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Ethnic Cleansing Of Art By Turks, A Speech Written By Diamanda Galas

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  • Ethnic Cleansing Of Art By Turks, A Speech Written By Diamanda Galas

    ETHNIC CLEANSING OF ART BY TURKS, A SPEECH WRITTEN BY DIAMANDA GALAS

    DiamandaGalas.com
    Assyria Times
    http://www.assyriatimes.com/engine/modules/n ews/article.php?storyid=3307
    March 4 2008
    CA

    On January 19, 2008, writer/genocide scholar Desmond Fernandes
    presented a text written by Diamanda at a memorial event for Hrant
    Dink, the Editor-in-Chief of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper,
    Agos, who was assassinated in Istanbul one year ago by a Turkish
    nationalist. The tribute was held outside the Houses of Parliament
    in London. Diamanda's speech was subsequently read during a brief
    presentation Desmond Fernandes made for a Hrant Dink Memorial lecture
    at London's House of Commons on January 21, 2008.

    Diamanda's Speech:

    The longer it takes to address the mandate of applying Turkishness to
    all things good--and good to all things Turkish, the longer it will
    take to redress the financially-supported cultural disinformation
    spread by those institutions and persons in Turkey who, using as a
    criminal mandate the necessity to translate all aural arts (songs,
    poetry, theatre, and other human ritual practices) into Turkish before
    they are allowed to be performed by the general public, effectively
    cleanse it of its owners' names and claim it as Turkish invention,
    innovation.

    Once the art is performed in Turkish it may then be claimed as Turkish,
    and thusly as a Turkish art form. With the censored owners under
    control or in prison for performing the work illegally (in their
    own languages), it can then be safely deposited under "anonymous"
    or a Turkish name into a vault that has been protected and in fact
    proclaimed as an ethnically inviolate treasure, with the help of
    Turkey's good friends, America and Israel.

    It is no mystery that the Greeks, the Armenians, the Assyrians, and
    the Kurds were for centuries expected to provide their own boys and
    young men to the Turkish military (in order to ensure protection of
    their families and land from the the Ottoman Republic, for example),
    but this enlistment also included composers of music, performers,
    singers, poets, and so on, who were NOT allowed to perform in any
    tongue but Turkish. Later, when their arms were taken away and they
    were slaughtered, the works they left behind were claimed as Turkish,
    as are Hagia Sofia, Assyrian and Greek sculpture, and Armenian poetry.

    In the obvious case of the great blind oudist Udi Hrant, he cannot
    be heard on record singing in Armenian, although he was an Armenian,
    and one of the most famous Armenians who lived in Turkey. He can only
    be heard singing in Turkish.

    The melodies of the amanes, amanethes, shared throughout Greece and
    Anatolia are now still claimed to be shared by all the cultures
    who have lived in Anatolia, since the agora of Smyrna/Izmir was
    the meeting place for Greeks, Armenians, Kurds, Jews, Arabs, and
    Assyrians. They all shared verses and sang this music to "a god
    invited by despair." The word "amanes" refers to "mana," or mother,
    in Greek. In other words, it is the last cry of the soldier on the
    battlefield, and it is the universal cry of the lonely.

    Fortunately the word "aman" is permissable in Turkey, but how soon
    will it be written in Turkish books of musical education that this
    great vocal tradition is initially a Turkish one? What then will the
    Greeks who hear our finest amanes singer Dalgas think in 100 years?

    In even 50?

    As the daughter of a Maniate Spartan and an Anatolian hailing from
    Smryna/Izmir, the Black Sea, and Alexandria, I find the ethnic
    cleansing of art to be preposterous, but also to be dangerous. If
    an Armenian is told to reject what may be his by birthright because
    he is later educated by disinformation passed down through Turkish
    ethnic music institutes that the music he loves is not Armenian
    but in fact Turkish, what does he have left? How many dromoi/makams
    (scales) does he have left to sing? This is true for all the cultures
    I mention above.

    Robbery is not just the robbery of money or human flesh; in involves
    the soul murder of cultures which will soon die if it they have no
    more songs to sing. Especially in the desert. And survival in the
    desert has been proven to be perilous.
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