 15 to 1.[26] He continues educational efforts through lectures and events, such as his scheduled keynote address on April 6, 2025, at the “Forgotten, Unforgettable” commemoration marking the 40th anniversary of this U.N. milestone, hosted by Armenian organizations in Watertown, Massachusetts, to highlight the sub-commission’s role in countering revisionist narratives.[26] These initiatives focus on disseminating verifiable documents, including Ottoman memos revealing centralized planning of relocations that resulted in documented mass atrocities, to educate diaspora communities and policymakers on the empirical basis for genocide classification.[24]During the 2015 centennial commemorations of the genocide’s onset, Sassounian participated in global events to amplify calls for U.S. federal recognition, including speaking at the “Responsibility 2015” conference in New York City, where he addressed reparations grounded in legal precedents like insurance claims awarded to survivors’ heirs in U.S. courts.[27] He also attended the launch of the “100 LIVES” initiative, engaging with international figures to underscore the demographic and cultural devastation evidenced by pre- and post-war censuses, while advocating against normalization of denialist claims that minimize causal links between Ottoman directives and the resulting humanitarian catastrophe.[27] [24] His work prioritizes primary-source-driven arguments over symbolic gestures, linking recognition to demands for restitution based on successor-state liability under international law.[24]
Armenia Artsakh Fund and Donations
Harut Sassounian serves as president of the Armenia Artsakh Fund, a non-profit organization he founded in 2015 to continue humanitarian aid efforts to Armenia and Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) that began following the 1988 Spitak earthquake, with cumulative deliveries exceeding one billion dollars.[13][10] The fund’s contributions include medicines, food, and support for displaced populations, with public financial reports from GuideStar verifying distributions to economically disadvantaged families and medical aid recipients in these regions.[28]In response to the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, the Armenia Artsakh Fund provided $15 million in humanitarian assistance to Armenia and Artsakh over the subsequent five months, aiding war-affected civilians through direct shipments of essentials.[29] This included partnerships for delivering $486,000 worth of medicines to displaced Artsakh Armenians sheltered in Armenia, as documented in fund announcements and partner reports from organizations like Direct Relief.[30] These efforts prioritized verifiable outcomes, such as medical distributions tracked via shipment logs, rather than unquantified appeals.
Political Commentary on Armenian Issues
Harut Sassounian has sharply critiqued Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan for interfering in the Armenian Apostolic Church, accusing him in a July 28, 2025, column of seeking control over ecclesiastical leadership amid governance failures, including demands to verify the moral integrity of Catholicos candidates without clear mechanisms.[31] He further alleged Pashinyan’s use of divide-and-rule strategies, such as pressuring Catholicos Karekin II to resign and inciting clergy divisions, as detailed in a December 1, 2025, piece, which Sassounian framed as undermining the church’s independence to consolidate power.[32] These criticisms align with Sassounian’s broader concerns over Pashinyan’s hostility toward religious institutions, dating back to early tensions where the prime minister denigrated church figures.[33]Sassounian has also questioned the integrity of Pashinyan’s political operations, highlighting irregularities in donor lists for his party’s Yerevan mayoral candidate in February 2024, where fake names appeared, contradicting claims of transparent elections and suggesting systemic deception.[34] In external affairs, he has voiced skepticism toward concessions in Artsakh disputes, citing a May 26-28, 2022, Gallup poll showing 89% of Armenians opposing placement under Azerbaijani rule, and arguing that yielding territory signals weakness that invites aggression rather than ensuring security, as concessions historically dishonor sacrifices without deterring threats.[35]On diaspora relations, Sassounian has advocated unity with Armenia, warning in a February 2010 analysis that policy rifts—such as over Turkish protocols—must not fracture ties, as diaspora support bolsters national resilience, even amid criticisms of government actions that alienate overseas Armenians.[37] He contends that internal divisions, fueled by Pashinyan’s rhetoric, weaken collective bargaining power against external foes, prioritizing causal links between cohesion and deterrence over short-term political expediency.[38]
Writings and Publications
Books and Edited Works
