Varujan Vosganian

Varujan Vosganian
Minister of Economy and Finance
In office
4 April 2007  22 December 2008
Prime Minister Călin Popescu-Tăriceanu
Preceded by Himself (Economy and Finance)
Succeeded by Adriean Videanu (Economy)
Gheorghe Pogea (Finance)
Minister of Economy and Commerce
In office
December 2006  4 April 2007
Prime Minister Călin Popescu-Tăriceanu
Preceded by Codruţ Şereş
Succeeded by Himself (Economy and Finance)
Minister of Economy
In office
December 2012  October 2013
Personal details
Born (1958-07-25) 25 July 1958
Craiova, Romania
Political party The Union of Armenians in Romania (Deputy during 1990–1996)
Union of Right Forces (1996–2003, Senator during 1996–2000)
National Liberal Party (2003–2015, Senator during 2004–2016)
Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) (Deputy during 2016–present)
Spouse(s) Mihaela Vosganian
Children Armine
Alma mater Bucharest University of Economic Studies
University of Bucharest
Website Official website

Varujan Vosganian (Romanian pronunciation: [varuˈʒan vosɡaˈnjan]; Armenian: Վարուժան Ոսկանյան, born on 25 July 1958) is a Romanian politician, economist, essayist and poet of Armenian origin. Vosganian was Romania's Minister of Economy and Commerce (2006–2008) in the Tăriceanu cabinet and Minister of Economy in the Ponta cabinet (2012–2013). He is the President of The Union of Armenians in Romania (UAR, 1990–present) and the Prime-vice president of the Union of Writers in Romania (2005–present). His books have been translated into more than 20 languages.

Biography

Varujan Vosganian was born in Craiova to a family of Armenian ethnicity. His grandparents were survivors of the genocide against Armenian people which took place in the Ottoman Empire in 1915. Vosganian studied at the Alexandru Ioan Cuza High School in Focşani. He then studied Commerce at the Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies (graduated 1982) and Mathematics at the University of Bucharest (graduated 1991), gaining a Ph.D. in economics in 1998.

After participating to the Romanian Revolution in 1989, he has been a member of the Romanian Parliament since first free elections in 1990. In 1990, he became president of The Union of Armenians in Romania and he was twice (1990–1992 and 1992–1996) elected a member of the Chamber of Deputies, and a Senator (1996–2000, on the lists of the Union of Right Forces, and 2004–2016, on the lists of the National Liberal Party. Between 1996 and 2003, he was the leader of the Union of Right Forces (Uniunea Forţelor de Dreapta), a right wing liberal party, which was eventually merged into the National Liberal Party in 2003. Having served as minister for Economy and Finance between 2006–2008, Vosganian was minister of commerce from 2012 to 2013.

Since 2016, he has been a member of the Chamber of Deputies on the lists of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE).

Along with non-fiction works on economics, Vosganian has also published many essays and literary texts, such as a volume of poems, short stories and novels. The international recognition came with The Book of Whispers (2009), translated in more than twenty languages. Presented in different events (public lectures, essays, workshops, screenings and dramatisations) in more than forty countries from all the continents, The Book of Whispers became the book-symbol against the crime of genocide.

Vosganian speaks Armenian, English, French, Italian, and Spanish.

Prizes and awards

Literary prizes and awards

Other Awards:

Publications

Economics

Literature

Translations:

To be published in 2017–2018:

The Book of Whispers

Vosganian said during one of his interviews: "The book was written between 2003 and 2008. I do not know when I got the idea to write it, maybe I always had this thought. The Book of Whispers is, at the same time, autobiography, fiction and historical document. The characters and the events recounted are true. What I have added is the power of symbols. I used both the memory of my family and testimonies of survivors or historical documents. The book presents the biography of the twentieth century; The Armenian Genocide; The Communism in Eastern Europe; How to surpass a common trauma; How to choose between oblivion, revenge and forgiveness (the fundamental option of the human condition: to forgive – to revenge – to forget)."

Other

References

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