Novel Mirrors Turkey’s Torn Soul

NOVEL MIRRORS TURKEY’S TORN SOUL
by M.J. Andersen

Providence Journal , RI
Oct 14 2005

IN ORHAN Pamuk’s latest novel, Snow, events foretold in the local
paper have a way of coming true. In life, lately, it seems that
“events” from the novel continue in the real world.

Turkish officials recently charged Pamuk with insulting his country,
a charge that could land him in jail for three years. The author’s
offense was to speak candidly about the Turkish slaughter of Armenians
around the time of World War I, and about the more recent slayings
of thousands of Kurds.

“Nobody but me dares to talk about it,” Pamuk told a Swiss daily,
which published his remarks last February.

In Snow, outspokenness leads to surveillance, torture, banishment and
worse. The protagonist, Ka, is a Turkish poet exiled to Germany for
activism in his student days. The narrator, a novelist named Orhan,
traces what becomes of Ka after he returns to a provincial Turkish
city as a journalist, to explore reports of suicide among young women.

So much of the novel concerns the political struggle between
Turkey’s secularists and Islamists that it almost reads as an act
of contemporary reportage. Pamuk’s earlier novels, though equally
obsessed with Turkish identity, are safely set in remote times. With
Snow, the 52-year-old Pamuk addresses the current moment — an act
of considerable courage.

The situation in Turkey is sensitive. For more than 40 years, Turkey
has been trying to join what is now the European Union. But some among
the 25 member nations have qualms. Turkey stands between Europe and
Asia, its identity an amalgam of secularist, modernizing tendencies,
rural customs, and, increasingly, Islamic fervor.

As part of its long campaign to join the E.U., Turkey has enacted
numerous suggested reforms: it abolished the death penalty, for
instance, and increased civilian control of the army.

Yet, since the September 11 attacks, Europeans have hesitated to
welcome a large Muslim nation (even a democracy) into the club.

Recent votes in France and the Netherlands against a proposed E.U.

constitution revealed misgivings about the E.U. enterprise as a
whole. (One of the E.U.’s functions is to bolster poorer areas with
aid; Turkey, with its large and fast-growing population, could turn
out to be a sponge.)

Nevertheless, last week, despite last-ditch resistance from Austria,
the E.U. agreed to begin talks that could formally end with Turkey’s
admission.

The charges against Pamuk thus come at an awkward time. He is accused
under a revised penal code, which permits denigration of the “Turkish
identity” to be held a crime.

Naturally, this is the sort of maneuver that leaves Western champions
of free speech aghast. But more is at stake. For hundreds of years,
Europeans have held talented novelists in special esteem.

Turkey has rarely produced such figures. Yet Pamuk has gradually
established himself as a world-class author. To attack such a writer
for speaking out is not just undemocratic; it is the opposite of
European.

E.U. Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn called the timing of Pamuk’s
case “provocative,” and expressed concern that prosecutors were
interpreting their penal code in a way that violated the European
Convention of Human Rights — thereby weakening Turkey’s bid for E.U.

membership.

The clash in values symbolized by Turkey’s quest to enter the E.U.

mirrors the larger one that afflicts the world. It is not just
a question of Islamic societies versus societies born of the
Enlightenment. It is where precisely to place God in the whole
business.

In Pamuk’s novel, snow becomes a metaphor for God. Ka’s inspiration
has run dry during his German exile. But during his brief stay in
the city of Kars, where God is a frequent and even urgent topic,
poem after poem comes to him.

Ka stands for the modern, educated reader as he enters the farcical
and ultimately tragic events of the novel. By the end, he embodies
the divided souls of many Turks. Snow’s characters want a route out
of poverty and stagnation but without the immorality they associate
with the West.

Throughout Pamuk’s work, internal contradictions take the form of
twoness. His fiction is stuffed with twin figures, who continually
blend and collide. Master and slave swap identities. In Snow, believers
fear their own unbelief, and atheists are stalked by the holy spirit.

No wonder Pamuk has landed in the thick of our discord. The same
unresolvable dualities haunt the global stage. One side yearns for
a sacred community; the other fears that God’s authority will be
usurped by the power-hungry. The divide is as great in Kansas as it
is in Anatolia.

