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Turkish film ‘Mastermind’ purports to reveal Jewish conspiracy

May 3, 2015 By administrator

6024703099791640360noAnti-Semitic documentary, based in part on Erdogan speech, claims Jews have conspired to dominate the world for 3,500 years; Turkish ruling party said to be encouraging such conspiracy theories.

Israel Jewish Scene

A documentary recently aired on pro-government Turkish news channel A Haber has sparked a new debate about anti-Semitism in Turkey, home to approximately 17,000 Jews.

The film, called Üst Akıl (Mastermind) and also published on major pro-government newspaper websites such as Sabah, claims that Jewish people have conspired to dominate the world for 3,500 years.

Several academics, journalists, and Etyen Mahçupyan, former adviser to Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, appear in the film, which is based in part on a speech given by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan last December.

Mastermind opens with the speech, in which Erdoğan describes “operations” against Turkey. “Behind all these there is a mastermind,” he explains, before telling his audience “you know who it is.”

The narrator then says this mastermind, who “rules, burns, destroys, starves the world, creates wars, organizes revolutions and coups, establishes states within states, (and is) the curse of the entire world,” can be found “in Jerusalem, where the sons of Israel live,” before delving into a conspiratorial tirade of historical manipulation.

“This is pretty much the worldview in the AKP now,” says writer and political commentator Mustafa Akyol, referring to Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party.

“The message they’re pumping into society is (that there is) a global Jewish conspiracy against the AKP.”

Akyol explains that anti-Semitism and conspiracy theories in Turkey far predate the AKP, but the party has ushered in an atmosphere wherein these beliefs flourish.

“Unfortunately, conspiracy theory is a national problem,” he says. “But the AKP is now shamelessly aggressive with them, and this so-called documentary is the zenith.”

The AKP started off as a reformist, Islamic-inspired political party in 2001, distancing itself from the conspiracy theories of some of Turkey’s fully Islamist parties.

However, according to Akyol, the party became increasingly paranoid, anti-Semitic and conspiratorial following challenges to its rule such as the widespread Gezi Park protests in spring 2013 and investigation of high-level government corruption in December of that year. The Gezi Park protests, in which 8 people died and around 8,000 were arrested, began as an environmental protest against government plans to urbanize the park but flared into wider dissent, due to heavy handed tactics by riot police and wide spread resentment of the Erdoğan government.

“They decided to interpret these not just as Turkish affairs but a global plot to topple them,” he says.

In one often-ridiculed instance during the protests, Erdoğan’s top economic advisor Yığıt Bulut even alleged that foreign forces were trying to assassinate the then prime minister using telekinesis.

Akyol says the military coup ousting then Egyptian president and Muslim Brotherhood member Mohamed Morsi in July 2013 also scared the pro-Brotherhood AKP.

“In their mind, the coup in Egypt was manufactured by America and Israel to get rid of Ikhwan (the Muslim Brotherhood), and the same thing would have happened in Turkey,” had Erdoğan not prevented it, according to Akyol.

Furthermore, opposition to Israeli policy often transforms into anti-Jewish sentiment.

“Israel isn’t just seen as a nation-state which is heavy-handed in its counter-insurgency,” Akyol says. “It’s seen as ‘the Jews.’ From anger against Israel you jump into a general dislike of the Jews.”

According to the Pew polling agency, 86 percent of Turks see Israel unfavorably.

Dr. Louis Fishman, an American-Israeli specialist in Turkish affairs, worries the anti-Semitism in Turkey is no longer “isolated to the back shelves of bookstores,” but is shifting into the official mainstream.

“The fact that there are anti-Semites or anti-Semitic propaganda in Turkey isn’t the main point. You have anti-Semitism everywhere in the world,” Fishman told The Media Line. “The problem is they’re on state-propagated TV.”

“It’s not just that the state is ignoring it,” he says. “The state is inherently part of it.”

Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç’s said earlier this month that “no one in Turkey is anti-Semitic,” and condemned other countries for “lagging behind Turkey,” in tolerance. However, even high-level AKP officials have publicly made anti-Semitic comments.

During Israel’s Operation Protective Edge in the Gaza Strip last summer, widely condemned in Turkey, AKP deputy Samil Tayyar tweeted, “May your race vanish and may you always have your Hitler.”

