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  • For The Erased

    FOR THE ERASED
    by LD Beghtol

    Village Voice (New York, NY)
    September 6, 2005, Tuesday

    Ages ago at college in her native California, singer, composer, and
    cultural provocatrice Diamanda Galas abandoned the study of science
    to pursue her true passion: experimental music. But biochemistry's
    loss is our gain; over the last two decades, her controversial works
    have earned her a place high in the avant-garde music pantheon.

    Fearlessly outspoken, frighteningly knowledgeable, and dangerously
    openhearted, Galas dedicates her latest work, Defixiones: Orders
    >From the Dead to the estimated 3 million to 4 million victims of the
    Armenian, Assyrian, and Anatolian Greek "ethnic cleansing" committed
    by the Ottoman Turks between 1914 and 1923.

    Since 1999, Defixiones has been performed to near unanimous acclaim at
    prestigious venues the world over, from London's Royal Festival Hall
    to the Sydney Opera House, from the Athens National Opera to Mexico
    City's Universidad del Claustro de Sor Juana. Its New York premiere
    (presented by the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council's "What Comes
    After: Cities, Art + Recovery" international summit) is scheduled
    for September 8 and 10 at Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts,
    Pace University--appropriately enough, just across from City Hall,
    mere blocks from ground zero.

    The word defixiones refers to warnings engraved in lead placed onto
    graves in Greece and Asia Minor, threatening desecraters with grievous
    harm. Galas uses this term in a broader memorializing sense, urging
    us to remember the forgotten dead, the "erased," the massacred. Her
    epic performance for solo voice, piano, and electronics speaks for
    the poet-author in exile--both far from home and in his homeland--as
    well as for "born outlaws," as Galas calls homosexuals, echoing Genet.

    Informed by excerpts from the Armenian Orthodox liturgy and the
    traditional amanethes, or improvisatory lamentations sung at Greek
    funerals, Galas 70-minute masterwork showcases both her astounding
    vocal technique and her enormous capacity for rage, compassion,
    defiance, and ferocious emotionalism. Though at times truly fearsome
    in its raw, insistent pathos--familiar to those who know her crushing
    Plague Mass (1990) or Schrei X (1996)--Defixiones' real power lies
    in those seductively lyrical, quiet passages that occur just before
    Galas wail of existential anguish erupts in reverberant majesty.

    Iraqi artist-scholar Selim Abdullah notes, "The sentiment, strength .

    . and sensitivity contained in this Saturnian representation go.

    back to the very aspects the Greeks gave to a whole Occidental
    culture." Awash in blood and tears, and haunted by images of
    unspeakable (and until now, largely unspoken) butchery, Galas funeral
    mass is cathartic, but neither glib nor sentimental. Any redemption
    is hard-won.

    I spoke with Miss Galas who has lived in the East Village for
    the past 10 years, on two occasions in mid August. Over multiple
    cappuccinos--caffeine being her current drug of choice--she dazzled
    me with her famous intelligence and often barbed wit. Onstage she's
    a mythic figure come to life; in person she is perhaps even more
    mesmerizing.

    Few people in America, other than those of Greek, Armenian, or Assyrian
    descent, seem to have heard of this horror. Why is it so unknown?

    This country discusses one or two genocides and markets them in very
    contrived ways. They don't write about them truthfully, the way
    [author and concentration camp survivor] Primo Levi did. Think of
    Spielberg and the legions of mediocrity he has propagated.

    And there's the conflicting numbers, and . . .

    What does it matter if it was 6 million or 2 million or 200? Genocide
    is genocide. Every culture has its particular way of killing and
    torturing its enemies. And the Turks are still trying to cover
    it up by calling it deportation, but that's just another word for
    "death sentence."

    You're perceived as the voice of the fallen and forgotten. Is that
    something you've chosen?

    No--I hated being the poster girl for the AIDS epidemic. It had to
    be done, but I hated it. I never meant to be political-- I'm an artist.

    An artist can only speak for herself. But if you get particularly good
    at something it has a sort of universality, and then it has a certain
    audience, and you're answerable for that. Like Adon [Syrian-born poet
    Adon Ali Ahmed Said]--a great, great poet--who is seen as the voice
    of a "leftist movement" of some sort, but he's only writing about
    what is truth to him.

    How did you come to create Defixiones?

    My father is an Anatolian Greek. All my life he's talked about how the
    finest Greek culture was from Anatolia--home to Assyrians, Armenians,
    Greeks, and Jews, who for centuries traded languages, songs, ideas,
    histories--and how many of these cultures are indistinguishable from
    one another. So the notion of racial purity there is just absurd. He
    also told me about the atrocities committed by the Turks against
    Greeks from Asia Minor. But the direct catalyst was an interview I
    saw with Dr. [Jack] Kevorkian, who said, "I'm Armenian, I know what
    torture is all about. I know the difference between homicide and
    helping people end a life of misery." He was so articulate, and he
    was discussing Greek Stoic philosophy and the Armenians in the same
    breath, which I found very unusual at the time.

    So in 1998 I said to myself: It's time to do this work.

