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NYC play "Killing the boss" takes Armenian community by storm

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  • NYC play "Killing the boss" takes Armenian community by storm

    AZG Armenian Daily #045, 08/03/2008

    NEW YORK CITY PLAY "KILLING THE BOSS" TAKES ARMENIAN
    COMMUNITY ACTIVIST BY STORM

    March 4, 2008

    New York, NY- The Armenian National Committee of New
    York took the Armenian Cause to Off-Broadway last week
    at Cherry Lane Studio Theatre in Greenwhich Village. A
    largely Armenian audience packed the house to see
    Catherine Filloux's Killing the Boss on February 23rd,
    which was immediately followed by a short panel
    discussion, "Through the Politics of Power:
    Considering the Legacy of the Armenian Genocide."

    The panelists were ANC Eastern Regional Executive
    Director Karine Birazian and anthropology scholar
    Sossi Essajanian. Filloux's drama provided rich
    material for the panelists and audience to ponder. Two
    years ago, the ANC of New York sponsored a similar
    panel following Filloux's Lemkin's House, which
    presented Raphael Lemkin beyond his death considering
    the United Nations Genocide Convention in light of the
    genocides that have been committed with impunity
    since.

    While genocide was not as central a theme in Killing
    the Boss, the issue still loomed large as the main
    character in righteous indignation attempted to
    assassinate the prime minister of a country, where he
    had previously been an architect of genocide. Cambodia
    quickly came to mind, but the location was never
    identified, leaving the viewer to imagine that the
    scenario of mass killing could have taken place in
    many nations, as indeed it has.

    In reflecting on the performance, Essajanian discussed
    how the politics of the intimate became the
    transformative mechanism for overcoming the seemingly
    unstoppable evil of the regime portrayed in the play.
    "It was the concern and love of the main character's
    husband and parents, who needed to find out what
    happened and not allow the distorted narrative of
    those in power to control the truth as well."

    Birazian connected the play to the Armenian case of
    genocide. "The government of Turkey continues to
    engage in the last stage of genocide through its
    denial of what happened. Righteous communities must
    remain active and continue to resist the perpetrator's
    campaign, whether it be in Darfur or in Cambodia or in
    Van, of falsely appropriating the history of the
    people they have tried to annihilate."

    Doug Geogerian of the ANC of New York thanked the
    playwright for her compelling work and for the
    opportunity to hold the subsequent panel discussion.
    "Dramatic art is a powerful way for the public to
    learn about the issue of genocide, which the media
    often presents as a Gordian Knot of geopolitics. Here
    we see in a visceral way how individual lives are
    impacted. It allows us to reflect and hopefully, to
    take future action."

    The ANC of NY will also be hosting a panel discussion
    on April 11th at 6:30 pm with the Middle East & Middle
    Eastern American Center. The panel discussion entitled
    Trauma and Memoir will feature authors Anotnia Arslan,
    Margaret Ahnert, and playwright Catherine Filloux. The
    event will be held at the CUNY Grad Center, 365 Fifth
    Ave., NY, NY in rooms 9204/5. For more information
    email [email protected].

    Karine Birazian Armenian National Committee of America
    Eastern Region Executive Director
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