Gagrule.net

Gagrule.net News, Views, Interviews worldwide

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • GagruleLive
  • Armenia profile

The World’s sexiest people are Armenian women

May 6, 2015 By administrator

21985Kim Kardashian is having a major effect on yet another “sexiest” list, as The Huffington Post reveals a new survey by MissTravel, a destination dating website, its customers say the world’s sexiest women are from Armenia and the world’s sexiest men are from Ireland. The travel site polled over 110,000 Americans to determine who they thought was sexiest.

The sexiest nationalities for women:

10. Lebanese
9. Bulgarian
8. Filipina
7. Brazilian
6. Australian
5. English
4. Colombian
3. American
2. Barbadian/Bajan
1. Armenian

The sexiest nationalities for men:

10. Spanish
9. Danish
8. Nigerian
7. Italian
6. Scottish
5. English
4. American
3. Pakistani
2. Australian
1. Irish

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, sexiest, woman, World

Turkey: Demolition of Istanbul Armenian orphanage pauses, amid outcry

May 6, 2015 By administrator

orph.thumbEfforts to demolish Kamp Armen, an Armenian orphanage in Istanbul’s Tuzla district that was expropriated in the wake of Turkey’s 1980 military coup, began early May 6, the Hurriyet Daily News reports. 

However, demolition work halted with the intervention of concerned citizens including Garo Paylan and Sezin Uçar, parliament candidates from the opposition Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) and Ali Çelik, the Tuzla district head of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP).

Paylan underlined the spiritual significance of the building and their determination to prevent the razing.

“The demolition had already begun but we arrived here and stopped it. They will now call the police to remove us. However, more people are arriving by the minute; we will resist,” he said.

“The orphanage is of historical value to us. Some 1,500 children lived here and learned about their culture. We are struggling to prevent its destruction for a second time.”

The issue received widespread attention once the news broke out on social media, with #KampArmen immediately becoming a trending topic.

Kamp Arman is also significant because of its construction, which many of its students took part in.

The orphanage was built in 1962 by the Gedikpaşa Armenian Protestant Church, as the former building could not host the increasing number of Armenian students arriving from various parts of Anatolia. Its students included Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist who was murdered in 2007, his wife Rakel Dink and HDP MP Erol Dora.

The Turkish state expropriated the orphanage in 1987, following the 1980 military coup, based on a 1936 bill preventing minority foundations from acquiring property.

Although the Turkish government signed a historic decree in 2011 to return property taken away from minority foundations, the orphanage was left out of its scope, alongside hundreds of other properties.

The Gedikpaşa Armenian Protestant Church has been fighting an abortive legal battle to win back the orphanage.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, İstanbul, orphanage

According to the Egyptian newspaper “Al-Misri al-Yom” after the Armenian Genocide Turkey’s continued crimes

May 6, 2015 By administrator

arton111387-399x300The Egyptian newspaper with wide circulation, “Al-Misri al-Yom” published an article by MP Emad Gad also vice president of the Center for Analysis “Al-Ahram” on the Armenian genocide.

Emad Gad affirms that Egypt might follow the example of many other countries and recognize the Armenian genocide carried out by Turkey and to write that “there is no justification to postpone the date of this recognition of the genocide of Armenians. “Under the headline” 100 years after the Armenian Genocide realized by Turkey “, the author presents the data of the genocide and violence of its realization against the Armenian civilian population.” The Turks crimes will not end with the extermination of the Armenians “, he wrote and continue” where the Turks have set foot there were massacres, blood flowed (…) this is what happened in Greece country democracy and philosophy. “