    Later I read Peter Balakian's book Black Dog of Fate, which talks
    about what being an Armenian in America means--it means you're
    invisible. It's the same with the Greeks. Most people think of Greek
    culture as a dead culture: Socrates and Aristotle and the statues . .

    And they think Assyrians are the same as Syrians..

    Then, as a fellow at Princeton in 1999, I studied texts by Giorgos
    Seferis and others in preparation for a performance at the Vooruit
    Festival at the Castle of Ghent [in Belgium].

    Defixiones was more a song cycle then, with [the underground Greek
    protest music known as] rembetika and works by Paul Celan, Henri
    Michaux, and Cesar Vallejo. I concentrated on exiled poets like
    the Anatolian Greek refugees of the 1920s--my father's people. The
    premiere was on September 11, 1999, which marked the anniversary
    of the reign of terror under Charles V, who persecuted homosexuals,
    women thought to be witches, and other heretics.

    Defixiones is somewhat a work in progress?

    Yes. Currently I'm using texts by Giorgos Seferis, [who] is like my
    bible--and Nikos Kazantzakis, who people will know from his novel The
    Last Temptation of Christ. And Pier Paolo Pasolini, whose poem is
    addressed to the people who survived. Everyone just hated him. And
    Yannis Ritsos. And "The Dance" by Siamanto, with its description of
    brides being burned alive. And the pro-genocide poem "Hate," which
    was published by [the Turkish newspaper] Huerriyet and broadcast by
    the BBC in 1974, right before the invasion of Cyprus--about why the
    Turks should decapitate the Greeks.

    September is such a politically charged month . . .

    Yes, starting with the destruction of Smyrna in September 1922. And
    Black September 1955, when Turkish officials waged a disinformation
    campaign stating that Greeks had bombed the consulate in Thessalon
    resulted in the desecration of Greek churches and the mutilation and
    murder of priests and other men. And the Black September of Ariel
    Sharon's going into Lebanon in '82. He was doing a real con job. And
    then the situation in America in 2001 . . .

    Your aggressive style and disturbing subject matter automatically
    put you outside the mainstream. Yet your music has a surprisingly
    broad appeal.

    Well, I've been creating sacred masses, which are not exactly a popular
    art form in this country today. But they're meant to be, literally,
    for the people. The American idea of a populist art form is rap. Some
    of it is good, but most is appalling in that it promotes stupidity and
    the abuse of the same groups that monotheist totalitarian governments
    persecute: women, homosexuals, and anyone who doesn't speak precisely
    your language.

    You must get tons of hate mail.

    Fundamentalists of all sorts despise me. I'm attacked by my own people
    too--American Greek men who are homophobic and think everything I
    say is heresy. I got shit recently from a Jewish promoter about doing
    Defixiones in Mexico. She asked me if I really believed people would
    be interested. And I thought: "Please don't insult my intelligence--or
    theirs. They'll understand the concept of genocide as it has occurred
    and continues to occur to so many people around the world . . . "

    I want to perform Defixiones in Istanbul and Smyrna. The psychic
    manifestations of violence can be just as devastating as the
    physical acts--especially when people refuse to recognize them. It's
    depersonalizing. I have a line in INSEKTA: "Believe me, believe me."

    Not being believed can kill.

    Who are your fans?

    People who find it necessary to think for themselves in order to
    survive, because they're damned by the fact they don't agree with the
    mediocrity that society shoves down their throats. They rise above
    this by continuing to educate themselves. This is especially true
    of homosexuals, who are born outside the law anyway. They're still
    figuratively and literally buried alive by the Egyptians and Turks.

    Here in New York they're visited upon by the Aesthetic Realism
    Foundation and treated with electroshock. In Iran, they hang teenage
    "infidels." It's unbelievable that ethnic groups still shut out those
    who can be so disciplined and organized, and who can do great things.

    [Gay men] either disappear completely or they address the situation.

    They've had to--to save their own lives. They are great fighters. I
    say these are the first soldiers you should enlist, not the last.

    This is the man to whom you should say, "Will you be my brother? Will
    you help me?"

    Will the Turkish government ever admit these atrocities?

    I think it will be forced to, through the ongoing work of their own
    scholars, both old and young, and by artists and writers who want to
    be part of the rest of the world, despite the horrific censorship that
    the Turkish government exercises over them. My website is listed as a
    hate site, which is completely ridiculous. I do not hate the Turkish
    scholars who are trying to address true events in the world.

    There are many Turks who want to see things change, but they're not
    given the opportunity to express themselves. When they do, they get
    sent to prison or mental asylums. Midnight Express is absolutely
    the truth.

    But until the government officially apologizes, there is no reason
    for it to be accepted by the European Union. You must admit what
    you've done--it shows that your present actions will be mandated by
    the apology for your past actions. But until this happens there can
    be no trust at all.

    For more information about the Greek, Armenian, and Assyrian genocides,
    Black September, and Galas's work, see: diamandagalas.com "Voices
    of Truth" series: hellenic-genocide.com/voices-of-truth"Before the
    Silence" archival news reports series, run by Sofia Kontogeorge Kostos:
    www.umd.umich.edu/dept/armenian/bts
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