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Screening of Armenian Genocide Films by J. Michael Hagopian at Kenda

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  • Screening of Armenian Genocide Films by J. Michael Hagopian at Kenda

    PRESS RELEASE

    The Greater Boston Committee to Commemorate the Armenian Genocide
    P.O. Box 35538
    Boston, MA 02135
    phone: (617) 489-1610
    email: [email protected]
    web: http://weremember1915.org
    Contact: Ara Nazarian

    Screening of Armenian Genocide Films by J. Michael Hagopian at Kendall
    Square Cinema

    Boston, MA -- April 27, 2005 -- Two movies by director J. Michael
    Hagopian probe two aspects of the Armenian Genocide, referred to as the
    forgotten or the secret genocide. In Germany and the Secret Genocide,
    Hagopian presents the involvement of the German government in the
    planning and execution of the Genocide relying mainly on recently
    declassified archives of the German government, while in the /Voices
    >From the Lakes/, he focuses on the day to day tragedies befallen upon
    the Armenians of Kharpert-Mezreh, he provides a case study of the
    Genocide's impact on one community, Hagopian's birthplace Kharpert-Mezreh.

    These movies will be screened at the Kendall Square Cinema in
    Cambridge from April 29 to May 5, 2005 through the initiatives of
    the Greater Boston Committee to Commemorate the Armenian Genocide. The
    show times for these movies are as follows: Germany and the Secret
    Genocide (86 min): Mon-Thurs at 2:20 PM, Fri-Sun at 12:20 PM. Voices
    >From the Lake (57 min): Mon-Thurs at 1:00 PM, Fri-Sun at 11:00 AM.
    There's a nominal fee.

    Germany and the Secret Genocide, released in 2003, takes place against
    the backdrop of World War I when German diplomats and soldiers help to
    cover up and deny the massacre of Armenians in exchange for Turkey's
    support in the war. It follows the final footsteps of Armenians who were
    led to their deaths in Turkey during the Armenian Genocide beginning in
    April 1915. Director J. Michael Hagopian weaves together filmed
    interviews and letters written by American and European survivors of the
    Genocide, plus witnesses and experts in the field, to examine Germany's
    involvement in the mass killings of Armenians at the hands of Turkish
    soldiers. He examines how German bureaucrats, diplomats and soldiers are
    complicit in the Genocide. Hagopian presents evidence throughout the
    film that the Genocide was a well thought-out attempt to exterminate an
    entire culture, complete with train schedules for the transportation of
    Armenians out of an area Turkey wanted to control during a time when its
    once powerful Ottoman Empire was on the decline.

    Twenty-five years in research and production, Voices from the Lake,
    the first feature-length documentary film on the Armenian genocide
    focuses on the day-to-day tragedy unfolding in Kharpert-Mezreh, one
    among 4000 towns and villages of the former Ottoman Empire in 1915,
    where monumental forces were unleashed by a policy of annihilation. The
    global humanitarian dimensions of the cataclysmic event are recorded by
    eyewitness accounts of American and European officials, missionaries,
    and educators, and by Armenian survivors. These are revealed for the
    first time through censored reports, classified documents and hidden
    diaries. Amazingly, scratched-out journals have been decoded with the
    help of modern digital technology.

    As a political science and economics professor at the University of
    California at Los Angeles (UCLA), J. Michael Hagopian was unsatisfied
    with the quality of educational films that were available for him to use
    in his classroom. Before long, he left his teaching post and picked up a
    camera to produce and direct quality educational tools on topics ranging
    >From Black history to Nigerian culture. Born in Kharpert-Mezreh,
    Armenia, Hagopian's search for his roots and the history of his people
    have won him critical acclaim, including two Emmys for the writing and
    production of The Forgotten Genocide, the first full-length feature
    film on the Armenian Genocide of 1915. Since then, filmmakers from
    around the world have turned to the Armenian Film Foundation seeking the
    rare archival film footage and survivor interviews Hagopian assembled
    for this film. In all, Hagopian's work encompasses nearly 400 survivor
    interviews and 20 years of research.

    In 1979, Hagopian founded the Armenian Film Foundation, a California
    educational non-profit organization, to document the Armenian culture
    and instill pride in Armenian youth worldwide. Since then, he has been
    leading the effort to raise funds and create THE WITNESSES trilogy on
    the Armenian Genocide. For additional info on the Armenian Film
    Foundation, please visit their website at www.armenianfilmfoundation.org.

    Germany and the Secret Genocide was first screened in Boston by the
    National Association for Armenian Studies and Research and was featured
    in Boston Film Festival in 2004.

    The Greater Boston Committee to Commemorate the Armenian Genocide is an
    umbrella organization representing the great majority of the Armenian
    religious, educational, cultural and athletic organizations in the
    Greater Boston area. For more information about the activities of the
    committee or ways to contribute, please visit our website at:
    http://www.weremember1915.org.
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