All Generations Of Reforms

ALL GENERATIONS OF REFORMS
Hakob Badalyan

Lragir, Armenia
July 24 2007

When one listens to the high-ranking Armenian officials, one has no
doubt that they are well-aware of the problems of Armenia, acknowledge
the issues which require urgent solution, and the efforts that should
be made to solve these problems. But when the time of making efforts
comes, the same officials decide to solve their personal problems
first and not the problems of the nation. The reason, perhaps, is
that the officials do not listen themselves talk.

They do not listen to themselves and they are not aware of the problems
that Armenia has and that must be solved to make the flesh and blood
of the regional tiger. On the other hand, it may seem strange how
these officials speak about the problems and outline the ways of
their solution in public speeches when they are unaware of these
problems. This strange phenomenon has a simple explanation.

Speaking has become a mechanical action for our officials. In other
words, they do not talk but the mechanics works, maybe even the
mechanics of happiness, because a person for whom speaking is not an
additional cause to think might be very happy. For instance, if the
officials said what they think, the picture would be quite different.

In this case, Armenia would have no problems, there would be no need
for an urgent solution, and those who would nevertheless try to remind
the official that there are problems would immediately be sent to
the prison of the National Security Service or to the mental hospital
because they pose threat to the security of the nation and the society.

It is possible, however, that our officials also need psychologist’s
help or maybe even medical treatment. The problem is that when they
speak about the problems of the nation and the country but they first
solve their and their family’s problems, it might be the consequence
of the identification short circuit, and they think that they are not
part of the nation and the country but the nation and the country
are them. Therefore, they make speeches with innocent faces, then
they get down to raising and solving the issues they had raised in
those speeches. For instance, someone states that there is a problem
of distribution of the economic growth and it should be distributed
evenly. And it is distributed evenly. For instance, the younger
daughter or son who went to the university in a Russian car in the
first year of his or her studies, in the second year he or she starts
attending the university in a BMW car, for instance, like his or her
elder sister of brother. Is distribution even? Certainly. And the
members of the family cannot complain that the economic growth is
not distributed evenly.

Nothing can help solve this problem except an experienced psychologist
who might be able to cure the official Armenia from the syndrome of
family. Otherwise, the so-called second generation of reforms our
officials are fond of talking about is endangered because with the
present psychological arrangement the second generation of reforms
means that this time the economic growth will be directed at the
grandchildren, and they will go to nursery school or school in a BMW,
Mercedes or a Hummer car.

It Is Disingenuous To Dismiss The NKR Elections

IT IS DISINGENUOUS TO DISMISS THE NKR ELECTIONS

A1+
[05:05 pm] 23 July, 2007

The RA Foreign Ministry welcomed the NKR presidential elections held
on July 19. Nearly 80% of NKR residents participated in the elections.

These elections are the most recent in some dozen presidential,
parliamentary, and local election polls and a constitutional referendum
held since 1991.

The elections guarantee democracy and rule of law for the NKR
people. Legitimately elected authorities have succeeded in securing
the safety and stability of that region even in the absence of a
permanent settlement.

Various OSCE and other international documents clearly indicate that
Nagorno-Karabakh should be engaged in the negotiations and the elected
authorities should represent the country.

To dismiss these elections is disingenuous and contrary to modern
political values. Further, rejection cannot be understood given
the fact that in other areas of the world, in places where final
political status and settlement are also absent, such elections are
indeed supported, promoted, observed and encouraged.

The people of Nagorno-Karabakh remain committed to resolving the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict through negotiations to reach a peaceful
and lasting settlement.

Arman Babajanian Temporarily Stops Hunger Strike

ARMAN BABAJANIAN TEMPORARILY STOPS HUNGER STRIKE

Noyan Tapan
Jul 23, 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 23, NOYAN TAPAN. Arman Babajanian, the editor-in-chief of
the Zhamanak Yerevan newspaper, on June 21, submitted an application
to the management of the Nubarashen penitentiary institution, on
stopping the hunger strike he went on the day before. As Noyan Tapan
correspondent was informed by Syuzan Simonian, the Spokesperson of the
Penitentiary Institutions Department of the RA Ministry of Justice,
A. Babajanian’s health condition is normal.

