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  • Bohjalian Electrifies Audience At Columbia University

    BOHJALIAN ELECTRIFIES AUDIENCE AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
    By Taleen Babayan

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/05/07/bohjalian-electrifies-audience-at-columbia-university/
    May 7, 2013

    Critically acclaimed author Chris Bohjalian led a spirited and
    engaging book discussion about his New York Times best-selling novel
    The Sandcastle Girls on Thurs., April 19 at Columbia University's
    Cowin Conference Center at an event hosted by the Armenian Center at
    Columbia University.

    Bohjalian speaking to the audience at Columbia about his book 'The
    Sandcastle Girls' (Photo by Robert V. Kinoian)

    On tour for the paperback release of The Sandcastle Girls, a love story
    that takes place during the Armenian Genocide, Bohjalian impressed
    the audience with his deep historical knowledge of the genocide and
    the powerful rippling effect the book has had in educating people
    about the atrocities.

    In her introduction of Bohjalian, Dr. Nicole Vartanian, vice-chair
    of the Armenian Center at Columbia, noted the author's "boundless
    intellectual curiosity" and his ability to pull in his audience from
    the very beginning.

    "His skilled narrative is seamless and captivating all at once,"
    she said. "Bohjalian's pen and prose merge to create an epic story
    of love, loss, betrayal, survival, hope, fear, and fortitude."

    For the audience to gain a better understanding of the significance
    of The Sandcastle Girls and how it came into being, Bohjalian began
    his presentation by sharing photos of his family dating back to
    19th-century Constantinople.

    One was of his grandfather as a youngster sitting on his father's
    lap at the turn of the 20th century in the Ottoman Empire. "My
    grandparents, Leo and Haigouhi Bohjalian, were survivors of the
    Armenian Genocide," he said. "Like most survivors, they took their
    stories to their graves."

    Flashing a black and white photo of his parents' wedding day, Bohjalian
    revealed that his mother was not Armenian, but Swedish. "My mother was
    never the outsider because she adored her Armenian family," he said,
    showing a touching photo of a bronze charm of Armenia that was on
    his mother's keychain.

    Shedding some light on his family's history, Bohjalian said his
    great-grandfather provided cavalry horsemen to the Turks. But with
    the start of the genocide, they confiscated his horses, home, and
    property in Constantinople, and killed him. The surviving members of
    the family made their way to Egypt, and his grandparents eventually
    met and wed in Paris.

    Growing up in Westchester, N.Y., Bohjalian was close with his
    grandparents, and would accompany them to the Holy Cross Armenian
    Church in Washington Heights on Sundays. The memory of his grandparents
    and the impact they had on his life remained with him, as when he first
    attempted, 17 years ago, to write a novel about the genocide. After
    completing the manuscript, however, he was not happy with the result;
    almost two decades later, he decided it was time to try again. But
    this time, he wanted to do it right, because "in my heart, I knew
    The Sandcastle Girls was the most important novel I was ever going
    to write."

    Members of the Executive Board of the Armenian Center at Columbia
    (Photo by Robert V. Kinoian)

    The book focuses on the story of an American nurse who brings aid
    to Armenians in Aleppo, Syria, where she meets Armen Petrosyan, an
    engineer who lost his wife and infant daughter to the genocide. In
    the present, their granddaughter Laura is drawn back by a photo she
    sees at the Armenian Library Museum of America (ALMA) in Watertown,
    Mass., of a woman who, based on the caption, is related to her. This
    picture links the present and the past. As Bohjalian noted, there is an
    "enormous amount of my childhood in this book."

    When he completed his manuscript, Bohjaian was warned that the book
    would be a commercial disaster because "no one has heard about the
    Armenian Genocide and no one wants to read about the death of 1.5
    million people." He maintained his belief in the novel, however,
    and of getting this story out to the world.

    He thanked the support of many Armenian organizations, such as the
    AGBU and ANCA, which hosted "remarkable events in three time zones
    in the first three days the book was published." Word of mouth spread
    quickly and soon Bohjalian was giving book talks to non-Armenians who
    were interested in hearing the truth about the genocide, a chapter
    of history they had never known. Bohjalian showed pictures of book
    groups who sent him photos expressing how much the book meant to them,
    as well as photos posted by those who were reading The Sandcastle
    Girls all over the world, from Norway to Afghanistan. Within weeks,
    he had sold the foreign rights to such countries as the United Kingdom,
    Brazil, Russia, France, and Israel.

    A highlight of Bohjalian's presentation was a photo journey that
    included the Catholicosate of Cilicia in Antelias, Lebanon, where
    there is an Armenian Genocide Museum, and Der Zor in Syria, where
    "to this day you can run your fingers through the sand and come away
    with fragments of skull and bone of our ancestors."

    Bohjalian also made a trip to the Jebel orphanage in Lebanon, founded
    by a Danish missionary, which housed more than 3,000 Armenian orphans,
    and the Musa Dagh memorial in Anjar, where he saw canisters that were
    once filled with ashes of genocide martyrs.

    His journey concluded with a trip to Yerevan, where he "went to
    the Armenian Genocide memorial in Yerevan and placed flowers at the
    eternal flame in memory of our ancestors."

    "It was important for me to see the geography of the Armenian soul
    from the Armenian ground, to see Mount Ararat," he said. "Ararat
    and Musa Dagh are two mountains that comprise the geography of the
    Armenian soul."

    Mark Momjian, the chair of the Armenian Center at Columbia University,
    thanked Bohjalian for a gripping and emotional discussion. He presented
    Bohjalian with a gift of an inscribed copy of the novel Mayfair by
    the Armenian writer Michael Arlen, and invited guests to a reception,
    where Bohjalian signed copies of his books.

    Bohjalian's story behind The Sandcastle Girls and his ties to his
    Armenian heritage inspired attendees. Nora Arkelian traveled all the
    way from Eerie, Pa., so she and her children could hear Bohjalian's
    talk. "I wanted my children to make this trip with me so that they
    understand their heritage, and how special it is to be Armenian,"
    said Arkelian, whose children never met their great-grandmother, a
    genocide survivor. "Chris' characters in the book reminded me of how
    strong a people we are. As Chris reminds us, 'We are the mountain.'"

    Columbia University Teacher's College student Anna Abalyan was
    impressed with Bohjalian's discussion and was "glad to see the book
    is helping raise awareness about the Armenian Genocide." Historian Dr.

    Vartan Matossian appreciated Bohjalian's ability to convey the story
    of how the book was written.

    "I was particularly interested to hear his reflections about
    being the son of an 'assimilated' Armenian-American and how he had
    been, predictably, attracted to trying his hand at the literary
    representation of the genocide, if such a thing is really feasible,
    over the past 20 years," Matossian said.

    The Armenian Center at Columbia University was proud to host such an
    impassioned and remarkable writer like Bohjalian. "The timing of Chris
    Bohjalian's inspirational talk at Columbia University, marking the
    98th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, is critical," said Momjian.

    "With the centennial two years away, our hearts and minds are moved
    by this great writer and his dedication not only to preserving the
    memory of this terrible crime, but the miraculous survival of the
    Armenian people."

    "Chris' presentation not only offered a fascinating perspective on
    the novel's, and his own, evolution through the stories it tells, but
    also demonstrated why he is such a celebrated and beloved novelist,"
    said Vartanian. "Interweaving personal anecdotes with the challenges
    of authoring a novel that requires such historical precision, he
    humbly exposed his writing and editing processes to the audience
    in a way that will linger with us as we return to the pages of this
    extraordinary novel again and again."




    From: A. Papazian
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