Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Komitas, Arshile Gorky, and roadmap: Diaspora this week

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Komitas, Arshile Gorky, and roadmap: Diaspora this week

    Information-Analytic Agency NEWS.am, Armenia
    Aug 29 2009

    Komitas, Arshile Gorky, and roadmap: Diaspora this week



    12:55 / 08/29/2009This week the Lebanon-based Aztag daily has
    published the reasoning of Gegham Sareyan, one of the members of the
    Armenian community in Lebanon. He speaks of the importance of
    preserving the pure Armenian language. Sareyan considers it
    inadvisable to use foreign words while the Armenian language has
    equivalents for all of them.

    According to him, `during the personality cult, it was not only
    humans, but also art, literature and language that suffered. Without
    having necessary knowledge of their native language, some statesmen,
    made arbitrary decisions making some Armenian words `obsolete' and
    putting their foreign equivalents into use. All that had no scholarly
    basis, being the result of personality cult. It should be noted,
    however, that attempts to restore the pure Armenian language were
    made: teachers, writers and public representatives addressed the
    problem. Even world-famous scholars addressed the problem, but, for
    some unclear reasons, all that remained &`voice crying in the
    wilderness.' In modern times, a language is a vital factor for both
    individuals and entire nations. Is it necessary to prove one that
    knowing his or her native language is each person's sacred duty? It is
    through the use of mother tong that a person's life and mental and
    spiritual world is shaped¦'

    The Asbarez newspaper reports that `the Philadelphia Museum of Art
    will present a major traveling retrospective celebrating the
    extraordinary life and work of Armenian American artist Arshile Gorky,
    a seminal figure in the movement toward gestural abstraction that
    would transform American art in the years after World War II.

    'The exhibition, which will run from October 21 to January 10, 2010 in
    Philadelphia, will travel to Tate Modern, London (February 10 ` May 3,
    2010) and The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (June 6 `
    September 20, 2010) following its debut in Philadelphia. A
    Retrospective will premier at the Museum and present 180 paintings,
    sculptures and works on paper reflecting the full scope of Gorky's
    prolific career.

    The exhibition has been organized by the Philadelphia Museum of Art
    and will be accompanied by a major publication, published in
    association with Yale University Press.

    Born Vosdanig Adoian around 1904 near Lake Van in an Armenian province
    of Ottoman Turkey, Gorky witnessed as a young boy the ethnic cleansing
    of his people, the minority Armenians. Gorky's mother died in his
    arms¦

    Gorky took his own life on July 21, 1948, leaving behind an impressive
    body of work that secured his reputation as the last of the great
    Surrealist painters and an important precursor to Abstract
    Expressionism¦

    The Argentina-based Komitas choir, 35 singers, has marked its 80th
    anniversary. On the occasion a Diario Armenia reporter met with
    Makruhà - Eolmessekian, Director of the choir. Ms. Eolmessekian has
    been directing the choir for almost 40 years. She says she loves
    music, and all that has to do with the Armenia and Armenians, best in
    the world. When a child, she loved Komatas' works and dreamed of
    becoming a pianist. She entered the National Conservatoire of Music
    and Scenic Art (Conservatorio Nacional de Música y Arte
    Escénico). Ms. Eolmessekian tries to speak Armenia as often as
    she can. She thinks Armenian is a very beautiful language and advises
    young Armenians living in Argentina to learn their mother tong. She
    also admires Armenian literature. During concerts Ms. Eolmessekian
    often recites poems in both Armenia and Spanish.

    The Komitas Choire was founded in 1929, and has since been doing its
    best to take the ancient Armenian cultural heritage to people
    everywhere. On August 29, the choir is to start the celebrations of
    its 80th anniversary with concerts, including solo performances.

    Diario Armenia also addressed politics. Specifically, Jorge
    Rubén Kazandjian, Editor of Diario Armenia, speaks of the
    passivity, laziness and inconsistency of Armenian diplomats, which
    allowed the Turkish foreign office to achieve success in pursuing its
    Armenian Genocide denial policy not only in Europe, in the Middle
    East, but also in South America.

    Specifically, Turkish diplomats launched vigorous activities in
    Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil and Chile. Under the circumstances, the
    resignation of RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan, whose response
    was nothing but worthless comments, is quite logical in the context
    unfavorable for both Armenia and the Diaspora. Meanwhile, the Turkish
    diplomats' activities produce results¦

    The Antelias agency reports that an international academic conference
    on the Armenian Genocide and International Law will take place from
    September 2 to 4 at Haigazian University.

    Organized by the Haigazian University and the Armenian National
    Committee-Middle East, the conference will discuss the Armenian
    Genocide from the perspective of international law and tackle issues
    such as professional ethics and genocide denial, the consequences of
    the Genocide and the rights of the Armenian nation within the context
    of international law, and means of further promoting the field of
    Armenian Genocide Studies.

    A number of scholars in genocide studies and experts in international
    law have been invited to the two-day conference. They will be arriving
    from Armenia, Canada, Egypt, Ireland, Lebanon, England, Switzerland,
    Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States.