Emad Gad, who recently participated in the Global Forum Yerevan wrote that Turkey is implementing significant means to be born of violence in Europe, Asia and Africa. The Egyptian MP notes however that the important role of Armenian communities, Greek and others to curb the entry of Turkey into the European Union and returns to the Pope’s statement François recognizing the Armenian Genocide and the US Congress efforts to Genocide recognition by Washington. Emad Gad also argues that denial of Turkey received a serious setback for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the European Parliament “international recognition of the Armenian Genocide can not be stopped by Ankara,” he wrote. Finally, the author openly critical of Turkey for its support to the “Muslim Brotherhood” as well as terrorist Islamist groups.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Egyption, Genocide, newspaper, Turkey

Museum Exhibits Armenian Artifacts a Century after Rescue by Russians

May 6, 2015 By administrator

BY HARUT SASSOUNIAN

Harut Sassounian-1

HARUT SASSOUNIAN

On my way back from the Centennial events in Yerevan last week, I stopped in Saint Petersburg, Russia, to attend the inauguration of an unprecedented exhibit of Armenian artifacts rescued by Russian ethnographers from Western Armenia during the Genocide.

Here is the incredible background story of that unique exhibit. In 1916, during the Russian military campaign which temporarily liberated Western Armenia from Ottoman Turkey, Saint Petersburg’s Russian Museum of Ethnography sought Czar Nicholas II’s permission to dispatch a scholarly expedition to the Van area to collect Armenian artifacts from imminent loss. The Czar gave immediate consent in his handwriting: “Approve. Need to hurry.”

A small team of ethnographers led by Alexander Miller arrived in Van on June 10, 1916, after a lengthy and perilous journey. During their two-week stay, they managed to purchase from local inhabitants a total of 513 objects: 396 Armenian, 110 Assyrian, 5 Kurdish, and 2 Turkish. The artifacts included traditional Armenian costumes, jewelry, and carpets from the City of Van, the towns of Alur, Bitlis, Moks, Mush, Shatakh, and neighboring villages. During their visit, the scholars took 60 photographs of natural landscapes, historical monuments, buildings, and some residents. All of these materials were hauled back to Saint Petersburg under the protection of the Russian military.

Surprisingly, these painstakingly-collected cultural objects remained in the Russian museum’s basement for 100 years and were never displayed! No one seemed to remember their existence, until two years ago, when Armenia’s Consul General Vardan Hakopyan in Saint Petersburg learned about these artifacts and informed the authorities in Armenia, local community leaders, and the Armenian Jewelry Association.

After extensive joint efforts between the Armenian Jewelers Foundation and the Russian Museum of Ethnography, the items that were kept in storage for a century were finally put on display in Saint Petersburg last week. The Jewelers Foundation and the Russian Museum published an impressive catalog titled, “Treasures of Western Armenia,” which showcased the artifacts collected from the region of Van in 1916, before its recapture and genocidal destruction by Ottoman Turkish forces.

The exhibit was officially opened on April 27, 2015, at the Russian Museum of Ethnography. It was attended by Vigen Sargsyan, the Armenian President’s Chief of Staff, Olga Kazanskaya, Vice Governor of Saint Petersburg, Vladimir Grusman, Director of Russian Museum of Ethnography, Pierre Akkelian, Chairman of Armenian Jewelers Foundation, Gagik Gevorkyan, President of Armenian Jewelry Association, and Karen Mkrtchyan, the Armenian community leader of Saint Petersburg.

Not surprisingly, after it became known that the Museum of Ethnography had in its possession valuable artifacts from the Van region, the Consulate of Turkey in Saint Petersburg contacted the Museum claiming that these items are the property of the Turkish Republic and sought their return. The Museum’s leadership rejected the Turkish request as the objects were purchased from their owners in 1916.

It is ironic that Turkish diplomats had the audacity to request these Armenian artifacts, after having killed their owners, burned their homes, and stolen their possessions! One would hope that the Turkish government would be foolish enough to go ahead and file a lawsuit against the Russian Museum, trying to claim these items. Such a lawsuit would further publicize Turkish responsibility for the Armenian Genocide, the looting of Armenian cultural objects, and occupation of their ancestral homeland!

