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G.N. South Grad Pens Play On Genocide

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  • G.N. South Grad Pens Play On Genocide

    G.N. SOUTH GRAD PENS PLAY ON GENOCIDE

    The Island Now
    Dec 11 2014

    By Adam Lidgett TheIslandNow.com

    When Anoush Baghdassarian wrote a play about the Armenian Genocide
    during his senior year at Great Neck South High School, she said,
    she only intended it to be a learning tool.

    Now Baghdassarian, who studies psychology and literature at Claremont
    McKenna College in Claremont, Calif., can say she is a published
    playwright, with her play, "FOUND," published by Xlibris.com, and
    available at amazon.com and barnesandnoble.com.

    "I just want people to know that this play is available to put on in
    communities, and to give to students to learn about the genocide,"
    she said.

    As part of that effort, she said, she is having a book signing on Jan.

    8 at the Barnes and Noble in Manhasset at 1542 Northern Blvd.

    Baghdassarian said she is not really interested in making money from
    the play, but that she wants instead to raise awareness and educate
    people about the Armenian Genocide.

    April 24, 2015 will mark the 100th anniversary of the start of the
    genocide, which claimed the lives of 1.5 million Armenians by the
    Ottoman Empire from 1915 through 1916.

    Baghdassarian said with the anniversary coming up this is the right
    time for schools as well as churches, temples and mosques to use to
    help others learn about the "forgotten genocide."

    The play centers on an Armenian woman named Lucine, who lives through
    the genocide.

    The stage is split in two, with one side of the play being a young
    Lucine in 1915, and the other side being Lucine in 1925, Baghdassarian
    said.

    Baghdassarian, who is of Armenian decent, said the show starts in 1915,
    with Lucine's home being invaded and her brother being kidnapped by
    the Ottomans. The rest of the play involves Lucine, in 1925, writing
    out the events as she saw them during the genocide.

    As Lucine's character writes about her experiences on stage them,
    they are played out on the 1915 portion of the stage.

    The play's plot is driven by Lucine trying to find her brother,
    and her worries about what happens to him.

    "The most relevant message to spread in Great Neck would be to teach
    people that when Hitler was planning the annihilation of the Polish
    Jews, he justified himself by saying, 'who, after all, speaks today
    of the annihilation of the Armenians?,'" Baghdassarian said. Hitler
    said this during his "Obersalzberg Speech" he gave on Aug. 22, 1939.

    Baghdassarian directed the play initially during May and June of 2013
    at the Levels Teen Center at the Great Neck Library, she said.

    The play then was produced at the Armenian Church of the Holy Martyrs
    in Bayside, Queens, later than June.

    The show eventually moved to her college in California in 2014,
    where she directed, produced and acted in it, Baghdassarian said.

    Baghdassarian said she has been involved in theatre since she was in
    the fifth grade, and that she has always loved to write.

    She said that while taking a playwriting class she was required to
    write a monologue, which would eventually, after a time, morph into
    the first scene of "FOUND."

    Baghdassarian said she has been trying to educate people about the
    Armenian Genocide since she was in the sixth grade.

    She originally starting by doing educational posters, and eventually
    would move on with her drive to educate with the play, she said.

    "People have said to me 'someone asked me about the Armenian Genocide
    and I knew it because of your presentation,'" Baghdassarian said.

    She said many of her family members were killed during the Armenian
    Genocide, and that various members of her family also had to escape
    to other areas of the world, including Egypt and South America.

    Baghdassarian said she is currently in a screenwriting class at
    Claremont McKenna College where she is working on a screenplay about
    the Palestine-Israel conflict.

    She said she eventually wants to practice law in the human rights
    field, and would also like to write plays about human rights issues
    as well, that would be both entertaining and educational.

    http://www.theislandnow.com/great_neck/g-n-south-grad-pens-play-on-genocide/article_ad329408-8153-11e4-8922-a32bdb1a14ae.html

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