According to Armine Ohanian, the editor of the Zhamanak Yerevan
newspaper, A. Babajanian made the decision to stop the hunger strike
after the visit of the chief of the above mentioned department and
after "making some arrangement" with him.

It should be mentioned that A. Babajanian sentenced to 3.5 years’
imprisonment for evading military service had gone on a hunger strike
as a token of protest against the respective commission’s dismissing
the penitentiary institution’s application to release him ahead of
the schedule.

Tehran: ‘The Messenger Of Love & Hope’ In Tehran

‘THE MESSENGER OF LOVE & HOPE’ IN TEHRAN

IranMania News, Iran
IranMania.com
July 23 2007

LONDON, July 23 (IranMania) – The Tehran Symphony Orchestra conducted
by the Iranian musician Loris Tjeknavorian is to perform ?The Messenger
of Love and Hope? symphony in honor of the Prophet Muhammad (S)
at Tehran?s Vahdat Hall, MNA reported.

There will be ten evening performances of the concert beginning on
August 10 simultaneously with the anniversary of Be?that, the day
commemorating Muhammad?s (S) appointment to Prophethood.

Composed by Seyyed Mehdi Shojaii, the symphony highlights various
stages of the Prophet?s life, including the conquest of Mecca, Hajjat
al-Wadaa (the Holy Prophet?s Farewell Pilgrimage) and his demise,
Tjeknavorian told Mehr News Agency.

He added, ?Several changes have been made to the symphony since its
performance by the Armenian orchestra during a program at the 22nd
Fajr International Music Festival in January. The work named ?Imam Ali
(AS)? composed by Farhad Fakhreddini has been omitted and a new piece
devised by myself on the same theme has been added.?

Iran Wants To Increase Imports From Armenia

IRAN WANTS TO INCREASE IMPORTS FROM ARMENIA

ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
July 20, 2007 Friday 08:44 PM EST

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told Armenian Prime
Minister Serge Sarkisyan on Friday that increasing imports from
Armenia was a priority for Iran.

A lot of untapped potential and opportunities are lying in this
field, said Mottaki who spent several hours in the Armenian capital
of Yerevan. He attended the 7th meeting of the Armenian-Iranian
Inter-Governmental Commission for Economic Cooperation.

The Iranian Foreign Minister believes that Armenia could become a
major re-exporter of goods to Iran. He said that other countries had
re-exported more than $11 billion worth of goods via the United Arab
Emirates to Iran last year.

The inter-governmental commission issued an order to finalize an
agreement on the trade regime between Armenia and Iran within the
next two months, Manouchehr Mottaki went on to say.

He described as exemplary the bilateral energy cooperation between the
two countries. He also said that banking cooperation and implementation
of mutually beneficial transportation programs were also promising.

"Iran is assigning Armenia with a vital role in the North-South
transportation corridor," Mottaki went on to say.

The Iranian side confirmed it was ready to render assistance in the
solution of the Karabakh conflict.

In turn, Armenian Prime Minister Serge Sarkisyan thanked Iran for
its role in securing stability and peace in the region. Yerevan also
favors the solution of problems by peaceful means through talks and
compromise, the Armenian premier said.

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki also met Armenian President
Robert Kocharyan. They stressed their countries’ determination
to develop bilateral cooperation on various issues, the Armenian
president’s press service told Itar-Tass. The Armenian-Iranian
political cooperation has been reflected in the economic sector.

Minister Oskanian To Pay A Working Visit To Georgia

MINISTER OSKANIAN TO PAY A WORKING VISIT TO GEORGIA

armradio.am
19.07.2007 16:00

At the invitation of the Georgian Minister of Foreign Affairs Gela
Bezhuashvili, RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian will leave for
Georgia on a three-day working visit.