One hundred years later, another expedition should be dispatched to Turkish museums and libraries to locate and recover all Armenian artifacts, manuscripts and other valuable items plundered during the Genocide. Lawsuits should be filed against all Turkish institutions holding such Armenian materials. If local Turkish courts reject the demand, Armenians should then appeal to the European Court of Human Rights in order to recover these long lost and precious fragments of Armenian cultural heritage. Such a legal effort would be yet another means of seeking restitution for the massive Genocide-era losses suffered by Armenians a century ago!

The Russian Museum’s remarkable exhibit should go on tour to Armenian communities around the world: Athens, Beirut, Berlin, Boston, Buenos Aires, London, Los Angeles, Montreal, Moscow, New York, Paris, Tehran, Toronto, San Francisco, San Paulo, Sydney, Yerevan and many other cities. Let the world see a small sampling of the vast quantities of valuable cultural artifacts that the Armenian nation lost during the Genocide in addition to the 1.5 million human souls.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Artifacts, Russia

Turkish writers & Journalist address letter to Armenian people (video)

May 5, 2015 By administrator

191670On the centenary of the Armenian Genocide, eight writers from Turkey post this letter to their fellow Armenians.

“It has been a hundred years since hundreds of thousands of Armenians of this land have fallen under the systematic massacre of the Ottoman State. In 1915, women and men, young and old, they lost their lives, their families, and their homes… We, at P24 (Independent Journalism Platform) humbly pay our respect to the fallen and present this letter from eight writer,” the letter says, according to Massis Post.

The short video produced by P24 and directed by Enis Riza carries the messages of Adalet Agaoglu, Ahmet Altan, Oya Baydar, Murat Belge, Hasan Cemal, Cengiz Çandar, Perihan Magden, and Bejan Matur.

 

Related links:

Massis Post. Letter to the Armenians

Filed Under: Genocide, News, Videos Tagged With: address, Armenian, people, Turkish, writers

Armenian Genocide: Let Truth Triumph

May 5, 2015 By administrator

By Jagdish N. Singh

March-for-Armenian-Genocide-e1430831309831I admire Pope Francis.  He is not just spiritual or religious. He is   courageous too and does not believe in refraining from calling a spade a spade . The Pope has now referred to the 20th century mass killings of Armenians as the first genocide of the 20th century. During a mass in Saint Peter’s Basilica the other day to commemorate the 100th anniversary of those heinous killings, the Pope said, “In the past century our human family has lived through three massive and unprecedented tragedies.  The first…struck your own Armenian people.”  Report Jewish press

Branding  the tragedy as a “senseless slaughter,” the Pope preached , “It is necessary, and indeed a duty, to honor their memory, for whenever memory fades, it means that evil allows wounds to fester.  Concealing or denying evil is like allowing a wound to keep bleeding without bandaging it.”  Pope Francis also recalled  other mass killings of the 20th century – in Cambodia, Rwanda, Burundi and Bosnia. 

Significantly, in his message to mark Holocaust Memorial Day (January 27) in 2011 then Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams  too had  spoken of the need to remember the atrocities committed against the Jewish people in the Holocaust and even in Britain’s own history. He had stressed the need to remember also the other victims of genocide .  Williams was quoted as saying that the works of poets such as Holocaust survivor Paul Celan and Etty Hillesum served to remind the world of the “loss of humanity that remains in our midst to this day…Although other  poets have spoken for those killed in Armenia, Cambodia and Darfur, many stories from these and other genocidal events remain untold. Testimony, poetry and autobiography allow us to attend to the distinct stories of individuals rather than trying to comprehend the statistics of different genocides of recent history.”  

Pertinently, Archbishop Williams noted that events in medieval Britain, such as the blood libel case against Jews following the mysterious death of William of Norwich in the 12th century or King Edward’s expulsion of all Jews from England were “almost completely lost to public awareness”. He warned , “If the stories are not told over and again, we lose the memory of those who suffered and we risk losing something that protects our humanity.” 