Sassounian compiled and introduced The Armenian Genocide: The World Speaks Out, 1915-2005: Documents and Declarations, published in 2005 by the 90th Anniversary Committee of the Armenian Genocide to mark the Ottoman Empire’s systematic extermination campaign against Armenians.[39] The volume aggregates dozens of primary documents, including diplomatic cables, eyewitness testimonies, parliamentary resolutions, and media reports from 1915 onward, prioritizing raw archival materials over interpretive narratives to substantiate the genocide’s scale and international awareness at the time.[40]An expanded edition, The Armenian Genocide: The World Speaks Out, 1915-2015: Documents and Declarations, was released in 2015 for the centennial commemoration, incorporating additional post-2005 materials such as U.S. presidential statements, European Parliament declarations, and scholarly analyses grounded in declassified records.[1] Sassounian’s editorial approach emphasizes verifiable evidence from governmental archives and contemporary observers, avoiding unsubstantiated claims while highlighting patterns of denial and delayed recognition by major powers.[17]
Key Columns and Opinions
Sassounian’s columns frequently address tensions between the Armenian Apostolic Church and the Armenian government, particularly highlighting divisions in 2024-2025 over ecclesiastical appointments and state influence. In a January 2024 piece, he criticized Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s administration for attempting to install a government-aligned candidate as Catholicos, arguing that such moves undermine the church’s autonomy and risk alienating the diaspora, which views the institution as a symbol of national resilience. He contended that historical precedents, including Soviet-era interferences, demonstrate the perils of politicizing religious leadership, potentially eroding public trust in both entities.On economic matters, Sassounian has opined on Kirk Kerkorian’s investments in Armenia, acknowledging their tangible benefits. He balanced this by noting Kerkorian’s philanthropy but emphasized that sustained foreign investment requires domestic reforms to convert capital inflows into self-sustaining growth.Sassounian advocates for Armenian self-sufficiency in columns debunking over-reliance on foreign aid, arguing that diaspora remittances—totaling over $2 billion annually to Armenia—foster dependency rather than innovation. In a 2023 analysis, he countered narratives of perpetual victimhood post-Armenian Genocide by urging policy shifts toward export-driven economies, citing Israel’s model of technological self-reliance despite similar historical traumas as evidence that internal reforms outperform aid petitions. He supported this with data showing Armenia’s GDP growth stagnating at 4-5% pre-2020 without diversification, warning that unchecked aid expectations could perpetuate cycles of corruption observed in post-Soviet states. This stance includes critiques of U.S. congressional resolutions for genocide recognition, which he views as symbolic but insufficient without accompanying economic empowerment strategies.
Controversies and Criticisms
Stances on Armenian Government and Diaspora Politics
Sassounian has been a vocal critic of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s administration, particularly regarding alleged corruption and electoral manipulations. In a 2021 column, he accused Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party of fabricating funding documents for Yerevan mayoral candidate, citing discrepancies in reported donations from diaspora sources that were later revealed as non-existent or misattributed. He argued this undermined electoral transparency, drawing on public financial disclosures and opposition reports to substantiate claims of systemic favoritism toward ruling party candidates.On ecclesiastical politics, Sassounian has questioned Pashinyan’s influence over the Armenian Apostolic Church, alleging in 2019 that the prime minister harbored ambitions to install a loyalist as Catholicos to consolidate power. He referenced Pashinyan’s public statements and church election interferences, such as the 2018 push against Karekin II, as evidence of politicization eroding the church’s independence. Sassounian defends his positions with verifiable timelines of government actions, such as delayed church reforms post-Velvet Revolution.In diaspora politics, Sassounian advocates for a confrontational stance toward Turkey, opposing Pashinyan’s normalization protocols signed in 2022, which he deemed a betrayal of Genocide recognition efforts without reciprocal concessions. He has praised diaspora organizations for funding military aid to Artsakh, contrasting this with government policies he views as appeasing Ankara at the expense of historical justice, supported by analyses of trade data showing minimal Turkish economic benefits to Armenia by 2023. Sassounian asserts with evidence of Turkey’s unfulfilled 2009 protocol commitments, emphasizing causal links between diplomatic softness and territorial losses in 2020-2023.
