Armenian state debt at 41.7% of GDP at end-2011

Interfax, Russia
April 28 2012

Armenian state debt at 41.7% of GDP at end-2011

YEREVAN. April 28

Total Armenian state debt stood at $4.129 billion at the end of last
year, representing 41.7% of GDP, Deputy Armenian Finance Minister and
treasury chief Atom Dzhandzhugazian told the press on Saturday.

The Finance Ministry had predicted that state debt would amount to
41.3% of GDP at end-2011.

Dzhandzhugazian said that foreign state debt amounted to $3.568
billion, or 36.1% of GDP, at the end of last year. Domestic state debt
was $560 million, or 5.7% of GDP. Of foreign debt, government
obligations accounted for $2.951 billion, or 29.8% of GDP and Central
Bank of Armenia obligations to $617 million.

As of March 31 this year, Dzhandzhugazian said, Armenia’s state debt
was at $4.196 billion, including $3.634 billion in foreign debts ($3.3
billion – government, $631 million – Central Bank), and $562.2 million
in domestic debts.

During the financial crisis, Armenia’s debt burden doubled,
Dzhandzhugazian said, although the country continues to be thought of
as a country with a low debt level. The cost of servicing state debt
will be rising until 2015, and then it will start to go down, he said.

Per its state-debt law, Armenia can increase that debt to 50%-60% of
GDP, while the government is obligated to keep the country’s budget
deficit to no more than 3% of GDP.

Cf

President Gül blames French politicians for escalating Turkophobia

, Turkey
April 28 2012

President Gül blames French politicians for escalating Turkophobia

Gül has blamed French politicians for using the so-called Armenian
genocide as a tool for triggering Turkophobia in France.

World Bulletin/News Desk

President Abdullah Gül has blamed French politicians for using the
so-called Armenian genocide as a tool for triggering Turkophobia in
France.

Speaking on the 97th anniversary of the Battle of Çanakkale, Gül said
that every year Turkey holds a ceremony for commemorating the French
soldiers who died at Çanakkale, but France does not exhibit the same
good intentioned approach towards Turkey.

`After the Republic was established, we avoided reopening old wounds
so future generations would not inherit these pains. Unfortunately,
the Armenian Diaspora has started to use this tragic event as a tool
for preserving their identity and enhancing the feeling of solidarity
between themselves since the 1960s. Some countries have unfairly
ratified laws that criminalize the so-called Armenian genocide.
Politicians who have voted in favor of these laws don’t have any
knowledge of the political conditions of the time; they are chasing
political benefits,’ said Gül.

Reiterating Turkey’s call for the establishment of a non-partisan
commission comprised of respected Turkish and foreign historians for
investigating the 1915 events, Gül noted that neither Armenia nor
France have given a positive response to this call.

`We frequently observe with sorrow today that French politicians are
exploiting the World War I-era deaths of Armenians to gain the support
of the Armenian community living in France and therefore encouraging
Turkophobia in France,’ he added.

The Turkish Foreign Ministry released a written statement on Tuesday
night accusing French presidential rivals Nicolas Sarkozy and Francois
Hollande of exploiting the World War I-era deaths of Armenians during
the Ottoman Empire to garner votes from its sizeable Armenian
community ahead of the second presidential run-off.

The statement said declarations by the French presidential rivals
regarding the 1915 events are `another example of the exploitation of
controversial historical issues for political gain.’

The statement added that it is unfortunate that history is politicized
based on various goals, and that prejudiced behavior won’t help
further justice or create a better understanding of history.

The Turkish government has also urged French politicians to exercise
restraint as statesmen and said it’s impossible to obtain results
through an outside, artificial imposition on a subject where the
involved states should reach a solution. The statement added that
similar statements are detrimental to peace efforts in the region.

www.WorldBulletin.net

139 candidates run for 41 constituency seats in Armenian parliament

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
April 28 2012

139 candidates run for 41 constituency seats in Armenian parliament

139 candidates will run for 41 seats in the Armenian parliament on May
6, according to the majority system, Armenia Today reports.

Gagik Tsarukyan, the leader of Prosperous Armenia, is the only
candidate in electoral district 28, Samvel Balasanyan, Vice Speaker of
Parliament and Deputy Chairman of the party, is the only candidate in
electoral district 34.

Armen Avdalyan of district 28 and Ayk Sultanyan of district 35 quit
the elections.

8 parties and a bloc are running for parliament. They include the
Republican Party, Prosperous Armenia, Orinats Yerkir, Dashnaktsutyun,
Heritage, the Armenian National Congress, the Democratic Party, the
Communist Party and United Armenians.

