ON ARMENIA CENTENNIAL, US ROCKERS HOPE MUSIC RAISES PRESSURE
Agence France Presse
April 6, 2015 Monday 2:38 PM GMT
Los Angeles, April 6 2015
One hundred years after the mass killings of Armenians, US band System
of a Down is taking the fight for remembrance beyond politicians to
the world's music fans.
The Los Angeles-area hard rockers, who have sold more than 40 million
albums since the mid-1990s, are of Armenian descent and are preparing a
European tour to culminate in a public concert on April 23 in Yerevan,
the band's first performance in Armenia.
System of a Down's goal is one for which Armenians have campaigned
for decades -- with limited success -- for the world to recognize
the killings of some 1.5 million people in 1915 in the waning days
of the Ottoman Empire as a genocide.
Turkey, born of the ashes of the Ottoman Empire, has vehemently denied
a systematic effort to wipe out Armenians.
Turkey puts the death toll at 500,000 and pins the blame on the chaos
of World War I and starvation.
"We don't have the lobbying power that the Turkish government has. We
only have the stories of our surviving family members," drummer John
Dolmayan told AFP.
"That is why after 100 years -- or 150, or 200 years -- the truth is
going to come out," he said.
Band members acknowledged many concert-goers are foremost drawn to
the music but said they were heartened by the number of fans who
learned about 1915 through System of a Down.
"We do the best we can not to be preachy," Dolmayan said. "You can't
make people listen to you, you can't make them agree with you, but
you can provide them with a source of information that they can take
and explore."
Vocalist Serj Tankian said that the tour -- dubbed "Wake Up the Souls"
-- also had a broader purpose of raising awareness of how major human
rights abuses remain rampant 100 years later.
He pointed to the killings of Yazidis, Christians and other minorities
by the Islamic State movement -- including in parts of Syria that
witnessed bloodshed in 1915.
"It's very ironic that bodies are being buried right over the bones
of our ancestors in the same desert," Tankian said.
The United Nations adopted the Genocide Convention after World War
II, but Tankian noted that there was still "no executable agreement
among major powers that if a genocide occurs, all bets are off and
we should stop dealing with that country."
- Tense anniversary -
System of a Down said that the free concert in Yerevan's Republic
Square -- on the eve of what Armenians mark as Genocide Remembrance
Day -- would be band's longest-ever, with a set of 32 songs.
The band members said that they hoped some Turkish fans would come,
stressing that their grievances lay with the Turkish government rather
than people.
For the European tour, which includes sold-out arena shows in Britain,
France and Germany, System of a Down plans a three-part video montage
that, in part, will ask whether the cautious reaction to killings of
Armenians emboldened Nazi Germany to order the Holocaust.
US lawmakers have repeatedly introduced Armenian genocide resolutions
but successive administrations have intervened for the sake of
keeping relations with Turkey, a NATO ally and major player in the
Islamic world.
President Barack Obama has walked a fine line by standing by a
statement he made before his 2008 election that described "genocide"
without reusing the term.
- Personal for band -
System of a Down has not released an album in a decade and had not
been planning to tour, but the centennial is deeply personal for
the musicians.
Dolmayan, who was born in Lebanon, recalled learning at an early age
about how his great-grandfather was killed.
"I used to get very angry. Now that I understand all the politics,
my anger has disappeared and a sick, disgusting feeling replaced it,"
he said.
Tankian, whose grandparents were survivors, said that the cause turned
him into an all-round activist. System of a Down has previously spoken
out against the Iraq war and for environmental protection.
"In the United States -- a democracy, where I grew up -- I said, hang
on, why is the government shying away from the genocide word? How
many other genocides are being put aside because of politics or
political capital?"
From: A. Papazian
Agence France Presse
April 6, 2015 Monday 2:38 PM GMT
Los Angeles, April 6 2015
One hundred years after the mass killings of Armenians, US band System
of a Down is taking the fight for remembrance beyond politicians to
the world's music fans.
The Los Angeles-area hard rockers, who have sold more than 40 million
albums since the mid-1990s, are of Armenian descent and are preparing a
European tour to culminate in a public concert on April 23 in Yerevan,
the band's first performance in Armenia.
System of a Down's goal is one for which Armenians have campaigned
for decades -- with limited success -- for the world to recognize
the killings of some 1.5 million people in 1915 in the waning days
of the Ottoman Empire as a genocide.
Turkey, born of the ashes of the Ottoman Empire, has vehemently denied
a systematic effort to wipe out Armenians.
Turkey puts the death toll at 500,000 and pins the blame on the chaos
of World War I and starvation.
"We don't have the lobbying power that the Turkish government has. We
only have the stories of our surviving family members," drummer John
Dolmayan told AFP.
"That is why after 100 years -- or 150, or 200 years -- the truth is
going to come out," he said.
Band members acknowledged many concert-goers are foremost drawn to
the music but said they were heartened by the number of fans who
learned about 1915 through System of a Down.
"We do the best we can not to be preachy," Dolmayan said. "You can't
make people listen to you, you can't make them agree with you, but
you can provide them with a source of information that they can take
and explore."
Vocalist Serj Tankian said that the tour -- dubbed "Wake Up the Souls"
-- also had a broader purpose of raising awareness of how major human
rights abuses remain rampant 100 years later.
He pointed to the killings of Yazidis, Christians and other minorities
by the Islamic State movement -- including in parts of Syria that
witnessed bloodshed in 1915.
"It's very ironic that bodies are being buried right over the bones
of our ancestors in the same desert," Tankian said.
The United Nations adopted the Genocide Convention after World War
II, but Tankian noted that there was still "no executable agreement
among major powers that if a genocide occurs, all bets are off and
we should stop dealing with that country."
- Tense anniversary -
System of a Down said that the free concert in Yerevan's Republic
Square -- on the eve of what Armenians mark as Genocide Remembrance
Day -- would be band's longest-ever, with a set of 32 songs.
The band members said that they hoped some Turkish fans would come,
stressing that their grievances lay with the Turkish government rather
than people.
For the European tour, which includes sold-out arena shows in Britain,
France and Germany, System of a Down plans a three-part video montage
that, in part, will ask whether the cautious reaction to killings of
Armenians emboldened Nazi Germany to order the Holocaust.
US lawmakers have repeatedly introduced Armenian genocide resolutions
but successive administrations have intervened for the sake of
keeping relations with Turkey, a NATO ally and major player in the
Islamic world.
President Barack Obama has walked a fine line by standing by a
statement he made before his 2008 election that described "genocide"
without reusing the term.
- Personal for band -
System of a Down has not released an album in a decade and had not
been planning to tour, but the centennial is deeply personal for
the musicians.
Dolmayan, who was born in Lebanon, recalled learning at an early age
about how his great-grandfather was killed.
"I used to get very angry. Now that I understand all the politics,
my anger has disappeared and a sick, disgusting feeling replaced it,"
he said.
Tankian, whose grandparents were survivors, said that the cause turned
him into an all-round activist. System of a Down has previously spoken
out against the Iraq war and for environmental protection.
"In the United States -- a democracy, where I grew up -- I said, hang
on, why is the government shying away from the genocide word? How
many other genocides are being put aside because of politics or
political capital?"
From: A. Papazian