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  • The German Pilgrim's "Planet Armenia" Travels About Germany And Spre

    THE GERMAN PILGRIM'S "PLANET ARMENIA" TRAVELS ABOUT GERMANY AND SPREADS ARMENIA'S AROMA
    Ofelya Sargsyan

    noyan tapan
    2011-12-26

    On November 26, 2011 at the Armenian Cultural Union in Hamburg took
    place the eighth presentation of the book "Planet Armenia: Pilgrimage
    to an Unknown Land" by Dr. Jochen Mangelsen. The book was released in
    Frankfurt am Main in September 2011 by the "Armenian Media" publishing
    house and has 187 pages. The book is rich in brilliant illustrations
    which are made by the Bremen-based Armenian painter Marietta Armena.

    Published in September the book had 8 presentations in 2 months
    organized by different Armenian communities and German organizations.

    Mangelsen's book was also noted by the German media: immediately after
    being published, one of the best read newspapers, the Weser Kurier
    on September 4, 2011, as well as the Radio Station Suedwestrundfunk
    SWR on September 19, 2011 and the Radio Bremen/WDR - Funkhaus Europa
    on November 13, 2011, discussed it. Moreover, in January an one-hour
    program devoted to the book is expected on the Nordwestradio by the
    Radio Bremen.

    The opening speech of the presentation in Hamburg was made by the
    president of the German-Armenians' Central Council and the Union of
    the Armenian Academics Azat Ordukhanyan who said, "Within a month
    Jochen moved from the north of Armenia to the south, reached Artsakh
    and his book managed to be in 8 cities within 2 months travelling
    from Bremen to Stuttgart, Frankfurt am Main, Halle, Leipzig, Berlin
    and Hamburg. They say, in general there are no irreplaceable people
    but Mangelsen is exceptional both as a friend and as a press advisor
    to the German-Armenians' Central Council".

    The book is a result of a several-week journey during which the
    author moved from region to region, from monastery to monastery and
    through spiritual adventures reached Artsakh. The South Caucasus
    politically risky and uncertain conflict concerned him as much as the
    country's fantastic legends, history of millenniums, people, culture
    and political events pushed him forward. He throws a bright look to
    our country situated on the slope of Mt. Ararat and provides a new
    perception about it, presenting it as a colorful and gorgeous planet.

    He describes his book as a political feleton.

    The book also includes text-miniatures - short novels which despite
    being only a few lines reflect the unique magic of the country. The
    book is truly exclusive and original and has already had a large sale.

    Therefore, with some small additions the second edition is expected
    after January and there will also be new presentations.

    Dr. Jochen Mangelsen was born in 1942, is a journalist, lives and
    works in Bremen, for many years worked as a spokesman for the Bremen
    Radio. He began his journalistic career after studying oration,
    drama studies, German language and philology. He was married with the
    Armenian Seda Murdayan. His daughter, Sona, was baptized in Armenia
    and in October, 2011 got married at the Armenian Church St. Hripsime
    under the Armenian rite. Also, the same day Mangelsen's grandchildren
    were baptized at St. Hripsime. According to him the roots that Seda
    instilled in her daughter's soul have deep foundations.

    The motivation that has brought Mangelsen to the topic "Armenia"
    over 40 years, Mangelsen took from his own, German, history. The
    holocaust committed by the generation of his parents makes him
    sensitive towards the Armenian Genocide, the impunity of which,
    many believe, encouraged the organizers of the Jews' massacre in
    Europe. The history of Germany and its approach to the history are
    linked with the question of how modern Turkey treats to its past, to
    the Genocide against its Christian neighbors organized by the Young
    Turks, the position of Germany towards this tragedy as well as with
    the responsiveness of the future generations. These are the facts
    and circumstances that served as a basis for Mangelsen's activity. He
    created an Armenian-German circle in Bremen then in Hannover, worked
    for the "Armenian-German Correspondence" magazine editorial, became its
    co-editor and currently is a media consultant to the German-Armenians'
    Central Council.

    Intensive, personally based, politically motivated years of connection
    with Armenia confirm his love for this country. Mangelsen himself says,
    "What charms me in Armenia? Perhaps, it is just as follows: we fall
    in love with a place, its nature and people and at one time we go to
    discover them and that journey takes us to our souls. Armenia, as well
    as Artsakh are miraculous countries full of legends, thousand-year-old
    cultural monuments, deeply affected by Christianity, mythology and the
    causalities of the modern history. Conclusion: I have been enchanted
    with Armenia for about 40 years". The proof of it is also his novel
    "Ofelya's long journey to Berlin published in 2001.

    The book raises the Genocide issue of 1915 - 19 during which 1,
    5 million Armenians were sent to innocent death. The novel also
    describes the fate of many Armenian families who live abroad but are
    unable to forget the horrific events of the past and feel abandoned
    and forgotten by the world. In the first plan of the book is a family
    story, in the background is the slaughter of millions of Armenians.

    Alfred remembers his ancestors' massacre and their migration from
    Western Armenia. As for Ofelya, she had to accompany her relatives on
    the hard ways of escapade from Persia. Mangelsen does describe the
    turnovers and upheavals of their lives painstakingly and the book
    reflects his compassion towards a multiply smitten country.

    Afterward, Mangelsen shifts from fiction to travel literature genre and
    in 2006 with Alexander Schmitt he published a book about his Jacobīs
    pilgrimage to Spain. His readers expected that the Jacobīs pilgrim
    would also pass through Armenia and Artsakh with his traveler's
    crook. At last, in 2010 the expectations of the writer's fans were
    satisfied: Mangelsen traveled to Armenia and Artsakh and summed up
    his vivid impressions of the Nairian land in his third book which is
    a pilgrim's unique love confession to Armenia and Armenians.

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