Reburning L.A. – The literature of 1992: This Angelic Land

Los Angeles Review of Books

D.J. Waldie on This Angelic Land
Reburning L.A. – The Literature of 1992

This Angelic Land
By: Aris Janigian
pp: 234

April 29, 2012

IT’S 20 YEARS SINCE LOS ANGELES LAST BURNED, far worse than in 1965 (the
Watts Riot) and more destructively than in 1943 (the Zoot Suit Riots) or
in 1871 (the Chinese Massacre). L.A. may burn again, even if as many
believe, the igniting brutality of the LAPD has been dampened. Still,
the disparity of prospects for ill-educated youth and the city’s working
poor is greater today than it was in either 1992 or 1965. L.A.’s
permanent social fractures generate enough tinder, and self-immolation
becomes us. It’s one of our hateful characteristics, along with a sick
fascination with apocalypses and self-inflicted amnesia.

Most of us don’t care to remember. But in Watts (even after 47 years),
you can still see places – like faint smudges – where businesses had
been burned out or failed soon after the fires. And in neighborhoods
south of downtown, 20 years after the Rodney King verdicts, lot-size
gaps still hole the streetscape. They hardly get a second glance. In
north Long Beach, where news helicopters rarely hovered in 1992, the
city put up low, three-rail white fences around the emptied lots,
looking like corrals for ponies. Our places remember better than Anglo
L.A. ever will.

For one thing, places don’t get bored. In our distracted recollection of
the events that followed the acquittal of four police officers who
clubbed Rodney King into compliance with the LAPD’s formal modes of
submission, our L.A. is located unhelpfully between the representations
in commission reports and the intensely personal, sudden, and fleeting
sensations of those who stood in and around the flames. As spectacle –
even as a moral spectacle in the monologues of Anna Deavere Smith’s
Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992 – the events of 20 years ago are nothing
but moments. What the words riot, civil disturbance, rebellion, or
uprising should have meant to us we have displaced, partly by the
lingering trauma and partly by forgetfulness. Memory for L.A. is an
empty can to be kicked down the road as we wait again for whatever.

Tomorrow has always been this city’s unreachable destination. As one
civic booster early in the 20th century put it, Los Angeles has
“everything in the future.” True enough in 1992 and today as well:
everything tomorrow and nothing today, where we actually live, and
little of substance from the past, either. For Angelenos, the death of
Kendrec McDade, the random shootings of black residents in Tulsa,
Oklahoma, and the killing of Trayvon Martin in Florida (reminiscent of
the shooting of young Latasha Harlins by a Korean shopkeeper in 1991)
are insufficient as reminders or as sparks. But not for every Angeleno.

In 2002, Jervey Tervalon (in his introduction to Geography of Rage:
Remembering the Los Angeles Riots of 1992) could write that the common
bonfire had made survivors in common:

We lived through it, were scared and furious, considered bailing
on Los Angeles, and feared that this explosion of rage was just
the precursor of more unrest. … We struggled with the fragmented
opinions of hows and whys; the city was too colored, too poor, too
vicious, too divided to pull itself back from the abyss of the
largest civil disturbance in the history of the United States. But
L.A. resurrected itself. We got along well enough for the economy
to blossom once again, and those that fled to greener or whiter
climes were replaced with browner or blacker or yellower faces,
and the city didn’t miss a beat. It was still too large, too
dangerous, too expensive, too smoggy, but we weren’t going
anywhere.

By 2007, black Angelenos no longer wanted perseverance in the ashes of
Peter Ueberroth’s failed Rebuild L.A. (Ueberroth, former president of
the organizing committee of the Los Angeles summer Olympics, sought to
transform the economics of poverty in South Central Los Angeles. He
failed to attract the corporate investment he needed. Rebuild L.A.
lasted until its charter expired in 1997.) That year, Tervalon wrote in
the L.A. Weekly that “Latinos have replaced African-Americans in these
neighborhoods and schools, and I wish them luck. I hope that Los Angeles
is kinder to them than to the black folks I knew in the Los Angeles I
loved.” In 2012, with the ruins of wholesale foreclosure all round, not
even the sprawl of not-quite-middle-class African Americans to the
farther valleys and high desert provides enough relief from their
anxiety. In a recent poll by Loyola Marymount University’s Leavey Center
for the Study of Los Angeles, substantially more African Americans than
white Anglos were certain that little or no progress has been made to
resolve racial and ethnic conflicts.

Ask Father Greg Boyle of Homeboy Industries and you’ll learn that any
kindness found in L.A. today is the result of faith or habit. Any luck
belongs to those who already have it.

2.