Acting Spokesman of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Vladimir Karapetyan
told ArmInfo that Minister Oskanian will leave for Tbilisi on July
25. the same day he will meet with his Georgian counterpart. The next
day Vartan Oskanian is scheduled to visit Batumi to get acquainted
with the condition of the building of the future Consulate General
of Armenia.

This Year 8483 School-Leavers Have Applied To State Higher Education

THIS YEAR 8483 SCHOOL-LEAVERS HAVE APPLIED TO STATE HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS OF YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Jul 19 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 19, NOYAN TAPAN. This year 8483 school-leavers,
in return for the 8171 recorded last year, have applied to the
State Higher Education Institutions of Yerevan. According to the
statement made by Ruben Topchian, the Head of the Counter center of
the HE Institution’s admission examinations, on July 18, the number
of the applicants has increased for the Yerevan State University of
Architecture and Construction, the Yerevan State Pedagogical University
named after Khachatur Abovian, and the Yerevan State Medical University
named after Mkhitar Heratsi. In comparison with the last year, less
school-leavers have applied to Yerevan State University and the
Yerevan State University of Architecture.

The school-leavers of Yerevan predominate the applicants. As for
those of from provinces, most of them are from Lori, Shirak, and
Armavir. According to the data of the Head of the Counter Center,
very few applicants were registered in the Vayots Dzor region.

According to professions, there is again a great number of applicants,
who have applied to the faculties of Informatics and Applied
Mathematics, and interest in natural scientific subjects has also
increased. The number of those who wanted to study in a number of
faculties, which enjoy popularity in Yerevan State University, such
as International Relations and Science of Law, has decreased, and as
for the philological faculty of "Armenian Language and Literature",
for example, there is a great number of applicants from Gegharkunik and
Armavir, and the number of the school-leavers from Yerevan, who have
applied to the above-mentioned faculty, has decreased in comparison
with last year. The number of those who applied to the faculty of
Elementary Education, Pedagogics, and Methods, has increased in the
Pedagogical University.

Tried By Fire: Finding Faith In A Troubled Land

TRIED BY FIRE: FINDING FAITH IN A TROUBLED LAND
By Stephanie Tracy – HERALD Editorial Assistant

Arlington Catholic Herald, VA
July 18 2007

Daniel Ali spent a large part of his adult life living under the
threat of torture and death. For 17 years, he fought against the
oppression of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.

He survived bombings, torture, eight imprisonments, and the March
1988 chemical attacks on the Kurdish city of Halabja, regarded as
the largest modern chemical weapons attack on a civilian population.

In the midst of such turmoil, the intellectual Muslim Kurd embarked
on a journey that brought him to the Catholic Church.

Growing up, Ali’s family was surrounded by the diversity of religions
and cultures typical in Kurdistan. A neighbor’s son, a priest of
the Armenian Church, gave the 7-year-old Ali a book about the early
Christian martyrs, which he devoured.

"I loved that book. It struck me as odd," said Ali, 48, a parishioner
at St. John Neumann Church in Reston. "These guys didn’t fight. These
guys did not shed anybody’s blood. … They went voluntarily, willing
to suffer and they did not denounce the faith. … That was in stark
contrast to what I read about my own faith, the martyrs, that they
were heroes on the battlefield, were killed in the process of killing."

Ali studied the Quran better than most. His study of the Muslim holy
book and the tradition of Mohammed, the Hadith, however, piqued his
interest in Jesus.

"I did not have a reason to doubt my faith. I had every reason to
love it," he said. "This was the faith of my father and my father’s
father. … (But) this Jesus in the Quran is a very unique individual."

Ali said he was intrigued by passages that contradicted the Muslim
assertion that Jesus was only a man and not divine. He couldn’t
understand how Jesus could be present on earth while, in other
passages, He was said to be watching over the world. And he wondered
why the Quran said Jesus would come at the end of the world if Muslims
believed Mohammed was the last prophet.