It is heartening to learn that more than 20 nations, including Russia , France and Germany,  have now come recognize the Armenian genocide. At a ceremony in Armenia, Russian President Vladmin Putin reportedly referred to “mass” killings and   used the word “genocide.” Putin said, “ There cannot be any justification for mass murder of people. Today we mourn together with the Armenian people.” French President Francois Hollande said, “ We will never forget the tragedies your people have endured. Important words have already been said in Turkey, but others are still expected so that shared grief can become shared destiny.” German President Joachim Gauck condemned the 1915 killings as genocide and acknowledged that Germany bore partial blame for the bloodletting.   

I wonder why American President Barack Obama and some other leaders in the democratic world  still shy away from branding the Armenian killings as genocide.  In 2006 then Senator  Obama had said,  “The Armenian genocide is not an allegation, a personal opinion, or a point of view, but rather a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of historical evidence.” It is time the American President retained his courage of conviction, spoke the truth in the case and  acted in the great American spirit that stands against all kinds of injustice the world over. 

Moreover, there is no confusion as to the nature of the Armenian killings.  The 1948 UN Geneva Convention clearly defines genocide as “systematic destruction, in whole or part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.” President Obama could invoke this definition very well . Over 1.5 million Armenians were estimated to have perished under the  Ottoman Empire during World War I. (http://www.nytimes.com/ref/timestopics/topics_armeniangenocide.html  ) .  This crime cannot be overlooked . 

About the Author: Jagdish N. Singh is an Indian journalist based in New Delhi.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Let, triumph, truth

Newington Man Connects With Family’s Role In Armenian Genocide

May 5, 2015 By administrator

By CHRISTOPHER HOFFMAN 
hc-newington-armenian-genocide-zartarian-famil-001

(Photo courtesy Zartarian family)

Roy Zartarian’s father, Charles Zartarian, is seen at center left in a family photograph taken sometime before the genocide in 1915. Charles’ father, Zakar Zartarian, is seen behind him. The two other children in the photograph are Charles’ sisters, both of whom were said to have died of starvation. Their names have been lost. The woman next to Zakar is his wife, Takoohi, who died after the family fled to Russia. The man seated to the left of Zakar is Roy’s great grandfather, Mushegh. Next to Mushegh is his wife, Roy’s great grandmother. Her name is lost. They are also assumed to have died in the genocide. The identity of the woman at far right is unknown.(Photo courtesy Zartarian family)

NEWINGTON — Roy Zartarian always knew his father and grandfather were survivors of the Armenian genocide during World War I, the 100th anniversary of which was marked last month.

His father Charles Zartarian bore the scars of his flight from the Turks: he had just one finger on one hand and two on the other — the result of amputations from frostbite, Zartarian was told. Report courant.com

But the story of their escape remained shrouded in mystery. Neither Zartarian’s father nor his grandfather ever spoke of it.

“I would ask my mother, and she would say he wouldn’t talk about what he experienced,” Zartarian, 68, said.

With his father’s early death of a heart attack in 1955, the tale seemed lost forever.

Fast forward to the mid-2000s. Zartarian’s interest in the Armenian genocide was growing. A database of of Hartford Courant stories had just been put online. On a whim, Zartarian searched his family name.

To his amazement, a Courant story from 1922 came up recounting in agonizing detail his father and grandfather’s horrific ordeal. Headlined “Armenian Boy, Minus Fingers, After Turkish Atrocity, Living Here,” it included a photograph of his father, then about 11.

“I couldn’t believe it,” Zartarian said, struggling to control his emotions. “I was in tears. It answered a lot of questions. I now know how my father and grandfather made it to this country.”

Zartarian’s grandfather was a successful blacksmith in Harput, today Elazig, in central Turkey, part of the Ottoman Empire, according to the article. Then came World War I.

The Ottoman Empire sided with Germany and found itself at war with Russia on its eastern border.