Even as black L.A. began a problematic diaspora out of post-riot
neighborhoods to the Inland Empire, the irony of “we weren’t going
anywhere” played out in the vernacular culture that followed the fires.
Ice Cube’s The Predator (1992), a rap cycle of fury and contempt, was
directed at the distant, indifferent shore where privileged Angelenos
live, even if the privileged were thought to include Korean grocers. “We
Had to Tear This Motherfucka Up” was Ice Cube’s explanation, a theme of
tragic necessity remixed by other rap and hip-hop artists. “The Day the
Niggaz Took Over” from Dr. Dre’s The Chronic (1992), with sampled news
reports and riot sound bites, rescripted the burning of L.A. as racial
solidarity of a sort, although that wasn’t true either, as anyone who
watched the looting on television could see. Ice-T in “Disorder” (1993)
sang “Injustice drives you crazy/It drive L.A. insane/In this
generation/hatred is the name” with the chorus repeating “War! LA ’92!”
The target of black rage was already generic, however real were the
reasons, and the politics-by-other-means grotesquely limited. “Gangsta
rap” might sing of Glocks and a stoic acceptance of fate – 2Pac
rapping “I see death around the corner” – but the misogyny, nihilism,
and self-absorption of gangsta poets hustled the memory of “tearing up”
L.A. into mere soliloquy.

Fiction and memoir, too, mostly failed to deliver a usable 1992. Los
Angeles Times book critic David Ulin, writing a 20th anniversary
retrospective of the riots and the literature it produced (Los Angeles
Times, 22, April 2012), found only fragments, cacophony, and the city’s
habitual desertion of history. Ulin praised two books as brave
approaches to the “story we have never quite known how to tell”:
Tervalon’s Geography of Rage (a collection long out of print) and Lynell
George’s No Crystal Stair, with its fine portraits of the suffering
compounded with George’s memoir of her own confusion and estrangement as
the events of 1992 unfolded:

For hours I’ve been transfixed, watching childhood landmarks
swallowed up in the surprisingly liquid aspects of billowing smoke
and flames – stores, streets, memories, futures. I’m watching my
old neighborhood blister, turn to embers, rendered entirely
foreign. I hear the fear in the voices of my relatives and friends
who’ve been trying to track the course of the flames, guess the
trajectory of anger.

Ulin also noted Richard Rayner’s motor tour of the burning city in his
essay “Los Angeles” (included in Ulin’s 2001 anthology Another City:
Writing from Los Angeles). The rioting had begun as a matter of black
rage, it seemed to Rayner, but then it had morphed into “property
redistribution” by the poor of all colors. It had ended as a public
entertainment in which at least 58 people were killed.

Ulin (as well as Libros Schmibros proprietor/librarian David Kipen,
commenting recently on KPCC) could recollect only a few post-riot
novels, and in the them, the fires are primarily a lurid backdrop:
Michael Connelly’s Echo Park and Concrete Blond, Héctor Tobar’s The
Tattooed Soldier, Gary Phillips’ Violent Spring, Paula Woods’ Inner City
Blues, and Bebe Moore Campbell’s Brothers and Sisters. Paul Beatty’s
White Boy Shuffle is a satire of male blackness and gangsta posturing.
What Korean American novelists said of their community’s desolation –
2,100 businesses ruined, five Korean merchants killed – I do not know.

“Not knowing” in media-saturated L.A. is our only universally shared
condition. We have a literature about Los Angeles in which a city we
partly recognize is sometimes monstrously, sometimes beautifully
re-imagined, but we have no literature yet of Los Angeles, not even a
shared grid of the stories from which such a literature might arise. And
so, we must begin.

A particularly poignant and relevant starting place for assembling this
necessary grid of stories is Aris Janigian’s unexpected novel This
Angelic Land (which takes its title from a line in William Blake’s
America – A Prophecy). Unexpected, because Janigian’s previous novels –
Bloodvine and Riverbig – have dealt with the Central Valley and
conflicts within the valley’s Armenian community. (Novels that I’ve
enjoyed, and said so in a book jacket blurb for Riverbig. Janigian is a
friend of a friend, which is how I came to be acquainted with his early
career as a writer. I also share a publisher with Janigian – Berkeley’s
wonderful Heyday Books. His latest novel is published by a new,
nonprofit imprint, West of West Books, founded by Janigian and Mark
Arax.) And unexpected, as well, because This Angelic Land reframes the
fires of 1992 not as an uprising against oppressive white institutions
or through the doomed romanticism of gangsta gunmen or in the form of a
metaphor for the tattered loyalties of the black bourgeoisie but as a
historically conditioned collision of dispossessed tribes on a patch of
contested ground. For contested ground is what Los Angeles has been
since its capture by the U.S. Army in 1847.

3.

