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Filmmaker to debut documentary on Christian Armenia

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  • Filmmaker to debut documentary on Christian Armenia

    Filmmaker to debut documentary on Christian Armenia

    01:00 AM EDT on Friday, April 17, 2009

    By Richard C. Dujardin

    Journal Staff Writer

    PROVIDENCE -- Armenian filmmaker Arsen Aslanyan says Armenians have
    always taken pride in their nation's being the first in the world to be
    formally declared a Christian nation, in 301 A.D.

    And if asked, he says, nearly all in his homeland will tell you they are
    Christian.

    Yet, on a visit to Sts. Sahag and Mesrob Armenian Apostolic Church on
    Tuesday to promote his documentary about Christianity in Armenia,
    Aslanyan said he suspects most of his fellow countrymen have only a
    limited knowledge of what the religion is about - the result, he says,
    of years of Soviet rule when an atheistic government turned churches
    into museums, prohibited the printing of Christian books and barred
    clergy from visiting people's homes.

    "When I was growing up, I would go to church sometimes to light a
    candle," he recalled. "But I didn't understand a lot. That's also true
    of most others."

    But the award-winning director says there's a chance that his
    documentary film, Christian Armenia, which will have its U.S. premiere
    Sunday at the Columbus Theater, will give people a better understanding
    of their history and Christian heritage.

    Armenia, which regained its independence from the Soviets in September
    1991, has a history that dates to centuries before the time of Christ. A

    key moment came in 301 A.D. when King Tiridates was converted by the
    first patriarch of the Armenian Church, Gregory the Illuminator, and
    proclaimed Christianity the sole religion in Armenia.

    Aslanyan, who began his career as a cameraman for Armenian television
    and won various awards as a filmmaker for films about Armenian composer
    Ohan Duryan and the 1980 Armenian earthquake, says his idea for the film

    came in 2001 when Armenia celebrated the 1,700th anniversary of
    Christianity in Armenia.

    He said he assumed someone else would make a film about it, but when no
    one did, "I felt I should make it."

    Making a film without having to deal with Soviet censorship made his
    work both easier and more difficult, he says. The Soviets would never
    have allowed him to even show a cross, but at least they paid for his
    work, he observed, while under the new system he can do what he wants
    but is not paid.

    It took him five years working off and on to complete the documentary,
    which visits all of the sites significant to Armenia's Christian
    history.

    With actor Vladimir Msryan playing the role of a sort of cosmic
    commentator who comes in and out of scenes dressed in a long robe, the
    film has so many facts squeezed in that people may find it hard to
    absorb.

    But Aslanyan says the film received "only positive" reviews in the
    places it has been shown - the Netherlands, Switzerland, Georgia and in
    Moscow and St. Petersburg in Russia where it won awards, and in Armenia.

    In making the film, "I learned a lot more things I wouldn't have known
    otherwise," he says, and he thinks it will help his countrymen better
    understand their faith and heritage as well.

    "In Armenia right now, it is still not possible for young people to
    learn their Christian history from reading books because the books
    haven't been printed yet. This film can be an introduction and help them

    feel proud."

    Sponsored by the cultural committee of Sts. Sahag and Mesrob Armenian
    Church, Christian Armenia will be shown at the Columbus Theater twice on

    Sunday - in English at 3 p.m. and in Armenian with English subtitles at
    5 p.m. The donation is $10.

    [email protected]
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