Fearing Armenians, who were Christians rather than Muslims, would side with the Russians, the Turks ordered their deportation and eventual slaughter. An estimated 1.5 million died.

For the Zartarian family, the nightmare began one day in 1915 when a crier went through their town ordering all Armenians to prepare to leave, the article says, an incident Zaratrian said he has corroborated.

The Turks forced-marched the Zartarians and their fellow Armenians to a village where Roy’s grandfather found a Kurd who agreed to hide the family for $500, the Zartarians told the Courant. Over that winter, Zartarian’s father’s two sisters died of starvation, they said.

The article goes on to describe the family’s escape to a Russian-occupied town and later capture by the Turks. Seeing his father’s frozen fingers, a Turkish soldier chopped them off, the article says.

Zartarian said he’s been unable to confirm the story independently.

“I don’t know whether that was embroidered or not for the sake of the news coverage back then,” he said.

The family escaped to Russia where Zartarian’s grandmother died. His father and grandfather, the family’s only survivors, then made their way to Istanbul. There, they learned of a relative in Hartford who sent money for passage to America.

Roy Zartarian’s father Charles and grandfather Zakar.

(Photo courtesy Zartarian family)

Asked by the Courant reporter in 1922 what he wanted to do for a living, Zartarian’s father replied that he wanted to be a lawyer. He fulfilled his ambition, attending Harvard Law School and becoming an immigration lawyer.

In spite of his disability, Charles Zartarian was able to button buttons, tie his tie, play golf and write. His penmanship was superb, Roy Zartarian said. His father’s old fountain pen is among his most prized possessions.

“His handwriting with two fingers was better than mine with five,” Zartarian said.

Turkey has yet to accept responsibility for the massacre of the Armenians during World War I. Its government continues to deny the genocide.

Turkey still could and should be held responsible its crimes against the Armenians, Zartarian said.

Zartarian has joined other Armenians in Connecticut and worldwide in commemorating the 100th anniversary of the genocide this year. He attended a recent event at the state Capitol and wears a purple wristband emblazoned with a Forget-Me-Not flower and the words, “We Will Never Forget.”

Zartarian talked of the importance of remembrance and human resilience.

“For the longest time, I kept this quiet,” Zartarian said. “With the 100th anniversary, I think it’s time to bring this story out and show how people can overcome and survive and make a new life for themselves.”

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Connects, Family's, Genocide, man, Newington

April 24 not final day to mark Genocide centennial – official

May 4, 2015 By administrator

f5547769e02b89_5547769e02bbf.thumbApril 24 does not mark an end to the commemoration events dedicated to the Armenian Genocide, says Vigen Sargsyan, the chief of the Presidential Staff and the coordinator of the commission arranging the centenary events.
The evidence, according to him, is the events that have been organized across the world since April 24.
“The events – with political, cultural and sporting agenda – will continue until the end of this year,” he told reporters on Tuesday.
The official added that the commission’s website, Armeniangenocide100.org, continues operating after the April 24 Remembrance Day to inform people of events taking place in different parts of the world.

Sargsyan said he finds that the events fully met the task of raising the world’s awareness of the issue and repeating the demand for recognition.
“The events held did, in our estimation, serve the main purposes we had set: raising international awareness of the Armenian Genocide and developing and mobilizing public opinion over the fight against, and condemnation of, genocides as a crime against humanity,” he added.
The official further addressed the comments made at the anti-genocide forum in Yerevan, highlighting particularly a former ICC (International Criminal Court) prosecutor’s call for making Armenia a leader in the world campaign against crimes of genocide.