We have arrived at a historical moment in which tolerance seems beside
the point — and novels can find no ending. What else is there to
do, then, but delay the aspirations of nations? What else but arrest
the novelists?

M.J. Andersen is a member of The Journal’s editorial board.

Recognition For Pinter’s World – Slippery And Very, Very English

RECOGNITION FOR PINTER’S WORLD – SLIPPERY AND VERY, VERY ENGLISH
By Dalya Alberge

The Times, UK
Oct 14 2005

Highest honour for the man who made silence an art form

Harold Pinter outside his London home yesterday (KIERAN
DOHERTY/REUTERS)

HE HAS been showered with awards and is revered worldwide, but Harold
Pinter, one of Britain’s greatest playwrights, received the ultimate
accolade yesterday – the $1.3 million (£743,000) Nobel Prize for
Literature.

At the age of 75, he is following in the footsteps of Saul Bellow,
Samuel Beckett and George Bernard Shaw, among winners of the world’s
most prestigious literary honour.

Pinter, who broke the mould of British theatre in the 1960s, turned
silence into an artform with brooding dramas.

His classics for screen and stage, including The Caretaker, The
Homecoming and The Servant, have stood the test of time, influencing
a generation of British dramatists and introduced a new word to the
English language, Pinteresque, to convey an atmospheric silence.

This month the Swedish Academy decision to give the Nobel Peace Prize
to Mohamed ElBaradei was seen as a slap in the face for the US.

Now it has awarded the Literature Prize to a radical and unrelenting
critic of America and its war in Iraq and of the Government of
Tony Blair. Pinter, who has never been afraid to speak his mind on
the political stage, has denounced the Prime Minister as “a hired
Christian thug” and President Bush as a “mass murderer”.

Pinter said yesterday that he was “overwhelmed” and, speaking to
reporters outside his London home, took the opportunity to attack
the Government over the Iraq war. “I have written 29 plays and I
think that’s really enough,” he said after a champagne celebration
with his wife Lady Antonia Fraser at their home. “I think the world
has had enough of my plays. I shall certainly be writing more poetry
and I’ll certainly remain deeply engaged in the question of political
structures in this world.” The writer has been recovering from cancer
of the oesophagus.

Leaning on a cane outside and sporting a bandaged head after a fall,
he continued: “I think the world is going down the drain if we’re
not very careful,” he said. “Iraq is just a symbol of the attitude
of Western democracies to the rest of the world.” He also hinted that
he would use the 45-minute acceptance speech to attack the war in Iraq.

“I intend to say whatever it is I think. I may well address the state
of the world.”

The academy said that it had singled out Pinter, “who, in his plays,
uncovers the precipice under everyday prattle and forces entry into
oppression’s closed rooms”.

Once again, the academy has opened the debate on the political nature
of a prize for literature. This year’s announcement was delayed
for a week after the 15 active academy members were reported to
have disagreed over whether to anoint Orhan Pamuk, the Turk who has
campaigned for recognition that Turkey committed genocide against
the Armenians after the First World War. A prize for him would have
angered Turkey, it was feared.

Part of the problem lies with the prize founder himself. Alfred Nobel,
who died in 1896, decreed in his will that the literature prize should
go to “the person who shall have produced . . . the most outstanding
work in an ideal direction”, a phrase that has confounded everyone
since.

News of Pinter’s win sent a flurry of excitement through the British
publishing and theatre worlds, if not Downing Street or the White
House. There was also a sense of relief that they knew his work. Year
after year, there has been a Pinteresque pause from publishers before
they ask, “Who?”, and confess to never having heard of the winner.

Some of Britain’s leading playwrights were among those leading the
applause yesterday.

The Oscar-winning writer Sir Tom Stoppard said: “With his earliest
work he stood alone in British theatre up against the bewilderment
and incomprehension of critics, the audience and writers, too.”