(N)iggaz start to loot and police start to shoot
Lock it down at seven o’clock, then again it’s like Beirut
Me don’t show no love cuz it’s us against them
– Dr. Dre, “The Day the Niggaz Took Over”

Beirut/Los Angeles; Los Angeles/Beirut: Janigian patrols the lethal
boundary that barely separates gunmen in both cities, carrying with him
the burden of the Armenian genocide and all the lesser genocides that
preceded and followed 1915 in a bloody trail to L.A., where the exiles
halted, unprepared to release their memories into prose. The most
hopeful of the exiles – including Janigian’s memoirist/quasi-narrator
Adam Derderian – sought reinvention in L.A., the global capital of
third and fourth chances. After all, Adam informs his older brother (who
is the storyteller outside Adam’s story), “The power to invent required
the power to ignore and forget.” But invention on L.A.’s terms comes
with a price.

Ignorance makes our sunshine perpetual, our paydays always on the come.
And forgetting slides another round into the receiver of the Glock,
slides a sometime porn actress into a booth in the bar Adam has
mysteriously ceased to own, turns the news commentary he hears into
drivel, and turns Angelenos like Adam and the Derderians into targets.

The Derderian family – including an aunt widowed by a sectarian
reprisal – had fled Beirut for the ghetto-as-souk of L.A.’s Little
Armenia when Adam was a boy. There, by the precise calculations of the
schoolyard “brown bag test,” he was too swarthy to be merely white, the
black kids said, and too white to be anything but. In 1992, in crossing
the grid of the city with a Kurdish friend to reassure his parents –
sure that the first evening of burning was Beirut all over again –
Adam passes from white to colored and back again, from businessman to
looter to son, from Anglo to Armenian, and from a witness to the
intolerable present moment to an inheritor of the equally intolerable
past. In each gap through the city’s net, these serial Adams measure a
part of the common longing that barely holds the tribes of L.A.
together. That longing can be lethal (Adam is the survivor of a suicide
attempt), and when longing is answered by nothing more than palm trees
and climate, it’s incendiary. Before Adam arrives at his terminus as a
riot statistic in the hills above fiery Los Angeles, he has questioned
the immunity he sought as an Angeleno, the premises of his city, its
faithlessness and his weak faith, and his reasons for – somehow –
remaining here. He’s sat with neighbors arming themselves, his parents
armed with worry, hipsters and bohos armored with L.A.’s mixture of
cynicism and innocence, and with the wise man Adam names the Wizard,
vastly aloof.

This Angelic Land does not answer the disputed claims of a particular
history although the sufferings of history signify something. Rather,
this is a novel of grace . . . and grace in several dimensions,
including palm trees and climate and all they imply about the sweetness
of the ruined paradise that is our Los Angeles. There’s the grace of
belief, a communal faith that hovers at the novel’s edges. There’s the
grace – rarely consoling – of family. There’s the bitter grace of
memory and the redeeming grace of comrades and the easily misplaced
grace of self-awareness. There’s the grace of America, too, but it’s
hard to discern through the smoke of 1992. And there’s the grace – or
the luck – of survival, although that hardly leaves anyone in the
novel at peace. Each was the survivor of something in getting here, a
survivor of this place in staying, and now the random survivor of 1992’s
tormented carnival of fire and fun. Survivors have their guilt and their
illusionary justifications for surviving, but they have survival in
common. And if that’s not enough on which to build a home for exiles,
it’s something, nonetheless.

Janigian refuses to dissolve L.A. into any combination of its clichés
or to accept hallucination as an explanation or to leave out what he has
the capacity to include (sometimes to the detriment of the narrative).
He has a nice way of sorting the easy graces from the ones that might
break your heart, that might prepare you for the grace to make you whole
again. Being whole could be true of our L.A. too, but Janigian is too
smart – too burned by memory – to deliver wholeness as a conclusion.
No one gets L.A. right except, Janigian suggests, those who stand
slightly detached from it, who are half exiles and homeless still, but
who have the capacity for stories. Perhaps he’s right, and that is a
place from which to start negotiation of the terms of our engagement on
this contested ground.

In “Parker Center,” an essay in Tervalon’s Geography of Rage, Lisa
Alvarez describes a serious young man on the first night of the riots,
carefully pouring gasoline around the base of a palm tree not far from
the LAPD headquarters. Alvarez sees the young man wedge some newspaper
as kindling into the cut fronds that cover part of the trunk. Alvarez,
while realizing her foolish pathos, pleads with the young man to spare
the tree, so harmless, so L.A. He informs her that the tree is fake, as
all of L.A. is fake. And when the young man makes the palm another evil
candle for that first night of rioting, he’s justified. He tells
Alvarez, “If it was real, it wouldn’t burn. What’s real doesn’t burn.”

This Angelic Land makes L.A. more real. It’s not the perfect novel of
1992, but it’s a necessary one.

Film Series at ALMA: "Genocide revealed: the Ukrainian Holodomor"

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Library & Museum of America
65 Main St., Watertown, MA. 02472
Tel: 617-926-2562
Web:
Email: [email protected]

Sunday, May 6, 2012

ARMENIAN LIBRARY AND MUSEUM OF AMERICA
invites you to

“Genocide Revealed”

Holodomor, the Ukrainian Genocide of 1932-1933

Film Screening at ALMA

EVENT INFORMATION

Date & Time
Sunday, May 6
2:00PM

Admission
Free
Open to the public

Movie length: 75 min.