By 15, Ali was reading the works of St. Thomas Aquinas and St.

Augustine. By 1982, he had intellectually rejected the faith of
his family.

After working as a linguist for the U.S. military during the Gulf
War, Ali met and married his American Christian wife, Sara, who was
surprised that he did not want her to convert to Islam. Ali confessed
he no longer believed in the faith of his fathers, but he also insisted
he would not convert to Christianity.

The Alis moved to the United States in 1993, and through Sara’s
influence and that of other friends, Daniel was baptized Sept. 17,
1995, in Sara’s non-denominational Christian church.

Attracted by the coherency of the Scriptures, in contrast to the Quran,
Ali began his daily habit of spending up to eight hours studying
the Bible. But it was a televised Mass that brought the Alis to the
doorstep of Catholicism.

"Sara was watching EWTN, and I was watching, too, and we saw the
priest elevating the Host," said Ali, wiping away tears. "That
speaks volumes. Even if this Jesus is not there, just to put that
much reverence into elevating Him was enough."

A Catholic neighbor who attended the Alis’ non-denominational Bible
study also intrigued them, and put them in touch with the late Father
William Most.

For more than two years, Father Most, a retired priest from the
Diocese of Dubuque, Iowa, who taught at Christendom College’s Notre
Dame Graduate School in Alexandria, catechized Daniel and Sara. He
welcomed the pair into the Catholic Church at a private Mass at All
Saints Church in Manassas on July 13, 1998.

Making the jump from a faith that, in varying degrees, denies the
existence of free will in favor of blind obedience to a harsh God,
to one that believes in a loving Triune God who respects human choice,
wasn’t the hardest part of conversion, according to Ali.

"Living the doctrine is another thing," he said. "To pray for your
enemy, to turn the other cheek and to have humility were the hardest.

The hardest thing to let go of from Islam was pride."

Ali’s family, while tolerant of his choice because they knew he
"didn’t take sides easily," didn’t take his conversion very well. But
Ali said he still speaks to his parents every day, and three of his
siblings are now Christian.

He takes every opportunity to share his faith with Muslims, and
educate Christians about Islam, even if those attempts at dialogue
lead to rejection.

"When you call yourself Christian, you must evangelize," he said. "If
we do not personify the life of the Trinity in our life, we cease to
be Christians."

>From 2001-03, Ali organized and ran the Christian Islamic Forum in
an effort to promote dialogue between the two faiths. In 2003, he
co-authored Inside Islam: A Guide for Catholics, a primer on Islam in
question and answer format. And this past March, he published his first
solo book, Out of Islam, Free at Last, the story of his own conversion
and an argument for Christianity from an Islamic perspective.

Eventually, Ali would like to earn a doctorate in theology. In
the meantime, he continues to reach out to Muslims and encourage
Christians to do the same, noting that he was never openly evangelized
by a Christian during his own conversion.

"Everyone says Muslims are difficult to convert. … When was the
last time you tried? Don’t be afraid – go and make disciples of
all nations," he said. "Christ will not care about how many times
you fall."

Stephanie Tracy can be reached at [email protected]

They Don’t Leave Shamshyan Alone

THEY DON’T LEAVE SHAMSHYAN ALONE

A1+
[08:23 pm] 16 July, 2007

Gagik Shamshyan, a press photographer of "Araravot" (Morning) and
"Chorrord Ishkhanutyun" (Forth Power) newspapers has appeared in
recurrent legal proceedings. Today he was invited to the Shengavit
police station.

"The point is that a Yerevan citizen brought an action against me. I
am accused of photographing her dead son ten years ago," Shamshyan
told A1+.

"I shan’t bear testimony. In 1999 "Haylur" broadcast the October
27 carnage when Karen Hunanyan and his team broke into the National
Assembly, tortured deputies and killed the prime minister. Why don’t
they sue Haylur?"