Sir David Hare, whose dramas include Stuff Happens, about the Iraq
war, said the academy had made a brilliant choice: “Not only has
Pinter written some of the outstanding plays of his time, he has
also blown fresh air into the musty attic of conventional English
literature by insisting that everything he does has a public and
political dimension.”

Pinter also follows in the footsteps of Sir V. S. Naipaul who, in
2001, became the first British author to win the prize since William
Golding in 1983.

Born the son of a Jewish tailor in East London in 1930, Pinter was a
rebel from an early age, declaring himself a conscientious objector
and refusing to do national service. He began his acting career in
provincial theatres. The Caretaker established him as a commercial
and critical success, making him one of Britain’s foremost dramatists.

LOUD APPLAUSE

“He had incredible tenacity as a director, expressed perhaps best
through his profound irritation at the old Royal Court’s squeaky
chairs, which blighted many a performance.”

Stephen Daldry, former artistic director of the Royal Court Theatre

“He’s very pedantic, famously so. Words don’t get changed, lines
don’t get changed. He really believes in the text.”

James Fox, who starred in Pinter’s classic, The Servant

“My two favourites are Landscape and Silence. I just thought, and
still do, they are the most beautiful poetic dramas, full of the pain
of lost memory.”

Ian Brown, artistic director of West Yorkshire Playhouse

–Boundary_(ID_U+7tZbKm0EL4dBVC5+OVnw)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Axa Agrees Settlement Of Armenian Genocide Case

AXA AGREES SETTLEMENT OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CASE

Insurance Business Review
Oct 14 2005

The French insurance giant Axa has completed a settlement for
a long-running case over compensation to relatives of Armenians
massacred by forces from the Ottoman Empire in 1915.

13 Oct 2005, 17:40 GMT – Under the terms of the agreement, Axa will set
up a fund to compensate descendants of victims of the 1915 genocide who
had life insurance provided by companies that today form part of Axa.

The relatives brought the case against Axa on the grounds that it had
not paid the due premiums on the life policies taken out by Armenians
prior to the massacres. The outcome of the class action law suit,
which was filed in California, will see Axa pay a total of $17 million
to the victims’ fund and Armenian charitable groups.

The suit is the second of its kind. Class counsel Vartkes Yeghiayan,
Brian Kabateck and Mark Geragos – all of Armenian descent – are
representing Armenian descendants in similar cases. Earlier this year
in another class action, New York Life agreed to pay $20 million to
descendants of Armenian policyholders killed during the genocide.

“This is an example where dead men can’t speak but they can file
lawsuits,” said Mr Yeghiayan. “It writes another chapter about
persistence and hope. The resolution of the case helps the healing
process.”

Axa has yet to comment on the settlement.

http://www.insurance-business-review.com/article_news.asp?guid=7C4D82E3-D466-4504-A796-65BFF9B861BB

ANKARA: M.G.K. Secretary General: Turkey And N Cyprus Have DoneEvery

M.G.K. SECRETARY GENERAL: TURKEY AND N CYPRUS HAVE DONE EVERYTHING THEY COULD

The Anatolian Times, Turkey
Oct 14 2005

ANKARA – “Turkey and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC)
have done everything they could to find a solution to the Cyprus
issue,” said Turkish National Security Council (MGK) Secretary-General
Yigit Alpogan.

Speaking at a seminar hosted by German-American Fulbright Commission
in association with the Turkish Fulbright Commission on “Turkey’s
Geo-Political and Security Concerns” in Ankara on Thursday, Alpogan
highlighted importance of national security.

He said, “threats such as international terrorism, weapons of mass
destruction, organized crimes, illicit drug trafficking and human
smuggling have been high on agenda of the world since the attack on
twin towers of the World Trade Center complex on September 11th.”

Referring to the Cyprus issue, Alpogan said, “Turkey and the TRNC
have done everything they could to find a solution to the Cyprus
issue. Turkish Cypriot people supported UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annan’s plan in the referendum last year but they were punished. On
the other hand, Greek Cypriot people rejected the plan but they
were awarded.”