Sargsyan said he highly appreciates the national unity he saw at the ceremonies in April.
“The peak, in that respect, was the canonization ceremony at the Mother See of St Echmiadzin. It was an important manifestation of national unity. The ringing of bells of not only the Armenian churches but also the sister churches worldwide really signaled the pan-Christian respect for the memory of the Armenian Genocide victims,” he noted.
As another remarkable event reaffirming the nation’s unity and attracting attention to the problem, Sargsyan cited the System of a Down’s open-air concert in central Yerevan.
“Despite the weather conditions, the spirit and unanimity and the youth’s unprecedented participation really demonstrated that the idea and the concert that day was the right decision, so I once again wish to extend my gratitude to the guys for their dedicated and consistent approach,” he added.
Sargsyan said he sees that April 24 really helped attract the world’s attention to Yerevan. “We managed to keep Yerevan on the world media spotlight, with leading international TV channels airing the April 24 event live,” he noted.

At the end, the chief of the Presidential Staff said he is thankful to everybody for dedication and attention to the pan-national issue. “I would like to extend my admiration and gratitude to all the segments of the society, every citizen, the non-governmental organizations, the media and the political parties for the unity and the approach they demonstrated to our events,” he said.

The official added that President Serzh Sargsyan will on Thursday join the Divine Liturgy in Washington Cathedral to pay respect to the victims. He added that commemoration events will continue across the US and many other cities and towns of the world throughout the year.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, centennial, contenue, Genocide

Busy Schedule: Armenian president to visit Washington, Moscow this week

May 4, 2015 By administrator

armenian-president-1President Serzh Sargsyan will visit the capitals of the United States and Russia this week to take part in different events, Armenian officials said last week.

Eduard Sharmazanov, the spokesman for the ruling Republican Party of Armenia, confirmed on April 30 that Sargsyan will be in Washington on May 7. The representative of the party led by Sargsyan did not specify, however, what meetings the head of state will hold in the United States and whether his meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama is planned. He said the presidential administration would come up with additional details later.

Earlier, it was reported that in the U.S. Sargsyan will take part in a religious ceremony to mark the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey. In particular, he is expected to attend an ecumenical memorial service that will take place at Washington’s National Cathedral on May 7.

According to the website of the steering committee of the National Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide Centennial, the service will be led by the two supreme heads of the Armenian Apostolic Church, His Holiness Karekin II Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians and His Holiness Aram I Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia. The ceremony is expected to be attended by members of the U.S. Congress and U.S. diplomats.

On May 8, President Sargsyan is expected to be in Moscow for a meeting of the Council of the Eurasian Economic Union and the next day, May 9, the Armenian head of state is scheduled to attend a large military parade in Red Square dedicated to the 70th anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany in World War II.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Moscow, president, Washington

Turkey: ‘So, as it turns out, I’m Armenian’

May 4, 2015 By administrator

The “Onlar” (Them) multi-screen video exhibit can be visited at SALT Galata until June 28.(Photo: Kenan Sunar)

By JÜLİDE GÜNGÖR

An older woman wearing a yellow dress appears on the TV screen.

210760_newsdetailShe is from Hemşin, and her maternal grandmother is a teacher of Islam. The woman in the yellow dress explains that many years later she returned for a visit. On doing some research, she discovered that she and her grandmother actually shared something unexpected — they were both Armenian. There are so many other stories like this in Turkey: the Jewish child not allowed to hold the flagstick at school, the young soldier not allowed to speak Kurdish with his mother, etc. The “others” of Turkey are all at SALT Galata in the exhibition “Onlar” (Them) right now. report ZAMAN

Let’s start off with the woman wearing red shoes about whom we know nothing, except that she is Jewish, before she starts talking: “When I was in primary school, our flag ceremony would always take place in a closed salon. A flag would be brought into the middle of the salon, and everyone had to put their hands out and hold the flagstick together; kids would volunteer for this. You’d raise your hand if you wanted to, and then go and hold the stick. Everyone wanted to do it, me included. So one day I went up to hold the flagstick, but I was sent back! I didn’t understand why at the time. Years later, I realized that it was completely identity based; I had been sent back because I was Jewish. I don’t know if it was thought that maybe Jewish peoples’ hands were dirty, or what, but I wasn’t meant to hold that flagstick.”

