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Spendlove Winner Recalls Armenian Genocide

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  • Spendlove Winner Recalls Armenian Genocide

    SPENDLOVE WINNER RECALLS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    ARMENPRESS
    APRIL 13, 2012
    YEREVAN

    YEREVAN, APRIL 13, ARMENPRESS.Trauma from the Armenian genocide remains
    alive to this day, said Peter Balakian, an award-winning author and
    a leading voice of the genocide's recognition. "Armenpress" reports,
    citing mercedsunstar.

    Activists say the genocide began in 1915, when the Turks rounded up
    the Armenian population and killed and deported between a million and
    a million and a half of them. In the aftermath, the Turkish government
    has tried to cover up the crime and has been in denial, which "it's a
    kind of an ongoing traumatic reality," Balakian said during a press
    conference Thursday afternoon. "To deal with this assault from the
    Turkish government today, keeps the wound very open."

    Balakian was at UC Merced to receive the 2012 Alice and Clifford
    Spendlove Prize. The award was presented to him during an evening
    ceremony. He will give a public talk today at 10 a.m. at the
    university's Kolligian Library, room 355.

    The Spendlove Prize honors people who exemplify social justice,
    diplomacy and tolerance in their work.

    Last year's recipient was former California Supreme Court Justice
    Cruz Reynoso, and the year before it was former President Jimmy Carter.

    Most of Balakian's maternal grandmother's family was murdered during
    the genocide, he said, adding that his father's family was slightly
    more fortunate.

    Balakian said that as a child, he found himself surrounded by
    what he calls puzzles -- encoded messages about the trauma of the
    past. "I didn't know what to make of them as a kid," he said. "It
    wasn't really until I began to write as an adult, first as a poet,
    then as a nonfiction writer, that I began to probe how the trauma
    was transmitted to me."

    The aftermath never ends, and that is known from studying human
    rights histories, he said. "The trauma is passed on from generation
    to generation in different forms," he said.

    Balakian has written about this history and about that of his own
    family. In his memoir, "Black Dog of Fate: An American Son Uncovers
    His Armenian Past," he talks about the transmission of trauma across
    generations. "I can hardly say that I'm traumatized in the way the
    survivors are traumatized and witnesses are traumatized, but I do
    think that the scars and wounds of the history are transmitted, and
    often in complicated ways," he said. "In my family, these matters
    were not spoken about openly; in fact, they were quite repressed, but
    I came to see that it was really not possible to repress trauma fully."

    Balakian said he hopes that his readers have been able to take away
    some knowledge of this history and the complexity of the aftermath
    of that history. "The long aftermath of any history is always rich,"
    he said. "So my hope is literature makes a difference."

    He said he was honored to have received the award, but what was more
    moving for him was that the Armenia genocide, its legacy and the
    denials by the Turkish government are acknowledged as an important
    part of social justice. "That's moving to me and I'm honored to be
    among many people who have worked hard on this history."

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