A number of organizations, museums and monuments are intended to serve as memorials to the Armenian Genocide and its over 2 million victims.
They include:
- A memorial chapel at the Armenian Catholicossate of Cilicia in Antelias, Lebanon (1938)
- A memorial khatchkar at the Armenian Catholic Patriarchate in Bzoummar, Lebanon (1960)
- The Montebello Genocide Memorial in Montebello, California (1965)
- The Armenian Genocide Monument in Bikfaya, Lebanon (1965)
- The Tsitsernakaberd Armenian Genocide memorial in Yerevan, (1968)
- The Memorial at the Vank Cathedral in the new Julfa district of Isfahan, Iran (1975)
- The Armenian Genocide Monument in Buenos Aires, Argentina (1985)
- The Armenian Genocide Monument and Memorial Complex at Der Zor, Syria (1990)
- The Armenian Genocide Monument in Nicosia Cyprus, (1990)
- Relief at the Armenian Catholic Patriarchate in Bzoummar, Lebanon (1993)
- The Mount Davidson Cross in San Francisco, California, (1997)
- The Armenian Genocide Memorial in Marcelin-Wilson Park in Montreal, Quebec (1998)
- The Holy Resurrection Church in Margadeh, Syria (site of mass grave in the Syrian desert discovered in the early 90s)[1] (1999)
- The "Armeens monument" begraafplaats De Boskamp in Assen, Netherlands (24 april 2001)
- The Marseille Genocide Memorial in Marseille, France, (2002)
- The Komitas Monument and Armenian Genocide Memorial in Paris, France (2003)
- The memorial monument in Lyon, France (2006)
- The Wales Genocide Memorial in Cardiff, Wales, (2007)
- The Armenian Genocide Memorial in Larnaca Cyprus, (2008)
- The Armenian Genocide Museum of America, Washington, D.C., United States (to be opened in 2010)
- The memorial monument in Mislata, Valencia, Spain (2010)
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