Today the Court on Criminal and Marshal Issues heard Shamshian’s suit
against the First Instance Court of Erebuni-Nubarashen Communities.

"Though the court found me innocent of swindling and extortion, I am
still charged with misappropriation and embezzlement," Shamshyan said.

To note, Erebuni-Nubarashen Prosecutor’s Office wanted to sentence
Shamshyan to 4-year imprisonment but judge Alexander Azaryan sentenced
him to 2.5-year probation.

I consider the court decision "a chain". It implies that once I make
a mistake I shall stand trial.

Therefore I must dance to Aghvan Hovsepyan’s tune. I have no right
to leave Yerevan. They want to keep me under control.

Shamshyan had appealed the First Instance Court decision at the
Appellate Court. Today, Judge Karine Ghazaryan upheld Shamshyan’s
claim and reduced the probation period to one year.

Diamanda Galas With Sergei Tcherepnin

DIAMANDA GALaS WITH SERGEI TCHEREPNIN

Brooklyn Rail, NY
-galas-with-sergei-tcherepnin
July 16 2007

Vocalist Diamanda Galas, a pioneer of extended vocal technique,
continues to amaze and confound listeners not only because of the
terrifying power and range of her voice, but also because of the
gravity of the subjects that she chooses to address. Much of her work
revolves around empathy, particularly with minorities who have been
forcibly repressed by larger powers and who have consequently suffered
from extreme alienation and isolation. With the release of her 2004
album Defixiones: Will and Testament, Galas’s multi-part dramatization
of exile and genocide, and her more recent "tragic and homicidal love
songs and death songs"-her own versions of blues and jazz songs by such
artists as Johnny Cash, Ralph Stanley, and Screamin’ Jay Hawkins-Galas
demonstrates that her powers as a performer are only growing. In
preparation for her NYC performances on August 6, 12, and 19 at the
Highline Ballroom, Galas spoke with composer Sergei Tcherepnin about
her work. Rail: Much of your work seems to come out of a deep sense of
empathy for those minority groups who have suffered or are suffering
as a result of being severely mistreated. What is currently happening
to your concepts of injustice that alters your most recent work?

Galas: I think that the performance, for example, and the work that
took me eight years to do Defixiones-well, that altered my work to a
great degree. Because for one thing it took the time frame in which
I was able to create it, because there was so much research demanded
in the creation of that work-the work was in thirteen languages,
which meant that I had to work a lot on Turkish, I had to work a lot
on Armenian, and more than usual on Greek; I had to get someone to
record Syrian; I had to do a lot of research on the genocides of the
Assyrians, the Armenians, and the Greeks from the periods of 1914-1923,
and actually find that those were the years of the specific genocides
of all those groups that took place at the same times. I became part of
a lot of genocide groups, and that involved people who were targeted by
the Grey Wolves, which is a Turkish hate group that targets Armenians
and targets Turks who are writing against "Turkishness." My website
is considered to be a Turkish hate site, [but] it’s not a Turkish
hate site at all. I don’t hate the Turkish people. I dislike those
who are spreading disinformation, disinformational propaganda which
includes newspapers like the Hurriyet out of Turkey, and the Grey
Wolves and so forth…To say something incorrect about a large group
of people who are suffering as we speak, like the Assyrians in Iraq,
who are targeted by the Muslims, that is not what I have in mind
as good work. So it becomes that sort of thing. People always ask
questions of composers and artists, "Don’t you think that art and
politics are mutually exclusive?" And I would say yes, they are to
a certain point, yes they are. And no, they’re not. I think it just
takes a great deal of time, and you have to have the time to spend
to do both well independently and dependently as they work together.

Rail: What kind research do you do-for instance, for your piece
Defixiones, what did you research with your fellowship at Princeton?