Upon a question, Alpogan said, “Armenians should take three steps
to resolve the problems between Turkey and Armenia. First of all,
Armenians should recognize the international border between Turkey
and Armenia which was drawn under the Kars Agreement. Then they should
give up describing eastern Anatolia as ‘western Armenia’. They should
also put an end to their allegations of genocide.”

Replying to a question about the terrorist organization PKK, Alpogan
said, “PKK is a part of international terrorism. It does not aim to
defend people living in southeastern Turkey.”

Upon a question on northern part of Iraq, Alpogan said, “Turkey wants
to see Iraq as a whole. Division of Iraq can lead to instability and
serious problems in the region.”

Responding to another question, Alpogan said that Turkey aimed to
set up good neighborly relations with Iran.

Meanwhile, U.S. Charge d’affaires in Ankara Nancy McEldowney said
that Turkey and the United States needed each other since they had
many regional and global interests in common.

McEldowney called on German and American journalists to introduce
Turkey to the world and Europe.

Armenians To Share $17m Payout For Ottoman Massacre

ARMENIANS TO SHARE $17M PAYOUT FOR OTTOMAN MASSACRE
By Stephen Castle in Brussels

The Independent, UK
Oct 14 2005

Descendants of some of the 1.5 million Armenians killed during the
collapse of Ottoman rule in 1915 will share a $17m (£9.7m) payout
after a settlement with the French insurance giant AXA. The relatives
lodged their legal case in California, home to one of the world’s
largest Armenian communities, claiming for life insurance benefits
that were never paid. The settlement is likely to be approved in
November in the US District Court in California.

Armenians are stepping up their campaign to win formal classification
of the murders as an act of genocide. Turkey has always denied there
was a systematic campaign of ethnic cleansing against Armenians,
saying they were casualties of partisan fighting and of a political
vacuum during the final days of the Ottoman Empire.

Ankara says that as many as 300,000 Armenians, and at least as many
Turks, died during civil strife in eastern Turkey during the First
World War. Last month the authorities finally allowed the issue to be
debated on Turkish soil by historians at an academic conference. But
the organisers had to side-step two legal orders banning it by
rearranging the venue.

The California settlement will be administered in France, which also
has many expatriate Armenian communities and which was one of the first
countries to recognise the murders as genocide. AXA’s headquarters
are in France and the company operates in the US through subsidiaries.

Under the settlement, AXA agreed to donate several million dollars to
various France-based Armenian charities. It will also contribute $11m
toward a fund to pay valid claims of heirs of policyholders with AXA
Group subsidiaries that did business in the Turkish Ottoman Empire
before 1915.

The AXA case was the second lawsuit of its kind to be settled in
US courts, although the United States, along with Turkey, does not
officially recognise the deaths as genocide. In February, New York
Life agreed to pay $20m to descendants of its Armenian policyholders
killed in 1915.

Mark Geragos, an Armenian descendant who was a lawyer for the
plaintiffs, said: “The AXA and New York Life settlements are important
building blocks not only toward seeking financial recovery for the
losses resulting from the Armenian genocide but also in our ultimate
goal, which is for Turkey and the US to officially acknowledge the
genocide.”

This month, Turkey launched EU membership talks which are expected
to last at least a decade. Despite criticism of the stance taken by
Ankara on the issue, EU member states did not seek to make recognition
of the Armenian case as genocide a condition of beginning negotiations
on joining the bloc.

The failure to acknowledge the genocide has also bedevilled Turkey’s
relations with its neighbour, Armenia. Turkey shut its border with
Armenia in 1993, angry at the Armenian separatist forces fighting
for independence from Azerbaijan in the disputed territory of
Nagorno-Karabakh.

For Armenians, the behaviour of the Young Turks, the dominant party in
the Ottoman Empire in 1915, in systematically arranging the deportation
and killing of 1.5 million Armenians, is central to their national
self image. They say persecutions continued with varying intensity
until 1923 when the Ottoman Empire ceased to exist and was replaced
by the Republic of Turkey.

Ankara angrily rejects the claim of a planned genocide, but some EU
politicians still want Turkey to recognise the killings as genocide
before Ankara is allowed to join the EU.