Refreshments following film

Location
ALMA’s Contemporary Art Gallery 3rd Floor

Museum Hours
(Sunday)
12:00PM to 6:00PM

Continuing with its film series, ALMA will host the projection of
“Genocide Revealed:

Holodomor, the Ukrainian Genocide of 1932-1933” on Sunday, May 6 at
2:00pm.

“Genocide Revealed” is a gripping documentary on the 1932-1933 Famine
Genocide in Soviet Ukraine when millions were deliberately starved to
death by Stalin’s regime; it also describes the accompanying
destruction of Ukraine’s religious, academic, cultural and political
leadership.

The film was produced, directed and edited by award-winning Montreal
filmmaker, Yurij Luhovy. It won numerous awards at US and
international film festivals in 2011, including the Albert Award for
Best Documentary at the Litchfield Hills Film Festival; the “Best
Audience” Award for best historical documentary and the Special
“Eye-Opener” Award at the Film Festival of Colorado; and the Best
Historical Film Award at the Honolulu Film Awards.

Please join us in learning about this forgotten tragedy.

Upcoming Events at ALMA

Sunday, May 20 – 2 p.m.

“Bound for Glory: 500 years of Armenian printing from ALMA’s
Collection”

This year marks the 500th anniversary of the first Armenian printed
book (published in Venice in 1512). Drawing on ALMA’s extensive
collection of antiquarian and modern publications, this exhibit will
highlight the creation of the Armenian alphabet and literature,
handwritten masterpieces, the development of Armenian printing around
the world, and an examination of the types of books printed.

Free with Museum admission

ARMENIAN LIBRARY AND MUSEUM OF AMERICA, Inc.
65 Main Street, Watertown MA 02472
617-926-2562 –

http://www.almainc.org/
www.almainc.org

Area Armenians Mark Anniversary Of Genocide

AREA ARMENIANS MARK ANNIVERSARY OF GENOCIDE
by Johanna Weidner

The Guelph Mercury (Ontario, Canada)
April 23, 2012 Monday

April 24 needs to be marked not only by Armenians but by all people
who want to stand up against genocide in the past and future.

On that day in 1915, Ottoman Turkish forces began the roundup and
mass killings of Armenians. An estimated 1.5 million Armenians died
in what is now widely viewed as the first genocide of the 20th century.

“It happened to everyone and it has the potential to happen to anyone,”
said J.P. Assadourian, chair of the Armenian National Committee’s
southwestern Ontario chapter.

The local chapter commemorated the 97th anniversary of the genocide
on Sunday at the Armenian Community Centre in Cambridge. A wreath in
honour of the hundreds of thousands who died.

April 24 is marked by Armenian communities around the world with
ceremonies and peaceful demonstrations in a decades-long fight to
get the Turkish government to acknowledge the killings.

“We will never stop,” Assadourian said.

He said that dark chapter in history must be talked about openly for
both the sake of Armenians and also the Turkish people, who have the
right to know about the nation’s past.

“They have been denied the facts of what has happened in their
history,” Assadourian said.

Holding nations accountable for genocide is also a warning to others
that the systematic extermination of a people will not be overlooked
or forgotten, he said.

The Turkish government does not recognize the First World War-era
genocide, saying the figure is inflated and the deaths occurred in
the civil unrest during the Ottoman Empire’s collapse.

“The Armenian nation will never forget the genocide and the Turkish
nation is reluctant to admit it happened,” said keynote speaker Hayg
Oshagan, a professor in the communication department at Wayne State
University in Michigan.

But he said it’s essential for the neighbouring nations to come to
an agreement about that time, regardless of how difficult it may be
to make reparations for the immeasurable loss.

“Nations are really reluctant to admit this sort of thing about their
past,” Oshagan said.

Despite the denials by the Turkish government, he said, the truth is
apparent through the eyewitness reports, photographs and records of
assets seized from Armenians as they were forced out of Turkey and
marched into the desert.

“It’s uncontested the genocide occurred,” Oshagan said.

“There’s tons of documentation on what has happened.”

Canada’s Parliament in 2004 backed a resolution condemning the actions
of the Ottoman Turkish forces, calling it unequivocally a genocide
and crime against humanity. The move was denounced by Turkey, accusing
Canadian legislators for blindly following those with marginal views.

Oshagan believes the Turks will eventually have to come to terms
with what happened. Until then, he said the fight will continue
among Armenians scattered around the globe even as almost 100 years
have passed.

“It’s our duty to our ancestors and our nation.”

Armenia-Set Film "Here" Opens In U.S.

