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  • Araz Artinian - "God Has Given Me The Energy To Help As Many People

    ARAZ ARTINIAN - "GOD HAS GIVEN ME THE ENERGY TO HELP AS MANY PEOPLE AS I CAN"
    Inga Martinyan

    http://hetq.am/en/society/araz-artinyan/
    2010/05/31 | 15:14

    Feature Stories society

    Canadian Filmmaker Says Diaspora is Losing Ground; Has Found New
    "Calling" in Armenia

    Araz is on the go all day long and thanks her shoes for wearing tough
    and getting her to where she has to be. It seems that in Armenia that
    aren't enough hours in the day for all she has to do.

    "It irritates me to no end to see students lazily walking by. I'm often
    tempted to grab them by the arm, rip off the heels from there shoes,
    and tell them that life is short; that they should be running.

    What I also find upsetting is how Armenian girls get all fancied-up,
    with make-up and all. They waste so much time on trivialities. There
    are so many problems in this country. If all young people are
    interested in are there things, then what kind of country will they
    demand in the future?" says Araz Artinian, an Armenian film director
    from Canada.

    Araz believes that she was born to become a star. She also dreamt of
    a singing career but never had the time to devote to it. But he has
    polished his singing voice. Araz has yet to be regarded as a star,
    but she shoots films, takes photos and creates websites.

    In September, her first book of poems will be published, entitled
    "Philophobia" (a persistent, abnormal, and irrational fear of love
    and intimacy). Afterwards, she is thinking of presenting her poetry
    via the medium of photography

    Araz's parents hail from Egypt and his grandparents are from western
    Armenia. She is the youngest in the family. His older sister is an
    attorney. She is marries and lives with her parents in Canada.

    Wanted to escape the responsibilities of being Armenian

    Araz's father established the Sourp Hagop School in Canada. Her mother
    worked as the director of the kindergarten. Both her parents were very
    active in local Armenian community life and raised their children in
    a strict Armenian atmosphere. This focus on an Armenian upbringing got
    so intense that the kids started to hate being Armenian. "My father's
    main focus was on national identity and the pressure on me was great.

    I had to withstand it." Arazx's father is an architect. He would draw
    pretty maps of Armenia and the children would point out the borders
    of Armenia in the past and today. Posters of the Armenian alphabet
    adorned the walls of their house. The father was always fearful that
    his daughters would marry non-Armenians and that they would thus
    forget the language.

    When she was 17, she brought home her first boyfriend, a non-Armenian.

    Her father was not pleased, to say the least, and told her never to
    bring him to the house again.

    After graduating from Sourp Hagop's, Araz attended the French College.

    She completed her B.A. in Communication Studies at Concordia
    University, specializing in film-making. During her senior year she
    produced her first film. It was about the Spitak earthquake.

    She was 17 when the earthquake struck. Every day, her father would
    bring home newspaper clippings about the earthquake. Araz would
    read the articles and save them. In 1997, Araz came to Armenia. She
    tracked down twelve individuals named in those articles and made a
    film about them.

    Her film "The Genocide in Me" Shown at 2006 Golden Apricot

    She then produced her second film, "The Genocide in Me". Over the
    course of 18 months, the film was shown in 47 cities. At the 2006
    "Golden Apricot" film festival in Armenia, the film won an honorable
    mention award. Araz decided to remain in Armenia. "In that film,
    I explained how I no longer wished to be Armenian, because in the
    diaspora the pressure is great to remain Armenian; to retain the
    language, marry an Armenian, etc. I was so tired of it all that I
    wanted to escape and no longer be Armenian. Then, when I came to
    Armenia, I decided to stay. I felt that the future lie here. In the
    diaspora, slowly but surely, we are disappearing. I want to be Armenian
    and free," says Araz. Later she worked with Atom Egoyan on the film
    "Ararat" as a screenwriter and head researcher.

    In 2005 she launched the website www.twentyvoices.com, the story of
    20 survivors of the 1915 Armenian genocide.

    Araz had grown tired of the word "genocide" and wanted to do something
    different; but what? "I thought about creating a website through
    which all the children of the world could exchange their cultures with
    others. The I thought about restoring the culture of 21 centuries. I
    searched for children in Yerevan. Each one represented one art form,
    one culture."

    Araz has studied Armenian history and culture and has traveled to many
    sites to select those that should be filmed. She will call her new
    website "Zart", her signature. It will be up and running in September.

    Each photo placed in the site is a history unto itself, a branch
    of culture. By pressing any pictured church on a phot, you can read
    its history.

