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: City's Armenian Heritage Attracts American Author

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  • : City's Armenian Heritage Attracts American Author

    CITY'S ARMENIAN HERITAGE ATTRACTS AMERICAN AUTHOR

    Times of India
    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/chennai/Citys-Armenian-heritage-attracts-American-author/articleshow/12012539.cms
    Feb 24 2012

    CHENNAI: Feedback from his youngest and oldest readers is what
    first-time author John D Balian values the most.

    His youngest fan is his son John, who now wants to be called Jonah
    after the central character in his book 'Gray Wolves and White Doves',
    while the oldest is an 80-year-old man from Bengaluru who wrote him
    a letter of appreciation. "I didn't expect my story to have such
    resonance," he said.

    The Armenian-American doctor was in Chennai on Thursday to launch
    his book based on the persecution of Armenians in Turkey during the
    1960s and '70s. "All the events in the book are real, based on my own
    experiences or those of my family, though it is a work of fiction. I
    have moved the events around to make the story flow better," said
    Balian, who was born in a remote village in eastern Turkey. He fled
    persecution from neo-fascists and migrated to the US when he was 16.

    The book, set in Turkey, Armenia, Syria and Jerusalem, talks of how
    Armenians were persecuted 50 years after the genocide of 1915 to 1919
    when 1.5 million Armenians were massacred by the Ottoman Turks.

    "Many books have been set during the genocide, which Turkey still
    does not acknowledge. My book is different in that it goes 50 years
    later to show how attitudes have still not changed. Even today,
    that sentiment exists among neo-fascists," he said, referring to the
    example of Nobel prize winner Orhan Pamuk getting into trouble over
    using the word 'genocide' to refer to the killings.

    Balian, who is looking for a distributor in India, said he chose
    Chennai for the India launch because he has visited the city many times
    while working for an healthcare corporate, and is familiar with its
    strong Armenian heritage. "At the St Thomas Mount church, there are
    inscriptions in Armenian and Portuguese. There is an Armenian Church
    and street here and the world's first Armenian journal was published
    here 300 years ago," he said.


    From: Baghdasarian
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