    A book telling the truth about the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has been
    published. The Noyev Kovcheg (Noah's Ark) newspaper recently published
    an article about the book written by the political scientist and
    journalists Arsen Melik-Shahnazarov. The book entitled
    `Nagorno-Karabakh: facts versus lies' deals with information and
    ideological aspects of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict. Melik-Shahnazarov's work contains an in-depth analysis of
    the history of the conflict between the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh
    in its broad sense (not to be mixed with the Nagorno-Karabakh
    autonomous region) and the pseudo-Azerbaijani nationalist
    authorities. The author's father, Ashot Melik-Shahnazarov (1931-2004)
    was a well-known Armenian and Soviet diplomat. His ancestors were
    princes in Nagorno-Karabakh. In 1988, Melik-Shahnazarov Senior
    actively joined his people's struggle against the colonial rule of the
    Baku regime.

    Melik-Shahnazarov was going deeply into all the aspects of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh problem, paying special attention to well-reasons
    exposure of falsifications `heaped up' by the Baku-based claimants to
    Nagorno-Karabakh and their supporters abroad. The result is a most
    interesting fundamental work for the general public.

    `Can Turkey wish away the Armenians and their past, by denying
    historical facts?' asks the Lebanon-based Daily Start newspaper. The
    newspaper provides an answer by drawing parallels between some
    problems.

    `Turkey's decision to dramatically switch gears on how it deals with
    its Kurdish citizens is part of a &`Kurdish initiative' by Prime
    Minister Erdogan, and gives the region a considerable amount of food
    for thought. Turkey's earlier policies were well-known, if not
    infamous: erasing the names of villages of its Kurdish community and
    banning the use of the Kurdish language in public settings, among
    other measures, all a part of `Turkification',' the newspaper
    writes. According to the authors, the same `the old-style policies of
    ethnic `cultural cleansing'' can be seen in Palestine.

    The newspaper refers to similar cases in North Africa, where `the
    Amazig people of North Africa, commonly referred to as the Berbers,
    face similar struggles over asserting their cultural and other
    rights.' As regards Iraq, the newspaper writes that `[it] provides an
    example of non-state actors targeting ethnic and religious groups,
    such as Kurds, Turkmen and various Christian sects, to create a
    supposedly `purer' country.' The authors arrived at the conclusion
    that `such policies are doomed to fail.' A striking example is Turkey,
    which `was mired in a fierce strain of nationalism over six
    decades¦' On our part, we would like to note that Turkey has so far
    had courage to show goodwill to the Kurdish issue. As regards the
    Armenian Genocide, the Turkish Government prefers the criminal
    negationist ideology.

    Progress in the Cyprus, Kurdish and Armenian issues will help the
    region achieve stability, writes Hürriyet Daily News, quoting
    the British Ambassador to Turkey Nick Baird, whose new post will start
    next month in London as director-general for Europe and Globalization.

    According to the ambassador, `Turkey is making good progress in
    solving the points of contention.' He expressed the confidence that
    `we have to make progress on that [Nagorno-Karabakh] issue in order to
    take a step forward in the Armenian road map more generally.'

    The newspaper writes on that `[this] April, both Turkey and Armenia
    announced a road map to normalize their troubled relations, saying
    they achieved tangible progress and mutual understanding in
    talks. Ankara's move drew criticism from Azerbaijan, which argues that
    opening the border will block a settlement in
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Opposition to the road map, both inside Turkey and
    from Baku, prompted Ankara to return to its original position, with
    the prime minister assuring that the border would not be opened before
    a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.' Commenting on Anraka's
    position, Baird said the Turkish Government did not `have very much
    choice.'

    He outgoing British Ambassador also mentioned the problem of Cyprus in
    the context of Turkey's integration into the European Union (EU).

    Mustafa Kemal, the first president of Turkey, who is better known as
    Ataturk, continued his predecessor's criminal policy and set a good
    example to his successors in denying the Armenian Genocide. On March
    7, 1920, he sent a telegraph to Admiral Bristol refuting `the claims
    of so called Armenian genocide, which [were] fabricated to break away
    Armenians from Turkish community,' reported www.topix.com. In his
    `righteous indignation' Ataturk asked the U.S. Government and allied
    forces to enlighten the `World community about the essence of this
    propaganda of slaughter of Armenians.' He claimed those pursuing their
    own interests fabricated a lie about the number of slaughtered
    Armenians.

    `What is hampering the normalization of relations between Ankara and
    Yerevan is a dispute over Karabakh and Turkey's support for
    Azerbaijan, not the widely discussed topic of genocide,' the political
    analyst and journalist Vicken Cheterian writes in Le Monde
    diplomatique.

    Ankara wants Armenia to withdraw its troops from Karabakh and other
    occupied territories ob Azerbaijan before it opens the border and
    establishes diplomatic relations with Armenia, the authors writes.

    The expert also mentioned Barack Obama's 24 April speech to the
    Armenians, when he `used the expression `medz yeghern', meaning `great
    calamity', and not the word which Armenian militants have been
    struggling for decades to hear.'

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X