Descendants of some of the 1.5 million Armenians killed during the
collapse of Ottoman rule in 1915 will share a $17m (£9.7m) payout
after a settlement with the French insurance giant AXA. The relatives
lodged their legal case in California, home to one of the world’s
largest Armenian communities, claiming for life insurance benefits
that were never paid. The settlement is likely to be approved in
November in the US District Court in California.

Armenians are stepping up their campaign to win formal classification
of the murders as an act of genocide. Turkey has always denied there
was a systematic campaign of ethnic cleansing against Armenians,
saying they were casualties of partisan fighting and of a political
vacuum during the final days of the Ottoman Empire.

Ankara says that as many as 300,000 Armenians, and at least as many
Turks, died during civil strife in eastern Turkey during the First
World War. Last month the authorities finally allowed the issue to be
debated on Turkish soil by historians at an academic conference. But
the organisers had to side-step two legal orders banning it by
rearranging the venue.

The California settlement will be administered in France, which also
has many expatriate Armenian communities and which was one of the first
countries to recognise the murders as genocide. AXA’s headquarters
are in France and the company operates in the US through subsidiaries.

Under the settlement, AXA agreed to donate several million dollars to
various France-based Armenian charities. It will also contribute $11m
toward a fund to pay valid claims of heirs of policyholders with AXA
Group subsidiaries that did business in the Turkish Ottoman Empire
before 1915.

The AXA case was the second lawsuit of its kind to be settled in
US courts, although the United States, along with Turkey, does not
officially recognise the deaths as genocide. In February, New York
Life agreed to pay $20m to descendants of its Armenian policyholders
killed in 1915.

Mark Geragos, an Armenian descendant who was a lawyer for the
plaintiffs, said: “The AXA and New York Life settlements are important
building blocks not only toward seeking financial recovery for the
losses resulting from the Armenian genocide but also in our ultimate
goal, which is for Turkey and the US to officially acknowledge the
genocide.”

This month, Turkey launched EU membership talks which are expected
to last at least a decade. Despite criticism of the stance taken by
Ankara on the issue, EU member states did not seek to make recognition
of the Armenian case as genocide a condition of beginning negotiations
on joining the bloc.

The failure to acknowledge the genocide has also bedevilled Turkey’s
relations with its neighbour, Armenia. Turkey shut its border with
Armenia in 1993, angry at the Armenian separatist forces fighting
for independence from Azerbaijan in the disputed territory of
Nagorno-Karabakh.

For Armenians, the behaviour of the Young Turks, the dominant party in
the Ottoman Empire in 1915, in systematically arranging the deportation
and killing of 1.5 million Armenians, is central to their national
self image. They say persecutions continued with varying intensity
until 1923 when the Ottoman Empire ceased to exist and was replaced
by the Republic of Turkey.

Ankara angrily rejects the claim of a planned genocide, but some EU
politicians still want Turkey to recognise the killings as genocide
before Ankara is allowed to join the EU.

–Boundary_(ID_w5yTcrfJaPFUOcjPl4Bi0g)–

The USA Promotes The RA National Assembly

THE USA PROMOTES THE RA NATIONAL ASSEMBLY

National Assembly of RA, Armenia
Oct 14 2005

On October 13, RA NA President and Robin Phillips, Mission Director
in Armenia of the US Agency for International Development (US/AID)
signed a mutual understanding memorandum between the RA National
Assembly and the US Agency for International Development in Armenia.

The NA President Artur Bahgdasaryan noted that the signing of
the mutual understanding memorandum is an important event, and the
memorandum in act will promote the increase of the role of the National
Assembly, activation of the people-parliament ties. It was highlighted
that the NA has already become more public, and representatives of
different social groups visit the parliament. It was also noted that
the program is worth of 2mln USD, it will serve for retraining the NA
specialists, technical upgrading and international exchanges. Artur
Baghdasaryan gave thanks to the US authorities for the regular
assistance to Armenia.

By the estimation of Robin Phillips, Mission Director in Armenia of the
US Agency for International Development, the National Assembly plays
a vital role in democratic management, adopting laws and monitoring
their implementation. In that sense it is especially important to
promote the technical upgrading of the parliament, retraining of the
staff, making closer the ties with the people. Mr.