ARMENIA-SET FILM “HERE” OPENS IN U.S.

Published: Friday April 27, 2012

Braden King filming HERE in Armenia. Courtesy image

Armenia itself is a character in Braden King’s movie, “Here”

Here and now

New York – “Here” premiered at the 2011 Sundance and Berlin Film
Festivals and has gone on to screen throughout the world. A live
installation version of the project, HERE [THE STORY SLEEPS], premiered
at The Museum of Modern Art in 2010, travelled to Mass MoCA and was
mounted at the 2011 Sundance and Houston Cinema Arts Festivals.

Tamar Gasparian spoke with filmmaker Braden King after a successful
New York City premiere earlier this month and just before HERE opens
in Los Angeles on April 27 and in San Francisco on May 11.

Q: Tell us about the journey that brought you HERE.

A: It’s been a long and winding road. Lately I’ve been comparing the
process to archaeology. Most films come about in a more architectural
way. A filmmaker has an idea that he or she wants to realize,
sketches it out and builds it. HERE was more of an expedition into
the unknown. I was following the breadcrumbs, looking for clues. I
started pulling this string many years ago, and it eventually led me
to these characters, this story and to Armenia itself. It’s been an
expanding, satisfying, mysterious journey. In many ways, the film is
a document of that process.

Q: HERE is opening in all these cities with significant Armenian
populations in the same month as Armenians all over the world are
commemorating the Armenian Genocide. However, HERE is not about the
Armenian past. HERE is about today’s Armenia. It is about the ordinary
people and two main characters, Will (Ben Foster) and Gadarine (Lubna
Azabal), whose story begins and develops on the roads of Armenia,
against the gorgeous landscape of the country. It is an interesting
coincidence that the U.S. premieres are in April, isn’t it?

A: It is. This film has always worked in mysterious ways. HERE somewhat
studiously avoids direct political commentary, but the occupation of
the American mapmaker, Will Shepard, can never truly be an apolitical
act. Any time you’re drawing a line on a map, you’re changing the
world – for better or for worse.

There is a kind of freedom from history that Will’s traveling partner,
Gadarine Najarian, represents. She’s very interested in the NOW, and
yet she discovers that there are these deep roots and traditions that
run deeply, if unconsciously, through her. The film asks questions
about how we can exist in a way that’s liberated from history and
tradition while simultaneously appreciating it, acknowledging it and
paying tribute to it. I’m not Armenian, but I think these themes are
universal – they exist to one degree or another in every culture,
every family, in all of us.

Q: During your opening remarks at the NYC premiere you explained that
the open space left in the frame of the film was there on purpose,
for the viewer to explore and use that space. Also, during one of our
conversations several months ago, you told me about the triangles
that you created with the characters. Tell us more about the space
and the shapes you have created within the frame of the film.

A: Films are not only about the stories they tell. There is a lot of
space within these images but there is also a lot of space within the
experience of HERE for the viewer to wander around in, on their own.

I wanted to make a film that would allow a viewer to inhabit it,
not just watch it. That is kind of a big ask for some viewers. The
characters are almost silently saying, “Come. Join us. You don’t have
to just sit back and watch.” The people who are most affected by the
film seem to be able to say yes to that proposition. I definitely
encourage viewers to let Will and Gadarine wander off on their own
every once in a while and to just explore these images, aside from
the story, in their own time and in their own way.

In terms of the triangulation you’re asking about – that’s a mapping
term and practice that goes back to geometry. If you know the length
of two sides of a right triangle you can calculate the third via
the Pythagorean Theorem. But I don’t think this idea only applies
to mathematics. We do this kind of thing in so many different ways
in our lives. Our relationships and experiences are like points on a
map – we use them to orient ourselves and to measure and make sense
of our world. We thought about this kind of thing a lot when writing
the film. How do we map our existence? What is the distance between
A and B? How do I get there? With who?

Q: In the film, I see Armenia as a country of breathtaking landscapes
and kind people, who are happy to share their food and homemade vodka
with strangers passing by. However, some acquaintances of mine were
unhappy with the images of Armenians as poor and constantly drinking.

They expected to see Armenia at its best and interpreted the images
in the film as anything but. How did you see Armenia and Armenians?

A: I can understand the desire to see Armenia portrayed as one
might wish it to be, to only point the camera at the new Northern
Boulevard in Yerevan and to avoid less “developed” locations. But
that’s simply not the truth on the ground. Almost everything you see
in HERE is real. There are very few sets – perhaps one, actually. Many
of the characters are played by non-actors. The script is based on
extensive research and travel that took place from 2004 – 2009. In
some respects the film can be seen as a documentary with a fictional
narrative mapped on to it – at least in its portrayal of the landscape
and locations circa 2009, when it was shot.