Galas: That was for a month and really it was more or less in Greek
studies to work on-let’s say new Greek music, so it was a more
general kind of thing. What I ended up doing was using the time
to create the libretto-the creation of the libretto means that you
have to select the writers of these texts you are going to compose
the music for…It takes you very far and then it ends up going back
into the music again, but it takes a long time for that to happen. I
don’t like works, for example, done by people who call themselves
musicians-folk musicians-and they say "We’re going to do a piece about
the war in Iraq." Well you know what, buddy, leave it out. I don’t
want to hear about it. I wouldn’t want to hear about some guy who had
one of those journalistic scholarships paid by the government to go
to Iraq and be completely protected-embedded journalists. I wouldn’t
really want to read his writing, because it would mean nothing to me;
it’s just propaganda for the USA. It’s meaningless…The research ends
up affecting the composing only if you spend the time-a great deal of
time. There are, for example, singers who I’m not that interested in
who would do kind of improvised speech stuff, onomatopoeia-whatever
it is, I don’t know. That was investigated many years ago, and it
wasn’t really that interesting then. Even if I look at Artaud’s work,
for the most part-and he was a visionary in theater-but if I look at
some of his little writings-poetic writings-with invented languages,
it comes off as terribly silly. I think that language is very, very
important and as musicians we are very snobbish about our vocabulary
and lack of it or possession of it, and so [we] should be or are
good writers. And so if a person’s going to say, "I’m singing in an
invented language," I’m going to laugh, because I’m going to say, look,
if you’re singing in the first place you’re already singing in another
language than a writer, so that should be good. But don’t be telling me
that you’re inventing a language as you speak, unless perhaps you’re
coming from [the] Pentecostal church, you’re coming from somewhere
where you actually believe that, and you don’t have any choice but to
say that-or perhaps for some reason you feel at that moment that that
is happening. But don’t-it’s not something one actually talks about…

Rail: In the past you have used texts of many poets such as Henri
Michaud and Cesar Vallejo-

Galas: Oh yes, God, that writer is really…there we also have the
sense of time-it’s kind of amazing. That guy is one of the most
interesting poets I’ve ever read-and prose writers. He did so much
writing. Some of it’s just being discovered now. The expression "a
tormented individual" is a cliche as we know it, but in his case I
would think not. I think in a paradoxical sense he’s everything that
Artaud wanted to be. I hope that Artaud never knew that he existed
because it would have tortured him to see someone who was able to
write like that-and so rhythmically-and write about subjects that
Artaud addressed as well-but Artaud said the subjects were so close
to him that he couldn’t write about them. I can only imagine that
would have really tortured him, because Vallejo writes about really,
really horrible things.

Rail: You have said in the past that you were persuaded not to sing
as a girl, or that you were banned from singing in the house when
you were growing up-

Galas: Oh yes, "pootanis," only "pootanis" are singers-you know,
whores.

Rail: And one of your first serious attempts at singing was in an
isolation chamber? Can you tell me a little about your experience
doing that? Galas: In an anechoic chamber. I really was doing that,
and taking lots of acid. I wanted to do stuff where I would not have
anyone censoring me because, after all, coming from the background
I came from in which when you improvised you were told you have to
practice Bach or you’re wasting your time…All of these kinds of
things were very dictatorial-that kind of background. I wanted to
know that when I made vocal sound that there was no judge outside
making statements or having thoughts about what I was doing, so that
I could actually do anything I wanted to do. So I did that for a while.

