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T.O. filmmaker documents Silent Genocide

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  • T.O. filmmaker documents Silent Genocide

    T.O. filmmaker documents Silent Genocide
    By Rebecca Whitnall, [email protected]

    Ventura County Star, CA
    Sept 10 2004

    Dr. Michael Hagopian speaks for those who no longer can. He's a
    storyteller by trade and his medium is film.

    Much of his 90 years has been spent documenting a genocide that to
    this day goes unheard of by even the well-educated and unrecognized
    by many governments, including our own and countries involved in the
    atrocities, he says.

    In April 1915, the annihilation of almost 1.5 million Armenians
    began. It is referred to as the Silent, or Secret Genocide.

    Despite the great number of Armenians who lost their lives, Hagopian
    isn't shocked more people don't know about it.

    "I'm not surprised because there's not been as much publicity,"
    Hagopian said. "There is a lesser presence in the world of Armenians
    than Jews. Also, there weren't photographers and film because it was
    much longer ago (than the Holocaust)."

    The Turkish Ottoman empire claims the deaths were the result of civil
    war. Hagopian's films document that there was nothing civil at all
    about these deaths.

    Half-century of work

    Most witnesses are now dead; the youngest remaining survivors would
    be 86 now. Hagopian, however, has been filming interviews for more
    than 50 years and has created what is reportedly the most complete
    collection of testimonies about the Armenian genocide in the world.

    His requirement in interviewing witnesses is that they were at least
    10 when they witnessed the deaths, providing a more accurate account
    than younger children could.

    The Armenian Film Foundation, of which Hagopian is a founder and
    chairman, is completing work on its third film in a trilogy, "The
    Witnesses," which documents the genocide.

    "Caravan Along the Euphrates," the series' third film, incorporates
    survivor accounts selected from the collection of more than 400
    interviews filmed by Hagopian on four continents. The film's target
    release date is next year, coinciding with the 90th commemorative
    year of the genocide and 35th anniversary of the film foundation.

    The first film in the series, "Voices from the Lake," was the
    first feature-length documentary on the genocide and focuses on the
    day-to-day tragedies that occurred in the city of Kharpert, Hagopian's
    hometown, where much of the annihilation took place.

    "It was the city of no return for Armenians," he said. They were
    taken there but never able to leave.

    The second film in the series, "Germany and the Secret Genocide,"
    is set against the backdrop of World War I. It weaves interviews and
    letters written by genocide survivors, with witnesses and experts in
    the field to examine Germany's involvement in the mass killings of
    Armenians at the hands of the Turkish soldiers.

    The organization's films have won numerous awards, including the
    prestigious Golden Camera Award in the history category from the U.S.
    International Film and Video Festival, the largest festival of its
    kind. It specializes in documentary, informational and industrial
    films.

    Hagopian also owns Atlantis Productions. He works from his home in
    Thousand Oaks, where he lives with wife, Antoinette, and one of his
    four children.

    He has a doctorate in international relations from Harvard University,
    is a graduate of University of California, Berkeley, and has done
    more than two years of graduate work in cinema at the University of
    Southern California.

    Also, he has taught at a number of colleges and universities, including
    the University of California, Los Angeles, where he was first inspired
    to create documentaries.

    Young filmmaker

    Hagopian was unimpressed with the quality of a film presented by a
    colleague as a possible teaching aid.

    "It was very simplistic. I thought I could do better," he said,
    even though photography was only a mild hobby.

    With that purpose in mind, he began looking for employment at
    international universities and finally accepted a position at the
    American University of Beirut in Lebanon, for the grand annual salary
    of $2,000.

    For a year he shot foot after foot of film and sent it back to an
    adviser in the United States for critique.

    He had no way of viewing the footage himself and his improvement
    relied entirely on advice received.

    The project begins

    The following year, he shot 30,000 feet of film on the Nile, from
    which he culled two movies. They won first prize at the Cleveland
    Film Festival.

    Encouraged, he went on to study filmmaking at USC.

    "It wasn't til 1965 that a community leader approached me and said
    he wanted to mark the 50th anniversary of the genocide," said Hagopian.

    He agreed to work with the group and in a matter of weeks produced
    a show for KCOP TV in Los Angeles titled "Where are My People."

    He said it was the first documentary on the secret genocide.

    "It was a lamentation in a way, asking where these people are,"
    he said.

    His next film on the subject was the Emmy-nominated "Forgotten
    Genocide."

    "Up til that time, I was doing them as individual films under the
    Atlantis Production label," he said.

    The Armenian Film Foundation was established in 1969.

    Though he tests the films by screening preliminary shows with members
    of the foundation, he mostly works on them alone.

    When working with a number of interviews and others' stories,
    "You let the film direct you," he explained. "Once it directs you,
    you do a lot of testing."

    But the creation, he said, "is kind of a one-man enterprise."

    "Documentary filmmaking is somewhat like being an artist. You can't
    make a statement by committee," he said. "Do you think Michael Moore
    works by committee?"

    Hagopian said art films differ from documentaries in the way audiences
    react to them.

    "In art films, you're expressing yourself, but I need to take the
    audience into consideration," he said. "If they don't understand what
    I'm saying, there's no point."

    'Asian Earth'

    Hagopian's next endeavor will be to revisit "Asian Earth," a film
    he made about life in India. "I think it's my best work. It's got
    everything in it: life, marriage, death."

    The idea with this project would be having someone revisit the areas
    covered in the film 100 years after the original footage was shot to
    compare the way of life of people in both periods.

    He also will be archiving the thousands of feet of film he's taken
    over the years for "The Witnesses."

    The foundation is looking at proposals by different agencies to take
    on the job.

    "I'm trying to tell the survivors' stories," he said.

    "With such great violations of human rights there are lessons to
    be learned.

    "It's a story that needs to be told."
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