Ankara mayor and prominent AKP member Melih Gökçek supported pop star Yıldız Tilbe during the conflict in Gaza after she tweeted, “May Allah bless Hitler.”

Former Deputy Prime Minister Beşir Atalay accused “international Jewry” of being behind the Gezi protests because they are “jealous of Turkey’s growth.”

Though Ataly later retracted his statements, none of the other officials apologized nor were condemned for their anti-Semitic remarks.

Erdoğan himself has made public comments about the “interest rate lobby,” often code-word for a Jewish plot, and said Judaism is “demeaning” to women at an award ceremony in Bursa in February.

Dr. Aykan Erdemir is a member of parliament from the secularist opposition Republic People’s Party (CHP) and one of the founding members of the International Panel of Parliamentarians for Freedom of Religion or Belief.

Erdemir says hate speech in the media and politics encourages such views in regular society.

“(Erdogan) has in a way inculcated a lot of prejudice and hate in Turkish society,” he says. “How? Through education, through government-mouthpiece media, through hateful and spiteful government announcements and declarations.”

He worries Turkish society has internalized this government-propagated hate, in the years since AKP came to power in 2002, and that the damage will last for decades.

“Outing the AK Party is a simple task, but undoing hate, intolerance and prejudice, that’s a very long process,” he told The Media Line.

Turkey ranked 17th in a report by the Anti-Defamation League last year, with 69% of Turks labelled anti-Semitic, compared to the world average of 26%.

Between July 17 and 18 last year during the strikes in Gaza, 30,926 Turkish-language tweets were sent by 27,309 users praising Hitler and the Holocaust, according to a survey by research group Gonzo Insight.

Erdemir says that during the AKP’s tenure, “there have been some baby steps vis-à-vis extending minority rights, and I salute them for that. But ultimately, most of this ends up being window dressing,” pointing out that anti-Semitic rhetoric has risen to unprecedented levels.

“Erdoğan said anti-Semitism is a crime against humanity, but then he attacked an aggrieved Soma miner with the words ‘you sperm (or spawn) of Israel,’” Erdemir says, referring to an incident during the Soma mining disaster last May when Erdoğan was caught on video allegedly making the slur.

Mois Gabay, a 31-year-old Jewish Turk who frequently contributes to the Jewish newspaper Şalom, says it’s important to acknowledge the progress made under the AKP.

He mentions the recent opening of the government-restored Great Synagogue in Edirne, Europe’s third largest. “It was such an amazing thing for us,” he says.

Other steps have also been taken.

The Holocaust Memorial Day in January was given more pomp than usual, being held in the capital Ankara and attended by a high-level government official for the first time.

Several old churches and synagogues have been restored and reopened by the government and $2.5 billion worth of minority-owned properties seized by the state in the past have been returned.

Though anti-Semitic speech runs rampant, the government-organized pogroms and minority-targeting taxes of the twentieth century are a thing of the past, and anti-Semitic attacks are exceedingly rare.

“I’m feeling more positive about the atmosphere now, but still feeling negative about the manipulation of the media,” Gabay says.

“It’s become normal to write things against Jews because there’s no punishment for it,” he says, adding that it has worsened in the last two years.

Though hate crime legislation was passed last year, Gabay would like to see a hate speech law.

“The laws have to be changed and have to be more functional for all minorities,” he says.

Though anti-Semitism and other forms of hate speech have been known to creep into even mainstream secularist newspapers, the worst offenders are the Islamist ones such as Yeni Akit, which is distributed onboard Turkey’s national airline, and whose editor regularly meets with Erdoğan and flies in his presidential jet.

During the Soma disaster the paper’s headline proclaimed “The boss’s son-in-law is a Jew.” Last September Yeni Akit columnist Faruk Köse called on Turkey’s Jews to be taxed to pay for buildings damaged in Gaza during Operation Protective Edge.

Gabay told The Media Line that quite a few young Jewish people are leaving Turkey, and he asserts that one reason is because they don’t feel comfortable being bombarded by such hate speech.

Dr. Fishman, who lived in Turkey for 10 years, says this is no surprise.

