Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

City Blocks Cemetary For Critic

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

  • City Blocks Cemetary For Critic

    CITY BLOCKS CEMETARY FOR CRITIC
    By Kevin O'Flynn

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    Jan 15 2010

    The Moscow city government deliberately blocked the funeral of an
    important cultural figure and outspoken critic of their building policy
    in a prestigious cemetery, organizers of the funeral alleged Thursday.

    David Sarkisyan, head of the Shchusev Architecture Museum and a
    figurehead for the preservationist movement in Moscow, died at the
    age of 62 on Jan. 7.

    Funeral organizers wanted to bury Sarkisyan -- born in Yerevan,
    Armenia -- in the Armenian Cemetery, part of the Vagankovskoye
    Cemetery, not far from Belorusskaya metro station.

    "He did so much for the city and made the museum famous around the
    world," said Natalya Samover from preservation movement Archnadzor,
    "The city did not consider that worthy enough."

    The cemetery is full, but burials can take place there with the
    permission of the city or if the owner of a plot sells one. Georgy
    Garanyan, a famous Armenian jazz musician, was buried Thursday in
    the Armenian Cemetery.

    Organizers, who include Deputy Culture Minister Pavel Khoroshilov,
    asked Deputy Mayor Vladimir Resin, acting mayor while Yury Luzhkov is
    on vacation, to give permission for the burial, but they were refused,
    despite the request being backed by the Armenian Church. Resin ranted
    about how Sarkisyan had held up progress in the city, one organizer
    alleged.

    Sarkisyan was a vocal critic of the city's construction policies,
    accusing them of barbarianism that put greed ahead of the city's
    heritage.

    Luzhkov was consulted about the decision, organizers alleged Resin
    said, and the burial was refused.

    An appeal was made by the city's chief architect, but the decision
    remained unchanged.

    "He defended historical heritage, and Luzhkov was against David even
    after his death," one of the organizers said. "He did not want to
    forgive him."

    They then raised more than $100,000 to buy a plot in the cemetery,
    but the city then specifically contacted the cemetery, ordering them
    not to allow the burial to take place.

    "The director of the cemetery said that he got a very direct order
    not to allow the funeral to take place," one organizer said.

    Organizers spoke off the record because they feared that if their
    names were published they would face problems in the future.

    A third organizer, architect Yury Grigoryan, confirmed that Sarkisyan
    would not be buried in the Armenian Cemetery but did not go into
    details, saying: "It is not a big issue. The important thing had been
    to save his life."

    Sarkisyan instead will now be buried Friday in the Troyekurovskoye
    Cemetery, where a number of Moscow's most famous citizens, such as
    writer Vasily Grossman, are buried and which is located on the edge
    of the city.

    Resin's press service said the matter concerned his work as acting
    mayor rather than his work as head of the construction department and
    directed questions to the Moscow mayor's press office. A secretary
    who answered the phone at the Moscow city press service said the press
    spokesman was on holiday and refused to connect or give a number for
    his deputy. She then hung up.

    The Culture Ministry is helping organize the funeral, said Natalya
    Uvarova, a spokeswoman for the ministry, but she would not comment
    on whether or not the city had blocked the funeral. The ministry has
    arranged for the Kultura television channel to repeat an interview
    with Sarkisyan at 7 p.m. on the day of his funeral. Khoroshilov could
    not be contacted Thursday.

    It was not lost on organizers that Sarkisyan, who made the museum
    a base for the grass-roots movement for preservation during his 10
    years in charge, would have enjoyed the fact that city leaders were
    still dealing with him.

    "He would be quite happy because even when he is dead they are still
    afraid of him," an organizer said.

    http://www.themoscowtimes.com/arts_n_ideas/ article/city-blocks-cemetary-for-critic/397420.htm l
Working...
X