    By visiting various music schools, Araz saw the condition they were in
    and decided raise some charitable funds that went towards renovating
    the halls, bathrooms, roofs and the purchase of instruments. She is
    amazed that art schools receive no assistance.

    She has raised funds to help disabled kids walk

    "You walk into a school and see the kids shivering, playing the piano
    wearing gloves. Why does it have to be like this. They produced
    national instruments free of charge but you don't see any in the
    schools for the students to learn."

    Araz then redirected her attention on children in the boarding schools,
    formerly known as orphanages.

    "Can you imagine what a feeling it is to start to walk after so many
    years of being bed-ridden or sitting in a wheelchair? I organized
    surgical operations for these kids and now many can walk. When you
    think that many of these kids might go through life without walking
    and the fact that no one else is taking an interest, I decided to
    do something. I am always busy with my art, but it's such a pleasure
    that I now help the kids of others. I just don't focus on myself."

    >>From January till now, Araz has been able to organize operations
    for four children. She uses facebook to get the message out and to
    fund-raise. With the donations she receives, Araz buys presents for
    the kids. She films it all and places it all on her facebook page.

    People can thus read how the donations have been spent.

    Araz tells us about the time when two sisters at the boarding school
    stole $500 in donations out of her bag. However, the next day, Araz
    brought the sisters some gifts. Araz says that she likes these girls
    the most.

    "Kids overseas are more jaded. They have everything but still want
    more. Here, they are different. I go inside and the kids run out,
    take off my coat and hang on to me, chanting, Araz, Araz," she says
    with emotion in her voice.

    Government in Armenia lacks a conscience

    Araz really doesn't like to compare Canada with Armenia. She is
    happy here. She misses regular films in English, her bike, car and,
    of course, her parents. Araz believes that people in Armenia lead
    very complex lives. She can't remember a day in Canada when she went
    without water. Here, it's a struggle every minute, a war.

    "People like us have to change things. We have to struggle and push
    those in power up against the wall. The government has no conscience.

    If they did, we wouldn't have wound up in the spot we're in today.

    Every thing that is humane has been removed. In these conditions,
    what kind of country are we talking about? If you give yourself an
    aim, you will reach it. It's just that the people are tired. If we
    have no culture, then we cease to exists as well."

    Araz says that right now she is solely focused on helping the
    children. Before this, if she saw building debris dumped in her yard
    she would gather the neighbors and construction workers and clean
    it up.

    Araz already has a family here. "The seamstress is like a mother to
    me, so too is the woman that cleans the house. the kids..." She has a
    notebook in which she jots down what her tasks are for the following
    day. The following evening she reviews what she accomplished during
    the day. She finds it disgusting that people spit in the streets or
    blow their noses on the sidewalks. Araz says that there is a lack of
    respect here. She tells about the time when she was waiting in line at
    a store and a woman cut in front of her. "It happened again last week.

    In was waiting in line in a store and a woman walked in front. I
    grabbed her and said "Excuse me lady but have a bit of respect. Do
    you understand? I am waiting as well'. Her reply was, 'What's the big
    deal. I'll only be a minute?' This is just wrong. We must understand
    that you do not cut in front of someone else waiting in line."

    Laughter as a way to deal with daily annoyances

    Araz sees such incidents all the time and has discovered a way to deal
    with them. "You get so irritated that you start to laugh. Araz tell
    about the time when she was waiting in line at Converse Bank. "There
    were so many people that I was pressed upon the glass counter. The girl
    sitting at the computer yelled out 'what do you want?' I said that
    I wanted to see how much money I had in my account. The girl yelled
    out my balance, $2,000. I turned around and asked 'hey everyone, are
    you happy that I have so much money in my account?' One man looked
    at me and said, 'yes, dear girl, we are happy'.

    Araz has no personal life to speak of at the moment. But she's not
    complaining. She's says her life is much more comfortable this way and
    that there are many more projects to work on. "I will buy a bicycle
    for my Goharik to ride to school. They live on the border," says Araz.

    "If one is looking for a wife that will cook and clean house, I am not
    that person; no, no, no. I like men who are creative, who break hearts,
    who live on another imaginary plane; guys who are calm and collected,
    who don't talk but create. But right now, I'm not in the mood for
    love." This is how Araz described her ideal man. When it comes to
    listing her own qualities, she notes that she is industrious, orderly,
    organized, dedicated, good-natured and multi-talented. " I don't know
    what to do - write, take photos, make a film? One life is just too
    short. I can never abide those who use me and then leave. I'd really
    make an awful fuss, to the point of leaving my friends in tears."

    In the end, Araz believes that her mission in life is helping as many
    people as she can. She believes that this is why God has given her
    an inexhaustible supply of energy.




    From: A. Papazian
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