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Armenia, Revisited; Amid Protests, PBS Slates Film and Panel Show

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  • Armenia, Revisited; Amid Protests, PBS Slates Film and Panel Show

    Armenia, Revisited

    Amid Protests, PBS Slates Film and Panel Show

    The Wall Street Journal
    April 14, 2006
    Page W2

    The mass killing of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during World War I
    still elicits both rage and denials -- as the controversy over two new
    PBS programs shows.

    On Monday, the public broadcasting network will air "The Armenian
    Genocide," a one-hour documentary that details both the horrors of that
    ethnic-cleansing campaign and the Turkish government's efforts to deny
    that what occurred qualifies as genocide. Narrated in somber tones by
    celebrities such as Juliana Margulies, Ed Harris and Natalie Portman,
    the film presents evidence that the slaughters were planned centrally,
    including letters from U.S. government officials and others who
    witnessed parts of the campaign. They describe forced deportations,
    during which many Armenians were killed or died, and government death
    squads that mopped up stragglers.

    The film includes some of the first statements from Turkey-based
    academics agreeing that the genocide occurred, as well as oral histories
    from Turkish people who recall their own families' involvement. "There
    is something my grandfather did personally," one man, filmed on a
    Turkish street, says. "They caught Armenians and put them in a barn and
    burned them. My grandfather says their voices didn't leave his ears for
    years." (According to many scholars, more than one million Armenians
    died in that period, though Ankara says the toll was much lower.)

    In Turkey, one of the professors involved in the film says he faced
    death threats when he spoke out in a Turkish newspaper about the
    genocide. In the U.S., the topic rouses passions as well. Filmmaker
    Andrew Goldberg, fearing a partisan protest, says he has hired off-duty
    police officers for added security for Monday's premiere of the
    documentary in a Los Angeles movie theater. Meanwhile, a separate
    discussion panel that PBS commissioned to run after the documentary is
    causing an outcry among pro-Armenian groups because it includes two
    academics who reject the label "genocide." PBS says it has received more
    than 8,600 letters and phone calls opposing the broadcast.

    While the documentary itself will be accessible to about 93% of U.S.
    television households, most major PBS affiliates in the top 20 TV
    markets aren't airing the panel show. That program will nevertheless
    reach about 58% of U.S. households through smaller PBS affiliates. A
    spokeswoman for WGBH in Boston, which is among the channels not airing
    the panel, says the station felt the documentary "stood on its own."

    ("The Armenian Genocide" airs in most markets on Monday, 10 p.m. EDT;
    check local listings)


    [PHOTO CAPTION] Century-old wound: Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in a
    scene from the PBS documentary "The Armenian Genocide."
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