“If you’re a Jewish family, your people are cursed regularly on the nightly news … you read Yeni Akit and see this anti-Semitism. Do you really want your children to grow up in this atmosphere?”

Dr. Erdemir submitted questions addressing anti-Semitism to parliament last September, but says there wasn’t much of a response.

Filed Under: Articles, Videos Tagged With: conpiracy, Film, Jewish, mastermind, Turkish

Serj Tankian premieres “1915” Genocide film in Moscow

April 20, 2015 By administrator

190891System of a Down American-Armenian rock band frontman Serj Tankian arrived in Moscow for a concert tour of the group, Starman24.com reports.

Ahead of the major show, Tankian attended the closed premiere of the film “1915” about the Armenian Genocide, for which he composed a score. Tankian was accompanied by the co-author of the film Garin Hovannisyan.

The film will hit the Russian theaters on April 20.

SOAD’s Wake up the Souls tour commemorates the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. It will wrap up with the Grammy-winning band’s first-ever performance in their homeland of Armenia.

Photo: Starman24
Related links:

Starman24: Серж Танкян представил в Москве фильм «1915»

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 1915, Film, Genocide, premieres, Serj Tankian

Documentary on Armenian genocide to be shown the Orphans

March 16, 2015 By administrator

LEE B. ROBERTS lee.roberts@journaltimes.com

55037dc7f290e.imageRACINE — A film being shown at Racine’s Golden Rondelle Theater on Thursday tells a powerful story that will be new to many, yet all too familiar to others.

“Orphans of the Genocide” tells part of a larger story of the Armenian genocide of 1915, through the eyes of some of its more than 130,000 orphaned children. The documentary, by Emmy Award-winning director Bared Maronian, focuses on one orphanage where 1,000 Armenian genocide orphans lived and were forcefully converted to Turkish beliefs and culture during World War I.

The 90-minute film features never-before-seen archival footage, as well as discovered memoirs of orphans. And, while it is an Armenian story, it is also truly an American story, according to Maronian, whose career includes 21 years working for PBS television.

“Americans were the first ones who went through a lot of effort and raised a lot of money to make sure that at least 132,000 orphans were saved,” the director said during a phone interview from his Florida home.

Many members of Racine’s two Armenian churches – Saint Hagop and Saint Mesrob – know similar stories because they are children of genocide orphans. Some know only bits and pieces, as their parents were reluctant to talk about the atrocities that occurred when the Ottoman Turkish government attempted to exterminate the indigenous Armenian population.

More than 1.5 million Armenians were killed between 1915 and 1923, and the entire population was uprooted from its homeland, which it had inhabited for more than 3,000 years, according to the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America. As of today, the Turkish government has yet to acknowledge the atrocities.

“There has never been a place where the people responsible were brought to justice by a court of law,” said Leon Saryan, a member of Racine’s St. Hagop Church, 4100 N. Newman Road, who lives in Greenfield and serves as commissioner of the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District.

Maronian, who is a third-generation genocide survivor, said that while the orphans’ story is a very sad one, it is also bittersweet in that they not only survived but went on to create whole new nation of Armenians after the genocide. It is also a story that many audience members — Armenian and not — are shocked or surprised to learn, he said.

“About 80 percent of the history I learned in making the film was new to me,” said Maronian, who also published a companion book to help tell the many stories he couldn’t fit in the film.

The film screening is one of a series of area events scheduled throughout 2015 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the genocide. Saryan and other members of St. Hagop and St. Mesrob serve on a committee with members of Milwaukee’s two Armenian churches – St. John the Baptist and Holy Resurrection – that is planning special services, concerts and other programs here as part of a worldwide 100th anniversary movement.

The yearlong commemoration is not only about remembering the victims of the genocide, but about telling their story in hopes of preventing such atrocities from happening again, said the Rev. Yeprem Kelegian, pastor at St. Mesrob Church, 4605 Erie St., and the son of a genocide orphan.

Its goal is to create a better understanding of what happened, not just for Armenians but for everyone, Saryan said.

“We’re seeing other instances of man’s inhumanity to man playing out right now in other parts of the world,” said Saryan, whose father was also a genocide orphan. “Raising awareness of what happened to Armenians will, hopefully, give people the opportunity to reflect on where this kind of thing goes when you step off the edge.”

