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Film On Morgenthau Opens Lens On The Armenian Genocide

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  • Film On Morgenthau Opens Lens On The Armenian Genocide

    FILM ON MORGENTHAU OPENS LENS ON THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Chris Bergeron

    Daily News
    Monday March 30, 2009

    FRAMINGHAM, MA--Descended from survivors of the Armenian genocide,
    filmmaker Apo Torosyan hopes his art transforms prejudice and hate
    into tolerance and compassion.

    Growing up in Turkey, he learned his father's parents had both starved
    to death after the genocidal massacres of 1915. As a teenager in
    Istanbul, he saw mobs hang Christian priests and rape Armenian women
    while his pregnant sister cowered in their apartment preparing to
    kill herself if necessary.

    Yet when Torosyan screens his newest film Wednesday in the Framingham
    Library in Massachusetts, it will honor a man who fought oppression
    at great personal risk while refusing to preach hate.

    His hour-long film, "The Morgenthau Story," will be shown at 7
    p.m. on Wednesday, April 1 in the Costin Room of the library at 49
    Lexington St.

    "I'm trying to reach out and warn people genocide is still with us
    today," said Torosyan. "Too often we don't see it. But when you say
    'us' and 'them,' you're already prejudging people."

    A shorter version of his film will be shown Monday, April 23 at 11
    a.m. in Peabody City Hall at 24 Lowell St.

    The son of a Greek mother and Armenian father, Torosyan earned his
    bachelor's and master's degrees at the Istanbul Academy of Fine Arts
    in the 1960s.

    He has exhibited his rich, moody paintings in more than 40 solo and
    20 group shows in Europe and North America. His paintings are in the
    permanent collections of several museums, including the Museum of
    Modern Art in Bordeaux, France, the Armenian Library and Museum of
    America in Watertown, Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Conn.,
    and the Florida Holocaust Museum in St. Petersburg, Fla.

    Now 67, Torosyan has made seven documentaries, including four
    dealing with aspects of the genocide and three others he describes
    as philosophic "meditations."

    Since immigrating to the United States in 1986, he fears he can't
    return to Turkey because on an earlier visit he expressed his opinion
    about the Armenian genocide, which puts him in danger of imprisonment.

    Torosyan's documentary incorporates interviews with the three
    descendants of Henry Morgenthau Sr., ambassador to Constantinople
    from 1913 to 1916, and archival footage about Turkish oppression of
    the Armenian minority.

    He credits Morgenthau for trying to alert the world to the Ottoman
    massacres of Armenians and other Christians and later, as chairman
    of the Greek Resettlement Commission, saving thousands after the 1922
    Smyrna massacre.

    While often regarded as the 20th century's first holocaust, Toroysyan
    fears Westerners know little about the Ottoman Empire's murderous
    policies against Christians.

    He said in April 1915, civilian and military authorities of the
    then-Ottoman Empire now present day Turkey launched attacks, massacres
    and forced marches to drive Armenians, as well as Greeks and Syrians,
    off their lands and into exile. While exact figures remain in dispute,
    Torosyan said it's "generally accepted" that between 1915 and 1923
    1.5 million Armenians died and another 2 million, representing nearly
    half the group's population, were driven from the country.

    Rather than "play the blame game," Torosyan said his films present
    history objectively so future generations can recognize the symptoms
    of ethnic, religious and racial prejudice before they take effect. "I
    believe history should be known so we don't forget the past,"
    he said. "I'm trying to reach out to youth in high school and
    college. They should know what happened."

    While the Republic of Turkey, which succeeded the Ottoman Empire,
    refuses to describe the deaths and forced relocations as genocide,
    Torosyan insisted he "holds no prejudice toward Turkish people today."

    Whether painting or making films, he said his art is intimately
    connected to his personal history.

    "What else is mine? My roots, my family history? Starving family
    members dying during the Armenian, Greek and Assyrian Genocide,
    including my grandparents," he said. "...I started making my films,
    which are not all related to human rights, but to life itself. My
    documentaries have been shown in places I've never been to and seen
    by thousands of people I've never met. And through the Internet,
    I have met a lot of new friends with the same message: Hope not hate."
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