VARTAN GREGORIAN, PRESIDENT OF CARNEGIE
CORPORATION OF NEW YORK
TO RECEIVE 2004 PRESIDENTIAL MEDAL
OF FREEDOM ONE OF THIRTEEN RECIPIENTS TO BE HONORED ON JUNE
23, 2004
New York, NY—June 22, 2004. Vartan Gregorian,
president of Carnegie Corporation of New York, has been chosen
as one of thirteen 2004 recipients of the Presidential Medal
of Freedom, the nation’s highest civil award. Established
in 1945 by President Harry Truman, the award is given each
year to distinguished leaders for service in a range of disciplines.
In the White House announcement, Gregorian is recognized as
a scholar and historian, and for his work in revitalizing
the New York Public Library and for his years of service as
a professor and leader at six universities in the United States
as well as his philanthropic endeavors.
“It is a great tribute to Vartan who is a teacher’s
teacher, a scholar’s scholar and a philanthropist’s
philanthropist,” said Helene Kaplan, chairman of the
board of trustees at Carnegie Corporation. “To be recognized
for a lifetime’s work can be daunting, but what we on
the Corporation’s board know only too clearly, is that
no honor will slow down the vitality and creativity of Vartan.
He has taken the subjects and skills he has mastered at each
job and brought them to the foundation in a way that has made
the Corporation a powerhouse of ideas and possibilities. It
is wonderful to see the White House recognize his life’s
work and his continuing contributions.”
“This is wonderful choice by President Bush,”
said Governor Thomas Kean, immediate past chair of the Corporation’s
board of trustees. “It reveals a deep respect for the
role of a scholar in public life and recognizes the great
importance of both universities and libraries to America.
Vartan has been honored by both the academic and library community
many times, and this Medal of Freedom honors not only Vartan
personally, but also, both communities whose work is vital
to our nation.”
Gregorian was named the president of Carnegie Corporation
of New York in 1997 and joined as the eleventh president after
serving for nine years at president of Brown University. As
president and chief executive officer of the New York Public
Library before that, Gregorian is credited with returning
the fabled city institution to its international esteem and
grandeur. Gregorian is an historian who began his teaching
career after graduating from Stanford University. He has taught
at San Francisco State, Stanford, University of California,
Berkeley, University of California, Los Angelese, and University
of Texas at Austin. University of Pennsylvania, New York University
and The New School for Social Research. It was at the University
of Pennsylvania that Gregorian rose in the ranks of academic
leadership, first as the founding dean of the Faculty of Arts
and Sciences, later accepting the job of provost.
Gregorian’s book on Afghanistan, The Emergence
of Modern Afghanistan: Politics of Reform and Modernization
1880-1946 is considered a classic about the history of
that country. Recently he authored Islam: A Mosaic Not
a Monolith and his autobiography The Road to Home.
He has won numerous awards and honorary degrees, including
the highest award of the American Library Association, its
honorary membership.
Gregorian is the third president of Carnegie Corporation
of New York to be honored with the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
John Gardner was awarded the medal in 1964 and David Hamburg
in 1995.
Carnegie Corporation of New York was created by Andrew Carnegie
in 1911 to promote "the advancement and diffusion of
knowledge and understanding." As a grantmaking foundation,
the Corporation seeks to carry out Carnegie's vision of philanthropy,
which he said should aim "to do real and permanent good
in the world."
The Corporation's capital fund, originally donated at a
value of about $135 million, hada market value of $1.8 billion
on September 30, 2003. The Corporation awards grants totaling
approximately $80 million a year in the areas of education,
international peace and security, international development
and strengthening U.S. democracy.