The truth is there are many citizens in Turkey who have shared similar stories. There are those who weren’t able to learn their native Zaza language, a Kurdish dialect from their grandparents for fear of retribution. The soldier who couldn’t speak to his mother for years as he was on military duty and couldn’t be overheard speaking Kurdish, though she only knew Kurdish. The youth whose mother would warn him whenever he left home, “Keep your Armenian identity a secret out there!”

Of course, these sorts of stories can be found all over the world, but in Turkey, the official version of events has been widely heard and accepted by the masses. This is why we sometimes feel strange when we encounter not the official, but the personal versions and accounts of what really happened way back when.

Citizen, speak Turkish!

İpek Duben deserves congratulations for her work. She gathered stories from 24 people of varying ethnicities, religions, languages and so on, and has put them all up for display and thought by those heading over to the SALT Galata gallery to see the “Onlar” exhibition.

The exhibition gives space to stories and memories from Kurdish, Alevi, Armenian, Jewish and Roma citizens of Turkey. Headscarved women and women who are victims of violence are also included in this exhibition. Curiously, there is no Turkish Greek voice. Apparently, Duben was unable to find anyone from this group willing to participate in this exhibition.

What we have in this new SALT exhibition is a serious vista of Turkey, one that needs to be heard. Duben herself says, “Whether you agree or not, you need to listen to these voices,” adding, “Everyone seems to have their own ‘Citizen, speak Turkish!’ memory in this country, myself included.”

State’s minority policies responsible for all of this

But how do we meet on middle ground? We hear from a young woman in blue busy perusing the show: “When we remove the fear of being ‘other,’ this entire business goes back to the state. If high school students weren’t treated to half a page of information on the events of 1915, if the talk didn’t always circle back to the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia [ASALA] when the topic of Armenians comes up, well, if these things weren’t the case, maybe coming together would have been easier. I think the factor that has made us all so late to confront these realities, that has made things drag on for so long, has been the state policies on minorities. We are talking about policies that have simply never allowed people to stand as one, to come together.”

This multi-screened video installation is on display until June 28. If you are in the mood to allow your mind some new confusion or to dispel any doubts about the power of our state, head over to see this. Because as Celal Salik noted in his book recently, “The deep differences between our citizens’ personal views and the official views we hear reflects the power of our state.”

 

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, exhibition, İpek Duben, SALT Galata, Turkey

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 119
  • 120
  • 121
  • 122
  • 123
  • …
  • 155
  • Next Page »

Support Gagrule.net

Subscribe Free News & Update

Search

GagruleLive with Harut Sassounian

Can activist run a Government?

Wally Sarkeesian Interview Onnik Dinkjian and son

https://youtu.be/BiI8_TJzHEM

Khachic Moradian

https://youtu.be/-NkIYpCAIII
https://youtu.be/9_Xi7FA3tGQ
https://youtu.be/Arg8gAhcIb0
https://youtu.be/zzh-WpjGltY





gagrulenet Twitter-Timeline

Tweets by @gagrulenet

Archives

Books

Recent Posts

  • Pashinyan Government Pays U.S. Public Relations Firm To Attack the Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Breaking News: Armenian Former Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan Pashinyan is agent
  • November 9: The Black Day of Armenia — How Artsakh Was Signed Away
  • @MorenoOcampo1, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, issued a Call to Action for Armenians worldwide.
  • Medieval Software. Modern Hardware. Our Politics Is Stuck in the Past.

Recent Comments

  • Baron Kisheranotz on Pashinyan’s Betrayal Dressed as Peace
  • Baron Kisheranotz on Trusting Turks or Azerbaijanis is itself a betrayal of the Armenian nation.
  • Stepan on A Nation in Peril: Anything Armenian pashinyan Dismantling
  • Stepan on Draft Letter to Armenian Legal Scholars / Armenian Bar Association
  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in