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INTERVIEW-Armenian Killings Film Not Anti-Turkish-Directors

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  • INTERVIEW-Armenian Killings Film Not Anti-Turkish-Directors

    INTERVIEW-ARMENIAN KILLINGS FILM NOT ANTI-TURKISH-DIRECTORS
    By Madeline Chambers

    Reuters, UK
    Feb 14 2007

    BERLIN, Feb 14 (Reuters) - A film depicting the tragedy of a rich
    family almost wiped out in the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks in 1915 is not meant to be anti-Turkish, the directors said
    on Wednesday.

    Italy's Taviani brothers say "The Lark Farm", featuring at the Berlin
    film festival, has a broad message about the human catastrophe of
    modern conflict.

    Sparing little detail, the drama shows Ottoman Turks decapitating,
    castrating and dismembering the men of the Armenian family in front
    of their wives and children, who are themselves sent on a punishing
    forced march towards the desert.

    "This movie is not against Turks," director Paolo Taviani told Reuters
    in an interview, pointing out a Turkish man is instrumental in saving
    some of the family's children.

    "It is not the Turks who kill -- it is the Young Turks -- a political
    movement. It is exactly the same as what happened in Italy with the
    Fascists and in Germany under Nazism."

    At the end of the press screening, the audience sat in stunned silence.

    Turkey, in accession talks with the European Union, denies claims
    by Armenia and other countries that 1.5 million Armenians died in a
    systematic genocide at Turkish hands.

    It argues large numbers of Christian Armenians and Muslim Turks
    perished during the breakup of the Ottoman Empire. To Ankara's dismay,
    several foreign parliaments have passed laws recognising the massacres
    as genocide.

    Last month Turkish Armenian editor Hrant Dink, who espoused
    reconciliation between the two peoples, was killed by a 17-year-old
    ultra-nationalist. Like dozens of intellectuals, Dink had been
    prosecuted for his views on the killings.

    NO RESPONSE FROM ANKARA

    Ahead of the film's public release, the Taviani brothers said they
    were unaware of any adverse reaction from Turkey. Berlin's Turkish
    embassy said it had received no response to the film from Ankara.

    Although a love story between an Armenian and Turk is a major part of
    the film and some Ottoman soldiers are portrayed as being reluctant
    to carry out orders to kill their friends, the focus is firmly on
    the suffering of the Armenian family.

    "We wanted to comment on current events like Kosovo, and Rwanda,"
    said Paolo Taviani's brother Vittorio.

    "We thought we should look at one of the most horrifying tragedies
    of mankind because there is nothing worse than a war between people
    who know each other well."

    The brothers say they are sure Turkey should join the EU.

    "(But) we are convinced ... of the necessity that it publicly
    recognises the historical truth of the Armenian tragedy, in the same
    way as Germany and Italy have come to terms with their criminal past,"
    they said in a statement.

    Actress Arsinee Khanjian, who plays a major character in "The Lark
    Farm", says Turkey still has a way to go.

    "Turkey must change its approach to the Armenian genocide but it
    also has big human rights problems with many other minorities,"
    the actress of Armenian descent told Reuters.
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