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  • Film explores Armenian Genocide

    Arlington Advocate, MA
    April 14 2005


    Film explores Armenian Genocide
    Thursday, April 14, 2005

    In honor of the 90th Armenian Genocide Commemoration this month,
    videographer Roger Hagopian will show his film "Memories of Marash:
    The Legacy of a Lost Armenian Community" on Thursday, April 21, 7
    p.m. in the Community Room at the Robbins Library in Arlington.

    This 70-minute video traces the ancient history of Marash,
    located in present day Turkey, from ancient times through the series
    of massacres committed by the Ottoman Turkish government from the
    late 1800s to 1923 and the final expulsion of the Armenian community.
    Marash was a cultural, religious and educational center with
    Armenians maintaining most of the economy. The unique and colorful
    style of Marash embroidery is a lost art as demonstrated in this
    video.

    While the Turks, in conspiracy with the Germans, were the
    obvious perpetrators, the documentary examines the actions of the
    British and French in denying the Armenians a last chance to reclaim
    their homeland. Broken treaties and revised agreements were the order
    of the day, with Turkey the prime beneficiary.

    However, the infusion of Turkish culture with Armenian,
    especially the language, music and foods is irrefutable and, as the
    video shows, a few Armenians avoided the deportations and were saved
    by "good Turks."

    The film consists of interviews with Genocide survivors as well
    as their children and experts on Marash, which was situated in
    Cilicia, the south coastal region of Asia Minor. Also included are
    family and historical photographs, silent movies from post-World War
    I, present day video scenes of the homeland and authentic music
    provided by Professor Leon Janikian of Northeastern University.

    The idea for the video originated with Hagopian's desire to tell
    a family story within the context of historical events. In the
    research process, the theme of the story shifted from the plight of
    his grandmother to the tale of the city itself.

    "Along the way, I discovered a lost, yet vibrant way of life
    that had existed prior to 1915. Whenever I make these video
    presentations, I always feel like I'm bringing the story home. It's a
    story that needs to be told in order to keep history alive - and not
    see it forgotten. If my emotions show, that goes along with the
    experience. For me, it's a way of presenting genealogy in a way
    that's informative, educational, and enlightening. A lot of hours and
    many books went into this project. It's a legacy I wanted to
    preserve," he said.

    While the story focuses on one ethnic group, the Armenians of the
    Ottoman Turkish Empire in the late 19th and early 20th century, the
    theme is universal. The ethnic cleansing that occurred there was the
    first genocide of modern times. Although it was well documented at
    the time by soldiers, relief workers, missionaries and reporters,
    this holocaust has been not been properly recognized by the United
    States for fear of offending Turkey, its NATO ally.

    Armenians have been put in the position of having to write
    books, create films and develop high school and university Armenian
    Genocide study curriculums for the purpose of imploring to the world
    that an entire nation of 2.5 million was, in fact, removed from its
    homeland of 3,400 years through genocide, massacres and deportations,
    resulting in the death of 1.5 million people in 1915.



    In 1939, prior to the invasion of Poland, World War II and the
    subsequent Jewish Holocaust, Adolf Hitler met with his leading
    officers and exclaimed, "Who speaks today of the extermination of the
    Armenians?"

    Hagopian is a film maker from Lexington. A previous work on this
    topic was "Journey of an Armenian Family: The Struggle of a Nation,"
    the story of his father, Hurire, a Genocide survivor. He is on the
    board of directors of the Middlesex Canal Association and has
    produced a documentary on the earliest major canal in America.

    This film is co-sponsored by the Armenian Cultural Foundation, a
    private library and museum dedicated to the preservation and
    enhancement of Armenian history, culture and letters. Located at 441
    Mystic St., this institution was incorporated in 1945 by Vahan
    Topalian (1886-1983), a well-known Armenian book collector and by a
    number of his friends and benefactors. Its current president is
    Robert Mirak and the curator is Ara Ghazarian.

    A question-and-answer period with the producer will conclude the
    evening.
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