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Groundbreaking Conference At Columbia University Highlights Monument

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  • Groundbreaking Conference At Columbia University Highlights Monument

    GROUNDBREAKING CONFERENCE AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY HIGHLIGHTS MONUMENTS AND MEMORY, ANCIENT CITY OF ANI

    By MassisPost
    Updated: March 26, 2015

    By Taleen Babayan

    Scholars from around the world participated in an in-depth and
    timely academic conference, "Monuments and Memory," focusing on
    buildings and material culture in the aftermath of mass violence,
    with a special consideration on the ruins of the medieval city of
    Ani in eastern Turkey, on Friday, February 20, at Columbia's School
    of International and Public Affairs in a standing-room only event
    spearheaded by Professors Peter Balakian and Rachel Goshgarian.

    The all-day symposium commenced with the initial session, "Monuments
    and Memory: The Significance of Material Culture in the Aftermath
    of Genocide," which was moderated by Christine Philliou, Associate
    Professor of History, Columbia University, and featured Peter Balakian,
    Donald M. Constance H. Rebar Professor of the Humanities, Colgate
    University; Marianne Hirsch, William Peterfield Trent Professor
    of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University and
    Professor in the Institute for Research on Women, Gender and Sexuality;
    and Andrew Herscher, Associate Professor at the University of Michigan.

    Hirsch elaborated on monumental memory, which sustains collective
    memory, and the mobilization of history through these monuments
    on sites of destruction. She touched on how public memory has
    responded with exhibitions, including two major ones in Paris about
    the liberation during the Second World War, as well as a year of new
    museums built on destruction sites, such as the 9/11 Memorial Museum
    in New York.

    "Museums have the capacity to be agents of transformation," said
    Hirsch, who noted that memorial museums bring the past into the
    present. "The museum is performing a series of small acts of repair."

    Herscher spoke about genocide as counter-memory and the politics of
    the counter-monument. He cited the "Memorial in Exile" of the Bosnian
    War that was unveiled at the 2012 Summer Olympic Park in London,
    which was a counter-monument to the removal of all traces of violence
    by Bosnian Serbs soldiers in the 1990s in Republika Srpska. He noted
    that in Germany in the 1980s, Holocaust memorials were being imagined
    and commissioned and that they "defied ambitions of permanence,
    durability and visibility."

    "These new monuments were designed to disappear, not be visible,"
    said Herscher, adding that violence was culturally productive. "Memory
    is a prime act of consciousness."

    Focusing on Grigoris Balakian's "The Ruins of Ani" published in 1910,
    Peter Balakian discussed the history of Ani depicted in G. Balakian's
    book, which he said shed light on Armenian intellectual thinking of the
    time. According to G. Balakian, the churches of Ani were foundations
    of gothic architecture in Europe and were of the highest artistic
    merit. Peter Balakian noted that Ani is today a place of cultural
    destruction and Turkey needs to tend to this issue, which could be
    the beginning of some restitution.

    "The current situation creates another post-genocidal trauma,"
    said Balakian.

    Balakian argued for a revaluation of the present situation of Ani
    through a post-colonial lens and asserted that, "Armenians remain
    indigenous to the region."

    The second session of the symposium focused on "The Medieval Armenian
    City of Ani: A Case Study in the Politicization of Art History,
    History, Historical Monuments and Preservation in a Post-Genocide
    Context," moderated by Nanor Kebranian, Assistant Professor of Middle
    East South Asian and African Studies, Columbia University.

    Christina Maranci, Arthur H. Dadian and Ara Oztemel Chair of Armenian
    Art and Architectural History at Tufts University, spoke about
    memory and medieval architecture in Ani. She noted the similarities
    of the Zvartnots and Garkashen churches and that Zvartnots represents
    "a creative fusion of traditions from Syria and the Holy Land."

    She mentioned that medieval accounts of Zvartnots praised the
    structure and although it was dedicated to St. Gregory, it showcased a
    specialized and localized artisanship. There was "careful observation
    of material past in an effort to preserve it if by reproduction."

    Heghnar Watenpaugh, Associate Professor of Art History, University of
    California, Davis, elaborated on the politics of cultural heritage
    at Ani. Providing background on the historical city, she said Ani
    flourished in the 10th and 11th centuries when it became the capital
    of the Armenian kingdom, but it was deserted by the 18th century. She
    noted Ani is one of Turkey's more "strenuous" tourist sites and the
    ancient city's history is sparingly mentioned, instead it is downplayed
    in the signage. She raised a concern among preservation activists of
    the intentional removal of crosses by the Turkish Ministry of Culture
    to erase signs of Christian Armenia presence in Anatolia. A new phase
    began in 2006, where academics devised a new plan of Ani and dialogue
    began to emerge between Armenian and Turkey.

    "Ani is a cultural bridge between Armenians and Turkey," said
    Watenpaugh. "Ani diplomacy reinforces the notion that cultural heritage
    and politics are intertwined."