I see very little poverty in these images. I see life. I see
strength. I see poetry. I see warmth, hospitality and love. We went out
of our way to photograph Armenia and its people in a neutral, objective
manner. This is a gorgeous, complicated country and culture. We made
a great effort to capture it as we found it. I see nothing in the
film that one cannot take profound pride in, and I would encourage
anyone who sees it to travel this road for themselves, to discover
the beauty, resilience and warmth of this landscape, this culture
and these incredible people.

Q: When I saw the film for the very first time, I was pleasantly
shocked. In the film, you noticed and captured something that, when
I was a child, had fascinated me and made me wonder if anyone else
noticed it. I am referring to the window of the bus that for several
seconds takes over the entire screen, reminding me of my childhood.

There are many reasons why I love this film, but that scene reinforced
it.

A: My methodology on HERE had a lot to do with being quiet – looking,
listening, observing. I tried to set up a situation in which the
cast, crew and I could explore ourselves in the same ways that the
film’s characters do. We were constantly asking, “What does it feel
like when one travels in this way? What do we remember? What does
an experience look like when it’s recalled years later in fleeting,
fragmentary images?” It’s gratifying to hear about the ways in which
that bus window connected you back to your childhood. It means that,
at least for that moment, we did our job the way we intended.

Q: I love the music in HERE. Are you planning to release a soundtrack
and when can we expect the film on DVD?

A: We are going to release a soundtrack, most likely around the time
of the DVD release, in July. I’m so proud of the music that composer
Michael Krassner and Boxhead Ensemble created. All of it was recorded
in Armenia, at the end of production. In many cases, it was recorded in
the very locations in which the film was shot, with additional sessions
at the Sergei Parajanov museum and at a disused Soviet recording studio
on the outskirts of Yerevan that used to belong to Melodia records.

The group featured Michael Krassner, Shahzad Ismaily, Laraine
Kaizer, Eyvind Kang and Jessika Kenney with Vartan Baghdasaryan,
Karine Hovhannisyan, Jim Becker and Tim Rutili. It’s a combination
of musical cultures, recorded in an environment that was foreign for
many of them. I think that sense of displacement and wonder comes
across in the beautiful, very mysterious music they created.

For more on the film link to

http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2012-04-27-armenia-set-film–here–opens-in-u-s-
http://www.herefilm.com/

Souls In Unrest

SOULS IN UNREST
By Jackie Hong

April 23, 2012

Recognizing different perspectives about the Armenian Genocide for
its 97th anniversary.

Almost a century and three generations separate Sevan Hajinian from
the Armenian genocide, but that doesn’t make what happened any easier
to comprehend. The upcoming anniversary of the Armenian genocide on
April 24 only makes it more difficult.

“When the month of April comes, it’s really a sad month for us,”
Hajinian says. Not only has Hajinian studied the genocide since she
was a teenager, but her family was also directly impacted by it – her
great-grandmother saw six of her seven children killed before she fled
the Ottoman Empire to Syria with her only son, Hajinian’s grandfather.

“He was always telling us he remembers walking through the desert
and getting to Syria, how tough it was for them to start all over,”
Hajinian says of her grandfather, who died in 1982.

Hajinian’s story is not an isolated one. From 1915 to 1923,
around 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire were killed by
government forces, the first action being the deportation of 250
Armenian intellectuals on April 24, 1915. Many of the deaths were
the result of deportations, where Armenians were marched out of the
country and left in the Syrian desert. Along the way, thousands died
from starvation, exhaustion, and attacks on the convoys.

By 1923, the worldwide population of Armenians had dropped from 4
million to 2.5 million. The Armenians that fled were dispersed around
the Middle East, and many eventually moved to North America. Today,
it is estimated that around 70,000 Armenians are living in Canada,
with Toronto having the largest Armenian community in the country.

The genocide label, although widely accepted, still stirs up
controversy 97 years after the fact.

Armenians have long been advocating for the events to be recognized
as genocide, and April 24 is a national day of remembrance in Armenia.

Over 20 countries, including Canada, have acknowledged the genocide, as
well as 43 states in the United States and two provinces in Australia,
even though the federal governments have not.

Genocide scholars and many historians support the label, deeming it
“the first genocide of the 20th century.” Scholars say that the
systematic approach the Ottoman Empire used to kill Armenians and
decimate Armenian culture are in line with the UN Genocide Convention,
a resolution enacted in 1951 that legally defines genocide.

The genocide resonates with younger generation of Armenian-Canadians
as well.

“It still continues to affect us just because the people who are
descendents of the genocide [survivors] have had to go through so many
things,” says Daron Mardirossian, president of the Armenian Students’
Association at Ryerson University.

“A lot of people were traumatized, weren’t able to have children,
weren’t able to lead normal lives afterwards,” he says. Like
Hajinian, Mardirossian has personal ties with the genocide – his
great-grandparents on his father’s side were business owners and
mayors in the Ottoman Empire, and were forced to leave everything
behind when escaping the violence.

