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What happened to our culture in the diaspora?

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  • What happened to our culture in the diaspora?

    A thought-provoking article by Christopher Atamian that recently ran in Ararat magazine.

    It was while translating Krikor Beledian’s 50 Years of Armenian Literature in France from French into English that I discovered that Missak Manouchian and I were cousins. Who was Missak Manouchian and why is my relation to him important? I will delve into both these matters a bit later on in this short essay, which I have purposefully structured like a chassé-croisé, a weaving of ideas and observations.

    For over fifty years there existed in France several generations of Armenian writers, most of them refugees in one way or another from Ottoman lands, who wrote almost entirely in Armenian for an Armenian audience. Some of them, such as Zareh Vorpuni, Hratch Zartarian, Nigoghos Sarafian and Shahan Shahnur, were part of the so-called Menk or We group. Others, I am thinking in particular of the stunning feminist writer Zabel Yessayan, were only peripherally part of what has become known as the “Paris School,” “Ecole de Paris” or “Parisi Tbrotsuh.” These writers produced numerous novels, plays, magazines, newspapers, feuilletons, essays, medical treatises — you name it — all in Western Armenian.

    What is most remarkable to me about these now-departed writers? Simply that they wrote in Western Armenian for an Armenian audience. All this, we must realize, has been lost, perhaps one of the last phases of the Aghet or Catastrophe. We have lost our language however, not simply because of the Turkish will to annihilation but also because of our own cultural priorities and our own will to forget. I attended a French Lycée in New York, for example, which is part of a global network of schools that has produced literally hundreds of thousands of francophone citizens across the globe. In fact, in my year and the year below me at the New York school, not less than four students have become recognized and even prize-winning authors — in French.


    Full article available here.

  • #2
    Re: What happened to our culture in the diaspora?

    Do you know how to contact the editor of the magazine?

    There's no contact section on their entire website.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: What happened to our culture in the diaspora?

      Not sure. Maybe try AGBU headquarters?

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: What happened to our culture in the diaspora?

        He lost credibility by not limiting himself to just a lament for things lost but going on to claim "While Armenians are not as populous as the French, there is no reason that they cannot build schools every bit as good as the French lycées". Or, more correctly, he lost credibility by claiming it in a magazine run by the Melkonian Institute-closing AGBU and not making any mention of the fate of the Melkonian Institute.
        Last edited by bell-the-cat; 12-05-2011, 04:48 AM.
        Plenipotentiary meow!

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: What happened to our culture in the diaspora?

          Originally posted by One-Way View Post
          Do you know how to contact the editor of the magazine?

          There's no contact section on their entire website.
          Aris Sevag (Araratmagazine.org editor) [email protected].
          Plenipotentiary meow!

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: What happened to our culture in the diaspora?

            The closure and monetising of the Melkonian Institute is one of the biggest betrayal against the (diaspora) Armenian Nation of recent times.

            This crime and incompetence had been on-going since the assets of the Parerar Hayrigs (benefactors) Melkonian Brothers were passed to the AGBU who subsequently squandered it.
            The crime came to its zenith with the attempt to pull down the School and sell the estate for commercial development.

            Unashamedly the AGBU thus far has refused to explain the fate of the School.

            As far as I am aware the School Buildings and the surrounding land and small forest has been declared as a cultural heritage site (of Cyprus !!) by the Cyprus Government to the frustration of the AGBU.

            Also I understand the site is being used as a Greek Secondary School (College).
            This sad situation is very close to to my heart since I have spent a few years at the school in my teens.
            Politics is not about the pursuit of morality nor what's right or wrong
            Its about self interest at personal and national level often at odds with the above.
            Great politicians pursue the National interest and small politicians personal interests

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            • #7
              Re: What happened to our culture in the diaspora?

              That's true about Melkonian. But he has a point about the focus on churches rather than on [secular] schools or cultural centers.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: What happened to our culture in the diaspora?

                Originally posted by bell-the-cat View Post
                Aris Sevag (Araratmagazine.org editor) [email protected].
                Thank you!

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: What happened to our culture in the diaspora?

                  It is disgusting how we view Armenian language and literature as somehow "less than" or less worthwhile.

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