For more about the 100th anniversary, go to www.armeniangenocidecentennial.org. More about the genocide is available at www.armenian-genocide.org and www.genocide-museum.am.

Source: journaltimes.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, documentary, Film, orphans

Billionaire Kirk Kerkorian to fund Armenian Genocide epic: Showbiz411

February 26, 2015 By administrator

Kirk Kerkorian

Kirk Kerkorian

Armenian-American billionaire Kirk Kerkorian is funding a secret feature film about the Armenian Genocide, Showbiz411 reports citing sources.

The Ottoman Empire, precursor to the country known as Turkey, killed around 1.5 million to people in the effort to destroy Armenia and establish itself. Kerkorian is hoping to produce the Armenian “Schindler’s List” to memorialize the holocaust.

There is already an Oscar nominated director and screenwriter signed to the project. Various actors’ names have come up, and some of that may become clear soon. The movie is described by the director– who’s asked not to reveal his name yet– as a “Reds” or “Dr. Zhivago”, a sweeping World War I romance set against the Armenian Genocide.

Kerkorian, who’s always been fascinated with Hollywood, is said to have contributed over $1 billion to Armenian charities and causes over his long life time.

Related links:

Showbiz411. EXCLUSIVE Billionaire Kirk Kerkorian, 97, Funding Epic Feature Film About Armenian Genocide

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Film, funding, Kirk-Kerkorian

“The Cut” by Fatih Akin screened in 10 theaters in Almaty (Kazakhstan)

February 21, 2015 By administrator

"The Cut" Film

“The Cut” Film

Thursday, February 19 was presented in “first” in Almaty (capital of Kazakhstan) the film “The Cut” of the German-Turkish director Fatih Akin. Ara Sahakian, the Armenian Ambassador to Kazakhstan attended the premiere. The next day, “The Cut” came out in 10 cinemas of Almaty and a dozen other cities such as Atriaou, Bavlodar, Petropavlovsk, Uralsk and Ust Kamenokorsk. The Armenian community of Kazakhstan is estimated at between 30 000 and 40 000 members.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: almaty, Film, kazakstan, the cut

Turks in the dark of their past – Arsine Khanjian

February 20, 2015 By administrator

Canadian-Armenian actress Arsine Khanjian

Canadian-Armenian actress Arsine Khanjian

Canadian-Armenian actress Arsine Khanjian, who is now in Istanbul, Turkey to participate in the in the international independent film festival !f, has shared her impressions of the changes in the Turkish and Armenian societies, and the Armenia Diaspora.

“An episodic story focused on the Armenian Genocide is presented in Turkey, with Turks getting entangled when it comes to confronting the fact. I now see that it is very difficult,” she said, speaking to the Turkish-Armenian publication Agos.

The actress, who is on her fifth visit to Turkey and third visit to Istanbul, said she availed herself the opportunity to meet face-to-face with ethnic Turks trying to gain a better understanding of the motives behind the Turkish society’s behavior. “And I came to see that the Turks do not know a lot from history. Blamed for their past throughout their lives, they, as a matter of fact, have no idea about that past,” she noted.

Speaking of the Turkish-Armenians, the actress said she sees that they do not seem to have very great expectations. “Those in the diaspora know that the Armenians live in intimidation. The diaspora has lost touch with the Armenians in Turkey. We have lost our heritage, our people, language and culture, but we can maintain and continue the dialogue with the people residing here,” she added.

Asked about her expectations from the Genocide centennial commemoration, the actress replied, “The centennial events are for keeping history alight. So we’ll keep doing the same on the 101st anniversary. We have finally arrived at a point that makes our dialogue with the Turkish society possible. As early as 50 years ago, nobody would talk about the Genocide. But it isn’t so now. That is why I find the events important.”

As for the films dedicated to the Genocide topic, Khanjyan said she doesn’t think that it is possible at all to satisfy an Armenian audience’s expectations from such a serious topic as that. “They observed such a long silence over the Genocide that they are now at a point where the Armenian spectator does not know what he or she wishes to see in the movie. They want the film to tell them about everything. The Holocaust stories evolved after [the Second World] War, so the Jews did not need such a film. But the things were not arranged the same way for the Armenians. We weren’t able to address all the aspects of the Genocide, and now, gathering the stories in one place, we expect to have a movie about the Genocide. It isn’t feasible,” she noted.