Phillips estimated the signed new memorandum as a cooperation
cornerstone of National Assembly-US Agency for International
Development.

After signing the memorandum RA NA President Artur Bahgdasaryan and
Robin Phillips, Mission Director in Armenia of the US Agency for
International Development had a briefing with the journalists.

Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade Figures Released

SEVAN-HRAZDAN CASCADE FIGURES RELEASED

International Water Power and Dam Construction, UK
Oct 14 2005

The Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade in Armenia generated 475MkWh of
hydroelectricity in the first nine months of this year, unchanged
as compared with the same period in 2004, according to the Interfax
news agency.

Full-year production this year is expected to reach 510MkWh, as
compared with 532.5MkWh in 2004.

Armenia’s public services commission is considering a request by the
International Energy Corporation (IEC) to acquire a US$24M loan from
Germany’s KfW bank for the modernisation of the Yerevan hydro electric
pant, which is part of the Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade.

The IEC, which is part of Russia’s Unified Energy Systems (UES), must
receive permission from the public services commission to receive
the loan under Armenia’s energy legislation.

The IEC was established in May 2003 to operate the Sevan-Hrazdan
Cascade. The Cascade, which has a total installed capacity of 556MW,
comprises six hydroelectric power plants built in the 1930-1962 period.

;storyCode=2031823

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.waterpowermagazine.com/story.asp?sectioncode=130&amp

With The Development Goal Of Armenian-Ukrainian Ties

WITH THE DEVELOPMENT GOAL OF ARMENIAN-UKRAINIAN TIES

National Assembly of RA, Armenia
Oct 14 2005

On October 13 RA NA President Artur Baghdasaryan received Oleksandr
Bozhko, the newly appointed Ambassador plenipotentiary and
extraordinary of the Republic of Ukraine to Armenia.

During the meeting the development issues of Armenian-Ukrainian
inter-parliamentary and interstate relations were discussed. Mr.

Bozhko expressed his gladness on the occasion of being re-appointed
an ambassador in Armenia and noted that the development of the
ties between two parliaments will be in the basis of his diplomacy
mission. By the Ambassador’s estimation the two countries have chosen
the way of Euro Integration and have a great impetus for mutual
promotion, especially the legislative experience of Armenia can
be useful for Ukraine on its way to become a member of World Trade
Organization. The Ukrainian experience will help Armenia in the sense
of the constitutional reforms. The cooperation was also mutually
highlighted in the sense of deepening the trade-economic ties. The
Ambassador presented the Parliament President the inter-political
situation of Ukraine.

During the meeting they touched upon the constitutional reforms of
Armenia, Mr. Bozhko highlighted the adoption of the reforms, as a
response, the NA President noted that the referendum day is already
fixed on November 27,and there are all preconditions that through
pan-democratic agreement Armenia will make a step forward on the
way of deepening the democracy and Euro-Integration. The Parliament
President highlighted the strengthening of the ties of the Supreme
Rada with the National Assembly and the cooperation at new level –
already at the inter-parliamentary level.

During the meeting they also touched upon other issues of mutual
interest.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Anti-Plan Working Well For System Of A Down

ANTI-PLAN WORKING WELL FOR SYSTEM OF A DOWN
By Ross Raihala Knight Ridder Newspapers

Wilkes Barre Times-Leader, PA
Oct 13 2005

“We’ve really never approached anything from the typical angle. We
came into the music scene in L.A. from left field. We always did our
own thing, taking everyone’s career advice and then not following it.”

Vocalist Serj Tankian of System of a Down

With its innovative, complex music and surreal lyrics, System of a Down
isn’t just the most unusual band in metal (that’s the closest genre
that fits the virtually unclassifiable band). It’s quite possibly
the weirdest million-seller on the charts.

“I love that,” vocalist Serj Tankian said during a phone interview
from Manhattan. “We’ve really never approached anything from the
typical angle. We came into the music scene in L.A. from left field.

“We always did our own thing, taking everyone’s career advice and
then not following it.”

