Re: Medz Yeghern: Great Crime vs. Great Calamity
I'm surprised a composer/poet could say such an unsophisticated thing. Didn't he realise that a far deeper meaning could have been got by explaining that "Medz Yeghern" arose from an event that was so horrible that there was no terminology capable of neatly labeling it, and it could only be named by its survivors in an abstract way.
I've got the full text somewhere, so maybe his whole statement is not quite that crude all the way through. And of course, although it claimed to be a "Statement to UK Parliament", it was actually another of those "by Armenians for Armenians" things, so it might be intentionally unsophisticated.
Professor Khatchatur I. Pilikian
FromStatement to UK Parliament 19 January 2010
The Armenian term Medz Yeghern=Big Crime . . . .
===================
CRIME, atrocity, outrage, evil act-- this is the core meaning of "yeghern",
things that should NEVER happen. Not earthquakes and floods and forest fires. The term is NOT morally neutral. Survivors of the Genocide like A. Aharonian knew very well what they meant when they called it "Medz Yeghern". They didn't mean, as Turkish propagandists like to say, that some bad things just sort of happened. That's the genius of the term they handed down: a moral indictment is built into it, unlike the pre-"genocide" terms used by many other groups. And some people want to emasculate it and cover it up and disown it. A very big pity.
FromStatement to UK Parliament 19 January 2010
The Armenian term Medz Yeghern=Big Crime . . . .
===================
CRIME, atrocity, outrage, evil act-- this is the core meaning of "yeghern",
things that should NEVER happen. Not earthquakes and floods and forest fires. The term is NOT morally neutral. Survivors of the Genocide like A. Aharonian knew very well what they meant when they called it "Medz Yeghern". They didn't mean, as Turkish propagandists like to say, that some bad things just sort of happened. That's the genius of the term they handed down: a moral indictment is built into it, unlike the pre-"genocide" terms used by many other groups. And some people want to emasculate it and cover it up and disown it. A very big pity.
I've got the full text somewhere, so maybe his whole statement is not quite that crude all the way through. And of course, although it claimed to be a "Statement to UK Parliament", it was actually another of those "by Armenians for Armenians" things, so it might be intentionally unsophisticated.
Comment