Report tert.am

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: actress, Arsine-Khanjian, Canadian, Film, İstanbul

Hollywood Movie 1915 – The Film – Simon Abkarian #endyourdenial

February 15, 2015 By administrator

#endyourdenial

#endyourdenial

Contrary to published information there a few months ago that Alain Delon and Dustin Hoffman participate in an Armenian generation dealing Komitas destiny of France, there is nothing. In any case it will not be with Alain Delon we could join. According to the French star has never been a question of filming around the Armenian genocide.

However, Hollywood has filmed a movie in 1915 to international distribution, starring Simon Abkarian and which will be screened in Hollywood April 24, 2015.

The psychological thriller written and directed connotation by Armeno Americans Garin Hovannisian and Alec Mouhibian says, 100 years after the genocide, the story of a theater director who staged a play in honor of the victims of this tragedy, a crime denied and forgotten for a century.

A piece that will generate events around the theater. Mysterious accidents occur causing panic among actors. The ghosts of the past reappear.

The film invites viewers to end the denial face the ghosts of the past, #endyourdenial

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: #endyourdenial, armenian genocide, Film, hollywood

#armeniangenocide FATIH AKIN: THE TRUTH IS THAT GENOCIDE WAS COMMITTED IN 1915

February 3, 2015 By administrator

By Mane Yepremyan

100-FATIH-AKINThe Cut, a film by Fatih Akin, a German director of Turkish descent, centers on a survivor of the Armenian Genocide, Nazaret Manoogian, who lost his family and learnt years later that his twin daughters may have been left alive. He goes on a quest to find them and eventually reaches North Dakota. The 138-minute English-language film is scribed by Akin and ethnic Armenian Mardik Martin. On January 30, Yerevan hosted a private screening of The Cut. In a conversation with ArmenianGenocide100.org, Akin spoke about the film, his position on the Armenian Genocide and more.  

When did you first hear about the Armenian Genocide?

I think I first heard of the Armenian Genocide when I was in high school – I was a teenager of 15 or 16 years.

What’s your personal position on the Armenian Genocide?

When I went to Turkey with the film, people kept asking me why I had shown just one side of the history. I said that this is not a football game with two sides. There is just one truth and I believe in that. I believe that events that took place in 1915 and the following years, are a genocide. But this is just my position, this is what I believe in.

Before screening the film, you said that Turkey is ready to watch a movie about the Genocide. Are you of the same opinion now?

Yes, I am. The film runs in Turkish movie theaters now, and people have access to it. If they want to have it on DVD, they will have it. If they want to stream it later, they can stream it later. Another question is if there is enough interest. Sadly enough, those who are interested are in the minority.

Do you think your movie changed anything in the Turkish society?

Some things have changed, of course. The other day an Armenian politician came to me and said that now he can forgive certain people. Or young people in Turkey who watched the movie were astonished as they had never heard of what the Ottoman Empire had done. So the film changed the reality of certain people. And maybe this is the right way to make some changes. Nobody can change the world altogether, but I can change my world. So, this change occurred not in the whole society, but in an individual.

If Turkey recognizes the Armenian Genocide, what should be done after that?

I have my own position, my own opinion regarding this question. I think that the word genocide is just a word misapplied by certain politicians due to some geopolitical issues. You should use this word when you really understand what has happened. I have nothing to do with politics whatsoever, and it is up to them whether to recognize the genocide or not. I think that it is more important for a cab driver, or a waiter, or the students, or the common people to know about the genocide, and I don’t care whether politicians accept it or not.

What film about the Armenian Genocide impressed you the most? 

I like Ararat by Atom Egoyan. It was a great inspiration. I like America, America by Elia Kazan which is not about the Armenian Genocide. In many aspects this film is the godfather of my film. There are even some direct references to America, America.

What did you feel during your first visit to the Armenian Genocide Museum, where numerous photos reflect the atrocities committed by the Ottoman Empire?