So far, the anti-plan has worked.

The Armenian-American quartet is having its most successful year to
date. The band launched “Mezmerize” in the spring with an instantly
sold-out guerrilla club tour. Follow-up disc “Hypnotize” hits stores
in November and is already one of the fall’s most hotly anticipated
releases.

“‘Mezmerize’ and ‘Hypnotize’ are really one record divided into two,”
Tankian said. “It’s not a concept album in terms of completing a story,
but it is kind of like completing a circle.”

Critics have long praised System of a Down’s unbridled creativity,
which brings a Frank Zappa-esque sense of the surreal to pounding,
operatic and politically charged metal.

But it’s the kids who fill the mosh pits at SOAD shows and have
snatched up more than 10 million copies of the band’s albums worldwide.

Does Tankian ever worry his young fans might be missing some of System
of a Down’s more subtle commentary in favor of merely rocking out?

“No, no – rocking out is the reason why we’re doing this,” he said.

“I think as long as people instinctively feel our music, they don’t
have to psychologically analyze it.

“A lot of people do come up with all sorts of theories and
understandings from the lyrics. A lot of people don’t, too, and that’s
OK. We just want people to connect to our music in some way.”

Tankian points to the song “B.Y.O.B.”

As far as SOAD goes, it’s a fairly straightforward protest song with
pointed lyrics: “Why don’t presidents fight the war? Why do they
always send the poor?”

“You may not be anti-war yourself,” he said, “but you will definitely
feel the power of the sarcasm in that song. You don’t have to theorize
about it – you just feel it.”

But there’s also a satirical side to System of a Down that often gets
overlooked amid all the anger.

“There has been such a focus on the political aspect of the band or
the heritage aspect of the band,” Tankian said.

“But I think people are starting to get now that humor is a huge part
of what we do, too.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.timesleader.com/mld/timesleader/entertainment/12898994.htm

Event To Benefit Evacuees

EVENT TO BENEFIT EVACUEES
By Alyssa Fry The Shorthorn staff

The Shorthorn, TX
Oct 14 2005

The Music Department will hold free concert, but donations will be
taken for Red Cross and Habitat for Humanity.

In an effort to raise more money for hurricane evacuees, the Music
Department will present a benefit concert at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in
Irons Recital Hall.

The event is free, but donations will be accepted. Half the proceeds
will be given to the Red Cross and half will go to Habitat for
Humanity.

Jeffrey Howard, visiting violin assistant professor, initiated the idea
of the performance to the department. He said he wanted to do something
to help because the impact of the recent hurricanes was so great.

“It’s important for the Music Department to have a response and to
do our best to support the people who have lost everything,” he said.

Another reason for wanting to help evacuees was his wife, he said.

Anna Soukiassian, who will perform at the benefit, survived a severe
earthquake in 1998 in her hometown of Yerevan, the capital of Armenia.

The earthquake hit while she was practicing the piano in the apartment
where she lived with her mother. After seeing the reflection of her
closet door open up behind her, she stood up, but fell to the floor.

“I sat in the window, and people were running out [of the apartment
building],” she said. “It lasted a good two minutes.”

The town of Spitlak, about two hours from where she lived, was where
the earthquake’s epicenter was located.

“The whole town was underground,” Soukiassian said. “There was nobody
to rescue. It was very tragic, I’m sure thousands died.”

This experience is the driving force behind her participation in this
concert, aside from supporting her husband, she said.

“I’ve been through and seen a lot of damages from natural disasters,”
she said. “And I know hurricanes are another kind of natural disaster,
but I have heard stories that remind me of the earthquake.

I am doing this without hesitation.”

Associate professor Elizabeth Morrow will also perform in the
concert. The last part of the performance, the “Adagio for Strings,”
was chosen because it’s very expressive, she said.

“We had to look for a piece that looked at the contemplative side
when we’re confronted with things that humble us,” she said.

Music, she said, is something the department can share with the public
while helping evacuees.

“It’s an opportunity to share our relationship with music which is
a personal thing,” she said. “And with this concert we share this
relationship on a public level.”