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Filmmaker Examines Genocide

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  • Filmmaker Examines Genocide

    FILMMAKER EXAMINES GENOCIDE
    by Sarah Probst

    UW Badger Herald
    http://badgerherald.com/artsetc/2008/11/12/ filmmaker_examines_g.php
    Nov 12 2008
    WI

    Over 90 years after its onset, the murder of over 1 million Armenians
    by the Turks in the Armenian genocide in 1915 is still a contentious
    issue -- and it most certainly hasn't been forgotten. Documentary
    filmmaker Dr. Carla Garapedian made this clear Tuesday night during
    a lecture where she addressed this issue head-on.

    The event, sponsored by the University of Wisconsin Genocide Awareness
    Week and the Armenian Students' Association, featured a screening of
    her documentary "Screamers," a bold glimpse at the gruesome nature
    of genocide seen through the lens of the band System of a Down and
    set to the soundtrack of their music.

    "If you came to see the political issues, I've got to warn you about
    the music," Garapedian warned. "If you came to hear the music, I've
    got to warn you about the genocide images."

    "Screamers," which has won three awards and been translated into
    12 languages, shows members of System of a Down -- all four men are
    Armenian -- as a politically charged unit set to educate lawmakers
    and fans alike about the Armenian genocide. At one point in the
    documentary, frontman Serj Tankian demands the Turkish government pay
    for what it's done, and the band launches into the song "P.L.U.C.K.,"
    or politically lying, unholy, cowardly killers.

    Although the documentary begins a political travel diary of the band's
    European tour, the film, released in 2006, eventually evolves into
    a broader look at genocide, the tragedies that follow the already
    horrific events and why the public has long had little knowledge
    about the Armenian genocide in particular.

    "The Armenian genocide is actually well-documented -- we just don't
    have moving picture," Garapedian explained, acknowledging that videos
    from the genocide in Darfur or the ethnic cleansing in Sarajevo have
    increased the public's awareness of these atrocities.

    Despite the countless photographs, many world nations -- including the
    United States -- have yet to acknowledge the atrocities that occurred
    in Armenia in the early 1900s as actual acts of genocide. For many
    countries, Garapedian explained, this is to protect the political
    interests of certain countries; some nations may fear that, by
    acknowledging the acts of another country as genocide, that country --
    the U.S., for example -- may be accused of war crimes.

    Still, acknowledging any situation as genocide isn't the end, and
    Garapedian indicated there's still a long road to travel before the
    Armenian government may take steps toward doing so.

    "[Dealing with genocide is] a process; it's as if the perpetrators
    (are) still going through the process of what's done," Garapedian
    said. "That hasn't happened in Turkey."
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