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System Of A Down Push For Recognition Of The Armenian Genocide

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  • System Of A Down Push For Recognition Of The Armenian Genocide

    SYSTEM OF A DOWN PUSH FOR RECOGNITION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    LA Weekly
    April 2 2015

    By Theis Duelund
    Thursday, April 2, 2015

    "A lot of my family on both sides was exterminated," System of a Down
    drummer John Dolmayan begins. "My great-grandfather was shot in front
    of his family. Women and children were killed. People were raped.

    Everything horrible you can imagine happened."

    Dolmayan calmly recites the laundry list of atrocities committed
    against his family when the Ottoman Empire began systematically
    exterminating its Armenian minority exactly 100 years ago. His neutral
    tone is hard-earned, the product of years of talking to journalists
    about a trauma that has been buried in history.

    This month, System of a Down embark on their Wake Up the Souls tour,
    which kicks off April 6 at the Forum and culminates with the band's
    first performance in Armenia's capital city of Yerevan on April 23.

    "The goal is to raise awareness about the Armenian genocide, and
    also to put the idea into people's minds that justice can prevail,
    even if it's been a hundred years," frontman Serj Tankian says.

    The Armenian genocide is one of the best-kept secrets of the 20th
    century, although it was not marginalized at the time it took place.

    In 1918, Henry Morgenthau, the U.S. ambassador to the Ottoman Empire,
    wrote in his memoirs: "The great massacres and persecutions of the
    past seem almost insignificant when compared to the sufferings of
    the Armenian race in 1915." But for the past century, a campaign of
    denial orchestrated and perpetuated by one Turkish administration
    after another has purposely obscured the historical record.

    On April 24, 1915, Ottoman authorities, high on the nationalist
    rhetoric of the Young Turks movement, rounded up Armenian intellectuals
    and community organizers and executed them. A ruthless propaganda
    strategy vilifying the Armenian population, which might as well
    have served as the Nazi Party's template, helped justify what was to
    follow. From 1915 to 1918, an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were
    massacred, and hundreds of thousands more were driven from their lands.

    "It's time for Turkey to come to grips with its past so we can all
    move on."

    "The most common misconception is that the genocide was part of a war,"
    says Dolmayan, who was born in Lebanon, where many Armenians fled,
    and moved to the United States as a child with his family. "When you
    have 1.5 million people from one side die, it's rarely a war. The
    Armenians fought back, but the people who were killed weren't
    soldiers. They were kids, women, the elderly. They were farmers and
    craftsmen. They were put in caves and fires were lit in front so they
    would asphyxiate. It wasn't like the Armenian army was beat by the
    Turkish army. The intention was to wipe out all Armenians."

    To date, 23 countries have recognized the Armenian genocide. The United
    States is notably absent from that list, although 43 states have
    officially recognized the genocide, including California. "It's the
    ugly side of realpolitik. It's shameful to use genocide as political
    capital," Tankian says. "We become apologists for those in Turkey
    denying the genocide, for those who put journalists in jail for
    questioning the official stand. It encourages more oppression."

    Becoming the poster band for the Armenian genocide was not part of
    the plan when System of a Down formed in L.A. in 1994. But history
    was an undeniable part of the alt-metal group from the beginning. All
    members -- in addition to Tankian and Dolmayan, System of a Down
    includes guitarist Daron Malakian and bassist Shavo Odadjian --
    are from Armenian families affected by the genocide.

    "When we first started touring, people in the U.S. didn't really
    know who Armenians were. This was long before Kim Kardashian," says
    Dolmayan, who grew up in the San Fernando Valley. "There wasn't a lot
    of sympathy toward the cause, especially with Turkey being an ally
    to the U.S. and NATO. Armenia had been a part of the Soviet Union for
    60 years." (It became an independent country in 1991.) "There was an
    education process that had to happen."

    For Tankian, it's all about learning from history's mistakes, but
    he says that's impossible so long as Turkey won't acknowledge the
    genocide. "If you go to the third floor of the Holocaust Museum in
    Washington, D.C., there's a quote from Hitler on the wall. As he was
    about to invade Poland, he said to his generals, 'Who speaks today
    of the annihilation of the Armenians?' He thought he could walk away
    with impunity from all of the atrocities he was about to commit."

    At its heart, the Wake Up the Souls tour is about preventing such
    atrocities from ever being swept under the rug again. Both Dolmayan
    and Tankian also stress that the denial of the genocide continues to
    shape Armenian-American culture and identity.

    "Turkey's refusal to recognize the genocide is a very unique historical
    fact," Tankian says. "It's become part of [Armenian] culture to try to
    fight this injustice. It's time for Turkey to come to grips with its
    past so we can all move on from this psychological trauma. Armenian
    culture is very old and rich. We want to move on and celebrate that,
    but we can't until there's recognition."

    "Being a victim of genocide, especially one that hasn't been
    recognized, makes you more sensitive to injustice in general,"
    Dolmayan adds.

    Although System of a Down have a huge Armenian fan base, the April
    23 concert in Yerevan will be the band's first in its ancestral land.

    "Armenians have been waiting for System of a Down for years, so
    this is going to be big," Tankian says. "As part of the show, we
    will have a three-part video presentation introducing the genocide
    and different elements of it in an artistic fashion. It's all still
    coming together." The band also is looking into streaming the concert
    online for fans worldwide.

    "My No. 1 personal goal with the tour is to raise awareness about
    this catastrophe and make an impact on Turkey and other nations,"
    Tankian says. "I'm looking for results, to put it plainly. There is
    more awareness today. I'm proud to say that the band has been a part of
    that change. The importance of this event is how it affects us today."

    Since forming System of a Down more than 20 years ago, Tankian and his
    bandmates have received countless emails and letters from people all
    over the world, asking for more information about the genocide. "It
    would be nice if Turkey accepted responsibility, but they're probably
    not happy about restitutions and giving land back. It will be costly
    for them, but avoiding it won't make it go away," Dolmayan says.

    Proposals for reparations differ greatly. Key to all of them is the
    demand for land return: Many argue that the Turkish-Armenian border as
    designated in the unratified 1920 Treaty of Sèvres should be restored.

    In Dolmayan's opinion, this is about more than just what happened to
    Armenians a century ago. "The worst thing isn't that people don't care
    about a genocide that happened a hundred years ago," the drummer says.

    "The worst thing is that people don't care about genocide happening
    today."

    http://www.laweekly.com/music/system-of-a-down-push-for-recognition-of-the-armenian-genocide-5463496

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