REQUIEM FOR A MILLION IN ARMENIA
The Telegraph
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1090430/js p/calcutta/story_10897634.jsp
April 30 2009
India
For many an Indian, April 24 is the Little Master's birthday. But for
Armenians across the world, it was on this day in 1915 that around
250 of their leaders were rounded up by Turks during World War I
and killed.
The day, known as the Armenian Genocide, was followed by the death
of more than a million Armenians.
This year, the incident was commemorated by the Armenian College
and Philanthropic Academy at Gorky Sadan with the screening of a
documentary on the incident.
"The aim of the event was to remind the young generation of the
sacrifices made by their forefathers," said Fr Oshagan Gulgulian,
pastor of the Armenians in India and former manager of Armenian
College.
Reading out an address from the President of Armenian, Ashot Kocharian,
the Armenian ambassador to India, said: "This gathering of people
from several diasporas to pay tribute to the victims will help in
spreading awareness."
While students from classes VII to X put up an exhibition of
photographs on the genocide, the school choir sang four songs
in Armenian. "We charred the black-and-white images at the edges
and surrounded them by red handprints to depict the horror of the
situation," said Arez Markarian, a Class IX student of the school,
set up in 1821.
The school, affiliated to the ICSE board, has 80 students, including
those from Iran, Iraq and Armenia.
Andrew Goldberg's 2006 documentary, Armenian Genocide, depicted the
events that led to the April 24 massacre and its fallout. Including
accounts of survivors, it described the survivors whose mourning
remains incomplete as their pain has not been acknowledged by Turks
or other nations of the world.
The programme included the recitation of the English translation of
Armenian poet Siamanto's The Dance. Siamanto was one of those killed
in April 1915. "It is about a German woman witnessing a group of
20 naked brides being whipped and burnt alive outside her window,"
explained Arez. The poem, dramatised by students, ends with the German
woman wondering how she can gouge her eyes out after seeing something
so cruel.
Doel Bose BA, English St Xavier's College
The Telegraph
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1090430/js p/calcutta/story_10897634.jsp
April 30 2009
India
For many an Indian, April 24 is the Little Master's birthday. But for
Armenians across the world, it was on this day in 1915 that around
250 of their leaders were rounded up by Turks during World War I
and killed.
The day, known as the Armenian Genocide, was followed by the death
of more than a million Armenians.
This year, the incident was commemorated by the Armenian College
and Philanthropic Academy at Gorky Sadan with the screening of a
documentary on the incident.
"The aim of the event was to remind the young generation of the
sacrifices made by their forefathers," said Fr Oshagan Gulgulian,
pastor of the Armenians in India and former manager of Armenian
College.
Reading out an address from the President of Armenian, Ashot Kocharian,
the Armenian ambassador to India, said: "This gathering of people
from several diasporas to pay tribute to the victims will help in
spreading awareness."
While students from classes VII to X put up an exhibition of
photographs on the genocide, the school choir sang four songs
in Armenian. "We charred the black-and-white images at the edges
and surrounded them by red handprints to depict the horror of the
situation," said Arez Markarian, a Class IX student of the school,
set up in 1821.
The school, affiliated to the ICSE board, has 80 students, including
those from Iran, Iraq and Armenia.
Andrew Goldberg's 2006 documentary, Armenian Genocide, depicted the
events that led to the April 24 massacre and its fallout. Including
accounts of survivors, it described the survivors whose mourning
remains incomplete as their pain has not been acknowledged by Turks
or other nations of the world.
The programme included the recitation of the English translation of
Armenian poet Siamanto's The Dance. Siamanto was one of those killed
in April 1915. "It is about a German woman witnessing a group of
20 naked brides being whipped and burnt alive outside her window,"
explained Arez. The poem, dramatised by students, ends with the German
woman wondering how she can gouge her eyes out after seeing something
so cruel.
Doel Bose BA, English St Xavier's College