An anechoic chamber is not a great place to do it in because you
can’t get any reverberant sound. You don’t even have a realistic
assessment of what it is. It must have been a real desire to feel safe
with the vocal sounds that I was making and with the expression that
lay underneath all those sounds I was making, which had to do with
fear and extreme pain-very extreme pain. And so I think that’s when
you really want to know no one is listening. I used to perform with
black-in blackness. I didn’t want anybody to see me-see my mouth,
I didn’t want them to see my body. I didn’t want any of that because
I was just interested in what the quality of the vocal sound was
after. It wasn’t an entertainment thing. I felt lucky enough to even
be allowed to perform what I was performing. And then eventually when
you get into quadraphonic sound systems and stuff like that and you
work with some kind of lighting people, and you say "Well, there’s
different levels of darkness, let’s try this level of darkness,"
and then suddenly you’re in light. (Laughs) Suddenly you’re using a
goddamn fucking strobe light and a smoke machine, then you’re playing
opposite the Sisters of Mercy-just kidding, that’s never happened.

Rail: Was there a moment of freedom when you started to sing for the
first time in the anechoic chamber?

Galas: I think I thought there would be but I don’t think that there
was because it was so dead. The problem with the anechoic chamber
is that it’s so dead that you actually do feel dead. It’s like, "Can
you hear me?" In fact, that’s the signal that you’re dead. It’s the
opposite of singing in church-it’s singing in hell. If Dante could
have thought of a sonic inferno or purgatorio that would be it, where
you’re screaming to a God invented by despair. Ain’t nobody there.

That’s it. It’s interesting in that regard. And it’s interesting in
that regard to think of recording something that is so dry it is clear
nobody can hear you. At the end of "Schrei"-I have this section when
I’m doing this laughter and I’m saying "kick my head" and laughing,
and it’s at that point-and that’s very dry, actually-that person
is saying, "Why don’t you just kill me, man, I don’t give a fuck
anyway." That was a torture piece…

Rail: You have also conducted work studying the effects of
antipsychotic drugs, including Thorazine and Mellaril-were those
musical experiments? Galas: No, they weren’t musical experiments at
all. I wish. I had to take them myself, so I know all about them. I
call them patient-management drugs because you literally can’t move
when you’re on them, you can’t do anything [because] you’re seeing
double. You’re a big danger to yourself-not to anybody else. You could
walk right into traffic and get hit by a car because you can’t see
what’s going on. I’m absolutely terrified of them and I know that
sometimes they’re really necessary. But there are people that have
been put on them when it wasn’t necessary, and they’ve been put on
them to shut them up, and to completely diminish their capacity to
do anything, and make them a member of the living dead. They give
you the feeling of a cow being led into the room of its own execution
without being able to fight it at all, so you feel dead already. And
actually you do feel pain because you don’t feel-a different kind
of pain. It’s just that no one can see it. You can’t even express
yourself. You can’t even say what you’re feeling. And it’s only that
sort of thing which makes me empathize with Artaud when he’s talking
about perhaps the inability to form language when he wanted to.

Rail: In many of your works you create dramatic scenarios based on
external texts. In performance, you express a given monodrama with what
you describe in your "Discussion Concerning the Composition of Wild
Women with Steak Knives" as a "pre-choreographed navigation through
specified mental and sentient states." Are these states themselves more
akin to states of emotion or to something like philosophical states?

Galas: Those were emotional states…The idea of that piece initially
was a murderess who had these flashbacks of driving from the scene of
the crime through red lights, and having had to kill this person for
having insulted her, and not being able to stop herself from killing
this person, and then having to live with the fact that she had done
it and being haunted by it forever. People erroneously described
Wild Women with Steak Knives as some sort of this or that or this or
that…and I said it’s not a treatise on anything, it’s just what it
is. However, it did, accurately, go through this series of emotional
states and I was showing the extreme beauty in the [piece]-I suppose
you could say extreme beauty, as well as other states; there’s
nothing about it that’s pleasant-it’s a very manic piece. There’s
still beauty in it, but it wasn’t pleasant for the person inhabiting
it. But you know, it’s funny, because years later after doing these
two microphone pieces you see the picture of the Cretan Women with
the snakes, and they’re holding these two snakes-it strikes me as
the same state that I’m in with Wild Women with Steak Knives, which
is the state of a maniac. The word happy doesn’t exist. The word sad
doesn’t exist. It’s a different state altogether. It’s interesting,
because my mother’s side of the family are called the "Maniates";
they are from near Sparta, and they are the fighters of Greece.

