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Filmmaker Journalist Tsvetana Paskaleva Kicks off Tour w/AGBU France

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  • Filmmaker Journalist Tsvetana Paskaleva Kicks off Tour w/AGBU France

    AGBU Press Office
    55 East 59th Street
    New York, NY 10022-1112
    Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
    Fax: 212.319.6507
    Email: [email protected]
    Website: www.agbu.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    Wednesday, January 9, 2013

    Award-Winning Filmmaker and Journalist Tsvetana Paskaleva Kicks off
    International Tour with AGBU France

    Screenings of Groundbreaking Documentary "Wounds of Karabakh" Attract
    Hundreds

    For millions around the world, news and images of the Nagorno Karabakh
    war with Azerbaijan are forever burned in memory. The Bulgarian
    reporter Tsvetana Paskaleva's dispatches from the frontlines of the
    1988-1994 conflict not only helped propel it into the international
    spotlight, but have earned her numerous awards and were developed into
    her seven groundbreaking documentaries. The films, entitled
    collectively "Wounds of Karabakh," received renewed attention over the
    past few weeks during a series of events organized and sponsored by
    AGBU France, which kicked off Paskaleva's international tour.

    Paskaleva's work has long been utilized to open the eyes of world
    leaders to the atrocities suffered by the Armenian community in
    Karabakh. From 1993-1994, "Wounds of Karabakh" was screened before
    Amnesty International, the Parliament of Canada, the United Nations
    and the United States Congress, among other government bodies and
    organizations. On Thursday, November 29, 2012, the French Senate was
    added to that list. At the invitation of French Senator Philippe
    Kaltenbach, who heads the France-Armenia Inter-Parliamentary
    Friendship Group, a delegation of Armenian parliamentary leaders met
    with French representatives in Luxembourg Palace. There, they viewed
    the film and participated in a roundtable discussion on peace and
    dialogue in Nagorno Karabakh. In the days that followed, dozens more
    elected officials and community leaders gathered at AGBU centers
    across the country.

    On Friday, November 30, 2012, AGBU Valence hosted a screening that
    drew guests from both near and far, including the Mayor of Valence
    Alain Maurice, the Mayor of the Armenian city of Idjevan Varuzhan
    Nersisyan, and AGBU Valence Chair Jean Jacques Vartanian. Since AGBU
    Valence adopted Idjevan as a sister city over two years ago, the two
    have joined forces to promote cultural and sustainable development
    initiatives internationally, and Mr. Nersisyan's presence demonstrated
    that their relationship remains strong. The following day she headed
    to Marseille for a showing of the film that was co-organized by the
    local AGBU chapter and the Coordination Council of Armenian
    Organizations of France (CCAF). AGBU Lyon also partnered with the
    CCAF, as well as with Radio Armenia, for their screening, which was
    held on Monday, December 3, 2012, and attracted over 70 attendees,
    among them AGBU Lyon Chair Michel Sandjian.

    At each stop on her AGBU tour, Paskaleva, who was joined by her
    producer Zara Nazarian, recounted what first prompted her to visit
    Karabakh, the violence she witnessed there, and ways she believes the
    region can achieve peace and stability to move forward. In 1991, when
    reports of mass deportations of Armenians living in the Karabakh
    villages of Getashen, Martunashen and Shahumyan reached Moscow, where
    Paskaleva was a PhD film student, she immediately packed her camera
    and traveled into the heart of the conflict. What she thought would be
    a short-term assignment turned into a three year engagement, as she
    began reporting for major news outlets and became the only
    international journalist on the ground continuously throughout the
    Karabakh war. She filmed hundreds of hours of harrowing footage,
    risking her life time and time again to ensure that the horrors of the
    war did not go unreported. Her extraordinary acts of bravery were
    recognized by a Medal for Courage from the Armenian Government in
    1996, as well as with the rank of Karabakh Defense Army Colonel, which
    she received in 1995 despite never bearing arms during the conflict.

    Years later, though, Paskaleva says her work is not yet done. As she
    commented during the AGBU France events, "Now is the time for
    Armenians to win the last battle: the diplomatic battle...I initiated
    this international tour to remind our politicians that the conflict is
    still painfully unresolved and that they bear the responsibility to
    bring sustainable peace to Karabakh so we may finally put the past
    behind us." At each of the screenings organized by AGBU France, policy
    makers were already responding to Paskaleva's appeal, gathering to
    discuss the status of Nagorno Karabakh and ways to create a brighter
    future in the region. As Tsvetana Paskaleva's international tour
    continues, she is sure to continue to inspire the political will to
    more toward positive change.

    Established in 1906, AGBU (www.agbu.org) is the world's largest
    non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU
    preserves and promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through
    educational, cultural and humanitarian programs, annually touching the
    lives of some 400,000 Armenians around the world.

    For more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please
    visit www.agbu.org.


    From: Baghdasarian
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