The first time I visited the museum was 5 years ago, in 2010. I felt sorry, and I felt the burden of responsibility, I felt the grief in the air. When you are at the Genocide museum, the only thing you think about is the genocide, and nothing else.

Is it possible for you to come back to Armenia on April 24?

I don’t know. I will be at the United States promoting the film. I know that physical presence is important but if this not possible I will definitely be here with all my mind and spirit.

 

Source: ArmenianGenocide100.org / Mane Yepremyan

 

Filed Under: Genocide, Interviews, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Fatih Akın, Film, interveiw

Australia, Leading Professor Slams Russell Crowe Film as ‘Silly’

January 16, 2015 By administrator

waterdivinerSYDNEY—Leading Australian World War I historian, Dr. Peter Stanley, has openly referred to Russell Crowe’s latest movie, “The Water Diviner,” as a “fundamentally silly film” and slammed it for not referring to the Armenian Genocide, the Armenian National Committee of Australia reports.

Stanley, the former head of Historical Research and Principal Historian at the Australian War Memorial, has written an extensive account on the historical inaccuracies of this movie, which claims to be “inspired by true events”.

The movie, which has been released to coincide with the centenary of ANZAC Day, tells the story of an Australian father who visits Gallipoli after the war in search of his dead son.

Stanley criticizes “The Water Diviner” on the basis of the “fundamental lack of credibility”.

He says: “…just about everything else in ‘The Water Diviner’ is made up and not very convincingly either….This is basically a silly film, full of impossibilities, and isn’t worth the attention it’s getting,” Stanley writes.

He adds: “There isn’t any reference to the massacres of Armenians that were such an important part of the last years of the Ottoman Empire. That’s true, but it seems to me that the Armenian agony simply has no relevance to the film’s plot, risible though the plot is.”

Under the guise of World War I, the Ottoman Turkish government implemented and carried out the first genocide of the 20th century against its Armenian population, as well as Greeks and Assyrians. Turkey continues to run an international campaign of denial.

Executive Director of the Armenian National Committee of Australia, Vache Kahramanian, remarked: “It is not unsurprising that Turkey is heavily promoting this film, which aim to portray the Turk as a victim, even though one of the greatest crimes against humanity was committed against its Armenian subjects from 1915 to 1923.”

The Water Diviner, already out in Australian cinemas, is scheduled to premiere in the United States on the Centenary anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the 24th of April, 2015.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Film, Russell Crowe’s

Interview: Fatih Akin, Turkey was ‘ready’ for a film on Armenian genocide (Video)

January 15, 2015 By administrator

By Achren ALLAHVERDIAN France24

Fatih-AkinGerman-Turkish director Fatih Akin spent seven years working on “The Cut”, a film that depicts the Armenian genocide of 1915. He first had the idea after the assassination of Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in Istanbul in 2007, which sparked protests across Turkey. “There was an open discussion about the Armenian genocide in Turkey after Hrant was shot”, he recalls.

Turkey does not recognise the Armenian genocide, only acknowledging a “massacre”. Nevertheless, Fatih Akin says he has witnessed a change in mentalities in Turkey.

Even though he was insulted and received deaths for making “The Cut”, the director “did not get any trouble” from the government and describes a “live and let live” response from the authorities. Turkey was “ready for such a film”, he concludes.

Source: France24 

The Armenian Genocide

The Armenian Genocide (1915-23) was the deliberate and systematic destruction of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire during and just after World War I. It was characterized by massacres, and deportations involving forced marches under conditions designed to lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of deaths reaching 1.5 million.

The majority of Armenian Diaspora communities were formed by the Genocide survivors.

Present-day Turkey denies the fact of the Armenian Genocide, justifying the atrocities as “deportation to secure Armenians”. Only a few Turkish intellectuals, including Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk and scholar Taner Akcam, speak openly about the necessity to recognize this crime against humanity.

The Armenian Genocide was recognized by Uruguay, Russia, France, Lithuania, the Italian Chamber of Deputies, majority of U.S. states, parliaments of Greece, Cyprus, Argentina, Belgium and Wales, National Council of Switzerland, Chamber of Commons of Canada, Polish Sejm, Vatican, European Parliament and the World Council of Churches.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Fatih Akın, Film, Turkey

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