However the Turkish community has a very different view on what
happened.

“There’s no genocide to revoke,” says Demir Delen, former president
of the Federation of Canadian Turkish Associations. His view is
shared by most Turkish scholars and some historians. Delen has spent
over four decades researching the history of the Ottoman Empire and
Armenian community.

“In order to understand the events of 1915, you have to really look
at the historical context,” says Delen. “It’s in the middle of the
First World War.”

At the time, Turkey was facing attacks from British and Russian
forces. There were Armenians enlisted in Russian and Turkish armies,
and it was believed that Armenians in Turkey were aiding the Russians.

“It was a purely military decision… to move the Armenians that
lived in the eastern Anatolia [where the Russians were attacking]
out of the way so they couldn’t assist the enemy,” says Delen.

Delen notes that over a million Turks and Muslims were killed during
the time of the genocide. He cites scholars’ lack of willingness to
look at Turkish accounts of what happened as the reason the Turkish
perspective is under-represented.

Delen also dismisses the governments who have recognized the genocide.

“These are not historians, they are politicians,” Delen says. “How
many of them even know the area or what happened?”

Along with academics, the genocide is a hot topic in the political
world.

Turkey strongly rejects the notion that a genocide happened. It has
arrested journalists who acknowledge the genocide under Article 301
of the Penal Code, which makes insulting Turkey and “Turkish-ness”
illegal.

There have also been deadly consequences. Hrant Dink, a Turkish-born
Armenian journalist who wrote about Armenian identity and the genocide,
was assassinated outside his Istanbul office in 2007 by a Turkish
nationalist.

As well, Turkish and French relations were strained earlier this year
when France passed a bill, later revoked by Senate, that would have
made denying the Armenian genocide illegal. The Turkish government
froze military, economic, and political ties with France and accused
French president Nicolas Sarkozy of trying to grab the votes of
France’s Armenians population, estimated to be around 500,000.

Turkey’s resistance to the genocide label has only strengthened
Armenians’ resolve to have it recognized.

“It gives us more reason to commemorate the events,” says Daniel
Ohanian, president of Armen Karo Student Association. The association
is a national body offers resources to Armenian university-student
groups.

Ohanian points out initiatives that spread awareness of the genocide
in Toronto. The Toronto District School Board has included a section
on the Armenian genocide in its Grade 11 genocide course, and every
year near the end of April, a vigil commemorating the genocide is
held at Queen’s Park.

Sevan Hajinian though, will not be in the city come April 24. Along
with hundreds of Armenians from across the country, Hajinian will be
heading to Ottawa.

“It’s a thank-you rally in front of Parliament [for recognizing the
genocide], and then we walk to the Turkish embassy,” she says of the
annual event. “We don’t have any problem with the Turkish people,
the problem is the government, who is denying the genocide.”

“Our souls will not rest ’til the perpetrators are brought to justice.”

http://ryersonfolio.com/souls-in-unrest

Kim Kardashian Informs Yahoo News Washington Bureau Chief On Armenia

KIM KARDASHIAN INFORMS YAHOO NEWS WASHINGTON BUREAU CHIEF ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

news.am
April 28, 2012 | 00:44

Every year the White House Correspondents’ Dinner is held with the
participation of the President, journalists, accredited for the White
House, political scientists, public figures and the Hollywood elite.

ABC TV channel presented a range of series of famous histories on
meetings and dinner curiosities told by famous journalists. Yahoo
News Washington Bureau Chief David Chalian told such news.

“The most surprising conversation I had at a dinner was a few years
back when I was introduced to Kim Kardashian and she became intrigued
by my last name’s Armenian heritage. She began to educate me about
the Armenian genocide well beyond anything I had ever known prior to
meeting the Hollywood starlet.

It was a good thing she steered the conversation and informed me all
about this issue near and dear to her because I had never seen her
reality TV show and didn’t know what we would talk about. Who would
think?” Chalian said.

Armenian And Russian MFAs Hold Discussion In Yerevan

ARMENIAN AND RUSSIAN MFAS HOLD DISCUSSION IN YEREVAN

news.am
April 27, 2012 | 19:23

YEREVAN. – Armenian and Russian MFA representatives held a discussion
on North America on Friday in Yerevan. The Russian MFA delegation was
led by American Department director Alexander Darchiev, the Armenian
MFA delegation was led by Deputy FM Ashot Hovakimyan.

Ashot Hovakimyan stressed the importance of such discussions. He also
mentioned that Armenia stands for the development of normal relations
between Russia and the USA as their relations affect the condition
in the Middle East and South Caucasus.

Alexander Darchiev mentioned that such discussions are especially
important regarded military alliance.