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Armenia Takes Genocide-Recognition To Eurovision

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  • Armenia Takes Genocide-Recognition To Eurovision

    ARMENIA TAKES GENOCIDE-RECOGNITION TO EUROVISION

    EurasiaNet.org
    March 13 2015

    March 13, 2015 - 2:41pm, by Giorgi Lomsadze

    Armenia plans to use Eurovision, the pop-and-politics fest
    extraordinaire, to ask Europe not to "deny" that the slaughter of
    thousands of ethnic Armenians in Ottoman Turkey amounted to genocide.

    The Armenian entry for Eurovision, "Don't Deny," has not formally been
    linked to many countries' - most notably, Turkey's - reluctance to
    admit that the slaying amounted to genocide. But in the song's video,
    presented on March 12, the subtext is fairly obvious.

    The performers, a sextet called Genealogy, are made up of five ethnic
    Armenian artists (from Australia, Ethiopia, France, Japan and the
    US), reportedly all descendants of survivors of the 1915 massacre,
    and a singer from Armenia.

    The group, mostly kitted out in contemporary renditions of early
    20th-century outfits, sing amidst retro-shots of an extended
    World-War-I-era family. The family ultimately vanishes, leaving empty
    chairs behind.

    Armenian Weekly claimed that each singer in the collective stands
    for a petal of the forget-me-not flower, the symbol chosen for the
    April 24 genocide-centennial in the Armenian capital, Yerevan. The
    publication claimed that Armenian singer Inga Arshakian represents
    the midpoint of the flower -- the center of gravity, if you will --
    for the far-flung Armenian Diaspora.

    The centennial's official commemoration date hits roughly a month
    before Eurovision's May 19-23 run in Vienna.

    Yet despite the obvious symbolism, Armenia denies that "Don't Deny"
    is about genocide denial. Arguably, it has its reasons. The country
    needs to make sure its submission makes it into the contest over
    complaints from century-old foe Turkey and modern-day enemy Azerbaijan.

    Already, Azerbaijan, which hosted the 2012 contest, has pledged that
    it will "act adequately" to stop Eurovision 2015 from "being sacrificed
    to the political ambitions of a country;" in other words, Armenia.

    The European Broadcasting Union maintains that it wants to avoid
    turning the contest, decided by cross-border voting, into a venue
    for political exchange. In 2009, an entry from Armenia's neighbor,
    Georgia, a song called "We Don't Wanna Put In," was disqualified for
    allegedly taking a swipe at Vladimir Putin, the then prime minister
    of host-country Russia.

    But the event is unavoidably political. Particularly in the post-Soviet
    region, where countries tend to take the result especially seriously.

    Don't expect anything different this time round.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/72516



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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