Responses to Opposing Viewpoints
Sassounian has countered Turkish denial of the Armenian Genocide by exposing state-sponsored efforts to fabricate doubt through academic funding. In a 2011 report, he detailed Prof. Taner Akçam’s findings from a Turkish insider source, revealing that the Turkish Foreign Ministry transferred substantial funds to U.S. scholars around 2004–2005 to author denialist books, with transactions documented by signed receipts retained in ministry records.[41] He cited works like Michael Gunter’s Armenian History and the Question of Genocide as exemplars of this strategy, which aimed to normalize skepticism rather than outright rejection, thereby undermining empirical evidence of the 1915–1923 extermination of 1.5 million Armenians.[41]Against Azerbaijani narratives asserting territorial integrity over Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), Sassounian rebutted claims of sovereignty by emphasizing demographic realities and historical self-determination, arguing that Baku’s blacklisting of Artsakh visitors since 2013 violated international norms and masked revanchist ambitions evidenced by post-2020 encroachments into Armenian territory.[42]In engagements with pro-Pashinyan diaspora factions defending concessions for purported peace, Sassounian highlighted causal failures in the 2023 Artsakh crisis, where Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s directives to Artsakh leaders for direct talks with Azerbaijan abandoned 120,000 Armenian citizens—entitled to protection under Armenia’s constitution—to a blockade initiated in December 2022 and a September 2023 invasion, yielding hundreds killed, thousands missing, and near-total ethnic cleansing via mass flight.[43] He refuted Pashinyan’s assertion that pre-2018 Armenian leaders recognized Artsakh as Azerbaijani, deeming it a falsification unsupported by official records or actions, and warned that such miscalculations ignored Aliyev’s documented expansionism, including occupation of Armenian border villages and rhetoric framing Armenia as “Western Azerbaijan.”[44][43]Sassounian has addressed left-leaning critiques labeling Armenian advocacy as excessive nationalism by invoking data on appeasement’s perils, paralleling Pashinyan’s deference—which sidelined military readiness despite Azerbaijan’s 44-day war victory in 2020—to historical precedents where territorial concessions emboldened aggressors, as seen in the Genocide-era Ottoman expansions unchecked by early deterrence.[43] This approach underscores that verifiable strategic inaction, not defensive nationalism, precipitated Artsakh’s fall, with over 100,000 refugees straining Armenia’s resources by late 2023.[43]
Legacy and Impact
Influence on Armenian Community
Sassounian’s tenure as publisher of The California Courier since 1983 has sustained the newspaper’s role as a primary platform for Armenian diaspora discourse, with his columns on political advocacy reprinted across U.S. and international outlets, fostering heightened awareness of Armenian issues among readers over four decades.[11][45] The publication, established in 1958 as the oldest independent English-language Armenian weekly, has amplified calls for unity and action, influencing community engagement on topics from humanitarian aid to international lobbying.[11]As president of the United Armenian Fund—a coalition of seven Armenian-American charities—Sassounian oversaw the delivery of $575 million in humanitarian assistance to Armenia and Artsakh from 1989 to 2009, exemplifying successful diaspora resource mobilization for post-Soviet reconstruction and crisis response.[45] This effort underscored the diaspora’s capacity to provide economic support independent of government constraints, channeling funds into infrastructure and relief that bolstered Armenia’s stability during vulnerable periods.[46]Sassounian received the ANC-WR Legacy Award from the Armenian National Committee of America, Western Region, in recognition of his over 30 years of volunteer support for the ANC and other organizations.[45]His advocacy advanced Armenian Genocide recognition, including a pivotal role as a non-governmental delegate in securing the United Nations Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities’ acknowledgment in 1985.[45][47] Sassounian’s documentation in The Armenian Genocide: The World Speaks Out, 1915-2005 compiled global declarations, aiding educational and lobbying campaigns that pressured policymakers toward formal recognitions.[45]These initiatives elevated genocide awareness and diaspora activism. Sassounian’s uncompromising rhetoric denounced participation in Turkish-hosted events like the 2010 Akhtamar church service as propaganda. Proponents credit this approach with sustaining vigilance against denialism.[46]
Recent Activities
In response to the 2023 Artsakh refugee crisis, the Armenia Artsakh Fund, under Sassounian’s presidency, intensified humanitarian aid efforts, delivering $486,000 worth of medicines to displaced Armenians in Armenia by November 2023.[49] This included shipments facilitated by partners like Direct Relief, which donated $27 million in medicines to Armenia in the first 10 months of 2023 alone.[49] By October 2024, the fund airlifted an additional $630,463 in medicines to Armenia, addressing ongoing needs from the displacement of over 100,000 Artsakh residents.[50]Sassounian continued publishing critical columns on Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s policies in 2024, arguing in July that only 13% of Armenians supported Pashinyan, urging new elections due to lost mandate amid territorial concessions.[51] In September, he critiqued Pashinyan’s Diaspora summit remarks as misguided, timing errors that alienated overseas Armenians by downplaying eternal struggle narratives.[52] He further accused Pashinyan’s government of internal dismantling through economic mismanagement and foreign policy shifts.[53]On church divisions, Sassounian warned in late 2024 of Pashinyan’s encroachments on the Armenian Apostolic Church, suggesting potential self-declaration as Catholicos amid disputes over Catholicos Karekin II’s authority.[54] These commentaries highlighted tensions between state policies and ecclesiastical independence.In media appearances, Sassounian discussed U.S. election impacts on Armenian issues in a November 2024 podcast, emphasizing diaspora advocacy.[55] He followed with a February 2025 Armenian News podcast interview detailing Kirk Kerkorian’s investments in Armenia, covering Kerkorian’s discovery of the country, funding projects until his 2015 death, and lessons for future philanthropy.[56]
References
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https://podcasts.Armenian News.org/guest/hsassounian/
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https://podcasts.Armenian News.org/409-harut-sassounian-kirk-kerkorians-benevolent-engagement-with-armenia/