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Bezjian: Open Letter

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  • Bezjian: Open Letter

    BEZJIAN: OPEN LETTER
    By: Nigol Bezjian

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2011/05/25/bezjian-open-letter/
    Wed, May 25 2011

    I keep my commentaries related to Armenian issues within the frame
    of social gatherings. But lately a couple of items I read in the news
    made me think that I should share them publicly.

    To start with is news that the director of the state-run Armenian
    National Cinema Center, Kevork Kevorkian, is in talks with Steven
    Spielberg and Steven Zailian to produce a film about the Armenian
    Genocide. What an idea!

    The Armenian National Cinema should only be engaged in supporting,
    nurturing, and promoting Armenian cinema and its makers, and not
    financing non-Armenian filmmakers. We are talking about state funds
    and not private funds. If Spielberg or others decide to make a film
    about the Armenian Genocide, or if an Armenian financier wishes to
    undertake a film project with any filmmaker, it is their right and
    prerogative. Zailian, who happens to have an Armenian last name,
    was criticized in the Armenian media when he received an Oscar for
    co-writing "Schindler's List" and did not utter a single word about
    the genocide in his acceptation speech. It did not matter to him;
    he is only a technician with an Armenian last name. Mr. Kevorkian
    knows that the making of "Schindler's List" took more than 10 years:
    Spielberg, at first, found himself unable to deal with a subject
    so close to his heart, and passed it on to Martin Scorsese. Years
    later he took it back and gave it to Zailian. He couldn't do the film
    without external help and a decade of time.

    "Schindler's List" cost more than $20 million to make, although it was
    shot in Poland 20 years ago (where it was much cheaper to shoot a film
    than in the U.S.). Today it will cost much more even if the film is
    made in Armenia. Where is this money coming from? The international
    audience does not really care for this sort of film; Mr. Kevorkian
    should know that "Schindler's List," for all its fame and glory,
    was a box office flop. Most of the screenings were sponsored and paid
    for by Jewish organization, having public education in mind.

    Such a budget, if available at all, could be easily spent to furnish
    film schools in Armenia, where they don't even have a simple DVD
    player, let alone professional equipment and studios to learn and
    practice. It could be spent to empower the younger generation of
    filmmakers, giving them an edge of competitiveness. Or it could allow
    for hundreds of films to be made by Armenian filmmakers instead of
    one that will b shown at a hundred film festivals.

    With this, Kevorkian is also telling the world that there is not a
    single Armenian who is capable of making a film about the genocide.

    What promotional material for a country that's trying to propagandize
    a deeply rooted national issue. This alone will shame every single
    Armenian filmmaker-known and unknown, talented or untalented, past
    and present-in front of the world.

    For a moment let's agree with Kevorkian's logic-that a national
    cause of such nature needs internationally recognized names to propel
    political gains. Fine. The extension of this, then, is that Armenia
    should commission Orhan Pamuk to write "The Armenian Novel," sponsor
    Arvo Part to compose "The Armenian Symphony," appoint Nanni Moretti
    as head of the Armenian National Cinema Center, or have Mohammad
    Khatemi as Armenia's minister of culture. We are not talking about
    an industrial, scientific, or financial venture, or a professional
    football team. Film is art, culture, national identity, history. One
    would think that the head of a national cinema would understand this.

    On top of it all, imagine the "national embarrassment" if and when
    Spielberg declines the project.

    As a reminder, when the Taviani brothers visited Armenia to prepare
    the production of "The Lark Farm," they were confronted by legal
    hostility in a cinematically speaking backward country, causing them
    to shoot the film in Bulgaria. And when the Turkish government tried
    to stop them, the Armenian side did nothing to support them. What,
    then, is behind this sudden change of heart in enlisting the Hollywood
    film industry to champion a national cause?

    ***

    Another issue that has raised my ire is the subject of creating
    a second parliament in Armenia that would include members of the
    Armenian Diaspora-a sad joke formulated in the president's office
    and thrown as a glove to the diaspora by the Ministry of Diaspora.

    It would be quite humorous for a pan-Armenian legislative body to
    pass rules in a country where a hefty percentage of its population
    lives outside of Armenia. At its best, it is a stillborn idea. I am
    more surprised at how diasporan opinion-makers are considering the
    merit of such a congress. By doing so they are already bargaining
    this non-sensible trickery.

    If the intention of unifying all Armenians around the homeland is
    real and honest, then the government should start by tackling the ways
    and means to stop massive emigration, and to eradicate unemployment,
    indifference, and idleness. They should focus on collecting taxes
    properly, on instituting and implementing law and order (that applies
    to all citizens regardless of rank). They should work to uphold the
    rights of women and minors, and wipe out the deep-rooted culture of
    corruption in the spheres of education, health, law enforcement,
    the judicial system, social services, environmental issues, the
    military, and human rights. Centralized power, hyper capitalism,
    mindless consumerism, and unchecked land grabbing should end. The
    ruling political parties that function under different names, but
    are in fact one in sharing mafia-like hegemony and running lucrative
    businesses, must stop shamelessly auctioning the votes of the hungry,
    unemployed, and needy, and instead allow democratic reforms. Bring
    to accountability the morally fallen church and its clergy that,
    from top to bottom, has forgotten its social and spiritual functions
    and is immersed in business, finance, and real-estate developments
    stretching far beyond Armenia's boundaries.

    Only then can Armenians of the diaspora think about repatriating to
    their homeland to live in a civilized society where democracy really
    functions instead of being shallowly imitated. Where their rights are
    safeguarded, opportunities are given, and their dignity is protected,
    then they will happily contribute to building a healthy, strong, and
    secure Armenia. And only then will a single, freely and democratically
    elected parliament be just enough for everyone, and maybe then will
    Armenian become the country where even non-Armenians dream to live.

    Yet, the recent announcement by the three political parties that
    they've agreed to nominate the current president as a candidate for
    the 2013 presidential election does not leave much room for hope. The
    Prosperous Armenia Party, Country of Law Party, and Republican Party
    seem to ignore the fact that at present, Armenia is not prosperous
    and not republican. The only true common denominator among the three
    is the "party" factor.

    Incidentally, while having lunch in a Beirut restaurant today, I
    couldn't help but overhear the conversation of two Armenian businessmen
    next to me. One was trying to keep the other from doing any business
    in Armenia. "Corruption is a king," he said. "They look at you as an
    outsiders who speaks Armenian, then you are one of the three, a spy,
    a milking cow, or an idiot. And if that doesn't satisfy them, then you
    are a disguised partner with the power, or a liar, or at best a failed
    dreamer. And many other things, draconian business laws and endless
    bribes, archaic tax rules... Forget it, you have nothing to do there."

    Surely this does not apply to everyone and everything in Armenia,
    but common and repeated experiences usually come together to form an
    inescapable general reputation.

    Few countries in the world, like Lebanon, Israel, and Syria, have a
    Ministry of Diaspora, but do they have a diaspora to start with? A
    shaming question no one wants to ask and no one wishes to answer. And
    yet I am not aware of any country that has a secondary house of
    parliament composed of "native" and "diaspora" members.

    Sad but true. Please take note.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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