    Rachel Goshgarian, Assistant Professor of History at Lafayette
    College, spoke about Armenian structures and the people who lived
    or are living with them in and around Ani. She noted that the Kars
    Church remains in the center of the city but it was converted into a
    mosque very early on while other area monuments have been neglected,
    destroyed or repurposed. The World Monument Fund, a New York-based
    non-profit organization dedicated to preserving and protecting
    endangered ancient and historic sites around the world, is working
    with the Turkish Ministry of Culture to encourage more attention be
    paid to these Armenian monuments.

    "Another important voice that needs to be engaged in the conversation
    are the local people who interact with these monuments every day,"
    said Goshgarian, who questioned what these structures mean to people
    on the ground, who interact with these monuments on a daily basis.

    "Individuals who live with these buildings may not understand
    the visual language of the structures but they have repurposed,
    restructured the sites and they have their own memories of the places
    as well," said Goshgarian.

    Yavuz Ozkaya, restoration architect and founder of PROMET, who has
    worked on the preservation of historical sites around Turkey, said
    that Ani is a unique site with great challenges. He gave a summary
    of projects in Ani, in particular the Church of St. Gregory of
    Tigrant Honents, the Church of the Holy Redeemer, and the Mosque of
    Minuchir, and the major challenges that were faced, such as making
    the roofs functional. He showed historical surveys and drawings of
    the reconstruction efforts, along with the World Monuments Fund and
    the Turkish Ministry of Culture.

    The final session, "Monuments, Memory, Restitution, and Social Justice:
    What issues do monuments raise in these historical contexts?

    How can social justice and restitution be achieved decades after the
    event of genocide or mass-killing?" was moderated by Hamid Dabashi,
    Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature
    at Columbia University.

    Leo Spitzer, K.T. Vernon Professor of History Emeritus and Research
    Professor at Dartmouth College, discussed connective memories, dreams,
    and journeys of return. He spoke about the power and persistence of
    attachments to an idea of a city and the "reconstitution to a place
    that draws on nostalgic and traumatic memories."

    "Persecution, displacement, war, refugee emigrants and post-generation
    carry open wounds that entail needs for repair, desires for
    re-establishment with past or physically undertaken journeys of
    return," said Spitzer.

    He noted that memories are not re-connective but collective,
    and the abundance of informative materials, such as a collective
    digital archive containing family photo histories, documents and
    postcards, have been central factors in creating richer and more
    detailed landscapes of memory, fostering "a sense of community and
    group identity."

    Osman Kavala, Founder of Anadolu Kultur, a non-profit company based
    in Istanbul, whose mission is to build bridges among different
    ethnic, religious and regional groups, spoke about unearthing
    Anatolia's Armenian heritage. He discussed the minority status
    given to non-Muslims following the Lausanne treaty post World War I,
    resulting in a "stigma" among the citizens. He added that the "spirit
    of conquest is an inseparable component of Ottoman history." He noted
    recent positive developments including Turkey's efforts to restore
    Armenian heritage sites and talks between the two countries.

    Elazar Barkan, Professor of International and Public Affairs at
    Columbia University, spoke about cultural heritage and historical
    dialogue as a form of restitution. He also discussed the widespread
    devastation as a result of local war, which creates another form of
    destruction inflicted through archaeology - excavating one culture
    over another.

    "Changing culture and heritage in post-conflict reconstruction is
    physical construction of a new identity," said Barkan. "There is very
    little restoration after conflict."

    He said it is a positive step that churches are renovated with the
    aim of "exhibiting tourism and tolerance." He said progress has been
    made in Ani and people are taking on greater involvement with conflict
    resolution and "engaging in the legacy of cultural heritage."

    "Advocacy and scholarship aims to narrow the scope of perspective of
    past violence and the knowledge of history to resolve the conflict,"
    said Barkan.

    The program concluded with a question and answer session, which
    included the participation of all of the conference speakers.

    "This conference took the discourse about the Armenian past in Turkey
    to some new places and the voice of Turkish presenters was very
    important," said Balakian. "The mix of scholarly voices was unusual
    and unique, from medieval Ottomantists to contemporary restoration
    specialists, resulting in an intensely engaged and focused audience."

    Added Watenpaugh, "The legacy of the destruction of cultural heritage
    as a critical aspect of war, ethnic cleansing and genocide underscored
    the conference and the destruction of Armenian life in Anatolia
    is being responded to through important work of reconstruction of
    religious and historical sites in Eastern Anatolia."

    "The Armenian Center is proud to have hosted this world-class gathering
    of scholars," said Dr. Nicole Vartanian, vice chair of The Armenian
    Center at Columbia University. "The conference explored issues that
    incorporated myriad disciplines and perspectives, and produced the kind
    of engaging dialogue that we aimed to facilitate among our panelists
    and participants. We are grateful to our fellow board members,
    Professors Balakian and Goshgarian, for bringing this caliber of
    programming to Columbia University vis-a-vis the Armenian Center."

    Heghnar Watenpaugh speaking about the politics and cultural heritage
    of Ani

    Rachel Goshgarian discussing the Armenian structures and people of Ani

    Peter Balakian elaborating on Grigoris Balakian's The Ruins of Ani

    Christina Maranci speaking about memory and medieval architecture
    at Ani

    http://massispost.com/2015/03/groundbreaking-conference-at-columbia-university-highlights-monuments-and-memory-ancient-city-of-ani/

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