They’re always hired when there needs to be a killing or a war with
the Turks, or they need to protect certain cities in Greece. They were
called the "Maniates" because they were considered to be very immoral
people; all they wanted to do was just fight (laughs)…They were very
moral, but they were always seen as immoral by others because they
were always being hired out as bandits or pirates. They would kidnap
an Athenian and sell him to a Turk-they didn’t really care (laughs),
because they just lived in their little area in the mountains. So
they were criminals, in a sense, [in the eyes of] others. But they
had a very strict code of honor, and they had vendettas, and that’s
where Sicilian vendettas come from-"Mani."

Well, I always asked my mother, "mani, mani, maniac, mania, mania,
Maniates-I wonder (laughs)-are you sure the word mania does not
come from Maniates? Because you people are crazy." I always tell
her this, that women are very good with knives, and I’d say, "You
people are completely crazy, you know. You’re not allowed to cry,
you’re not allowed to do anything, except at funerals, and the rest
of the time it’s just blood lust." It’s a very strange mentality, and
there are very tough broads over there. You see the women in Mani, man,
they’re all dressed in black, they’re never smiling, they’re standing
like this-and they look like buzzards. They’re very, very tough. So
I think of that when I think of these particular of mental states.

Rail: Can you tell us about the way dreams inform your work?

DG Ahhh. That’s a very interesting question because of the next piece I
am doing on Anteros, written by Nerval. Actually, I started working on
the piece and then had a dream, a premonition, about someone I would
meet who I would have to kill-and I don’t mean literally kill, but I
mean execute in my mind. And today I did the final execution. I had
a dream. I tried to execute the person the first time and it didn’t
work. In the dream it’s a real execution. And today I executed him
again, and I think this time it actually worked (laughs). That’s very
interesting. It’s not an execution per se, but in the dream the way I
was able to execute the person the second time was because I became a
human shredding machine and I looked at the person and my whole body
turned into a shredding machine with little teeth, and I shredded
from the epidermal layer down to the organs. I kept shredding until
there was no bone material left, and then continued shredding. And
continue shredding as we speak.

It’s interesting because Anteros is really the brother of Eros,
and it’s a piece by Nerval, and the piece that I’m doing along with
it is a piece by Aime Cesaire, "Le Sang de Terre"-"The Blood of the
Earth"-and he’s talking about the beast of the "Sang de Terre." I’m
alternating the verse and the chorus; the verse is "Anteros" by Nerval,
and the chorus is Aime Cesaire. The dream that I wrote out that I had
more than a year ago will be delivered behind all of this through a
tunnel of changing rooms, because it was prescient, very prescient. I
don’t know why, and I don’t know how. I really don’t. So last night
I woke up and started working more on this piece. The dream was very
informative. I’ve looked at it several times-and I didn’t believe
in them before. I was very skeptical about it, because usually what
happens is you take a dream and you take it to a Freudian psychologist,
and they give you their interpretation, which is some horrendously
banal university-educated rendering of something that they should
admit that they can’t understand because they’re not you. All these
things-these concepts of psychoanalysis and so forth-were discussed
by the Greeks thousands of years before Freud, so don’t take a dream
and tell me that there’s only Freud and Jung that can tell me what
the dream means. That’s absurd. All cultures have contributed to
ideas, the history of ideas, the history of art and the history
of psychoanalysis and so forth, but Freud is not the only person
who should be given the power to decipher a dream One has to be
very careful with these things. And I think that its realization in
art-not as a prosaic rendering of the dream in front of two hundred
bored listeners, but as a part and parcel of the work-can be quite
interesting, quite interesting indeed-but not to be met without a
certain amount of suffering, I would think. Not in this dream’s case
(laughs). Not in this dream’s case.

http://www.brooklynrail.org/2007/7/music/diamanda