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Headbangers Against Genocide: System of a Down

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  • Headbangers Against Genocide: System of a Down

    Foreign Policy In Focus
    Jan 5 2007


    Headbangers Against Genocide
    John Feffer, IRC | January 4, 2007

    Editor: Chuck Hosking, IRC


    John Dolmayan, Daron Malakian, Shavo Odadjian, and Serj Tankian of
    System of a Down

    Thousands of young people with long hair and studded tongues pay good
    money several dozen times a year to listen to lectures about
    genocide. Well, `lecture' is perhaps not the best way to describe
    Serj Tankian's delivery. The tall lanky Tankian, who has cascades of
    curly hair and looks like the long-lost offspring of Frank Zappa and
    Cher, is a natural on stage. But when he grabs the microphone, he is
    more likely to shout than to talk.

    Serj Tankian is the lead singer of System of a Down, a popular rock
    group on the cusp of heavy metal. SOAD, as its fans like to call it,
    is part of a new generation of politically engaged rock groups. Like
    Rage Against the Machine or Green Day, SOAD produces some rousing
    antiwar songs (like `BYOB' with its chorus of `Why don't presidents
    fight the war? Why do they always send the poor?'). But the group
    also has a very specific political goal: to educate the world about
    the Armenian genocide.

    A new documentary, Screamers, tells the story of the 1915 genocide
    through the words, music, and activism of the four Armenian-American
    members of System of a Down. The film comes at a particularly
    important time. Despite repeated public avowals of `never again' by
    many government leaders - after Bosnia, after Rwanda - genocide is again
    in the headlines because of Darfur. And Turkey continues to evade
    responsibility for the Armenian genocide even as it attempts to join
    the European Union and cement its alliances with the United States.

    Screamers, as genocide expert Samantha Powers explains in the film,
    are people who react viscerally to the horror of atrocity and won't
    stop screaming until something is done about it. The raw energy of
    System of a Down clearly resonates with its audience. But will such
    musical activism make waves outside the concert halls as well?

    Political Metal
    Heavy metal, according to convention, is all about Satan, death, and
    doom. It is a musical form about as far removed from politics and
    foreign policy as a lullaby or a mazurka.

    Dig a little deeper, though, and even heavy metal turns out to be
    more complicated than that. Ozzy Osbourne's Black Sabbath, for
    instance, would seem to be the epitome of reactionary, white-boy
    rock. Long before his reality show resurrection, however, Ozzy took
    aim at the Vietnam War in the song `War Pigs' and blasted the
    insanity of Cold War deterrence in the song `Children of the Grave.'
    Today, heavy metal bands wear their politics even more prominently on
    the sleeves of their black T-shirts. Bands like Lamb of God write
    songs castigating U.S. foreign policy, while Cattle Decapitation
    takes on the protein industrial complex.

    It's one thing to rile up an audience of recruitment-age young people
    with songs about the idiocy of the Iraq War. System of a Down,
    however, aims at the more difficult goal of activating young people
    around an event that occurred nearly a century ago. In 2005, during a
    concert tour devoted to the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
    genocide, the band put photographs of the atrocities on the big
    screen in the concert hall and ran TV footage of Peter Jennings
    discussing the meaning and contemporary significance of the term
    `genocide.'

    `Today, more people learn about the Armenian genocide from System of
    a Down than through all the other efforts combined,' says Aram
    Hamparian of the Armenian National Committee.

    And it's not just Armenians or the descendants of other genocide
    victims (Jews, Cambodians) who groove to SOAD's message. Although the
    band refuses to play in Turkey, Serj Tankian reports, `We have a lot
    of fans there. We've gotten into the heads of some of the younger
    generation, and hopefully something will happen one day with that.'

    For SOAD, the crusade is deeply personal. In Screamers, the band
    members each relate stories passed down from their grandparents and
    great grandparents about who survived, who didn't, and the
    unspeakable things that were witnessed. Scholars estimate that 1.5
    million Armenians died during the genocide. `A whole race, Genocide.
    Taken away, all our pride,' SOAD sings in `PLUCK.'

    There's Something About Turkey
    The stakes reach well beyond settling personal scores or even setting
    the historical record straight. System of a Down is very clear about
    the geopolitics of its work. Throughout the Cold War, Turkey fended
    off all outside pressure to alter its policies - regarding Cyprus, its
    mistreatment of Kurds, or its interpretation of its national
    history - by emphasizing its anticommunist credentials. With the Cold
    War over and membership in the European Union beckoning, Turkey has
    been willing to make some concessions, such as abolishing the death
    penalty and providing more rights to the Kurdish community. But
    diplomatic recognition of Cyprus is still off the table, and the
    Armenian genocide remains a forbidden topic.

    Several prominent Turkish writers, including Nobel Prize-winner Orhan
    Pamuk, have run afoul of the authorities for merely mentioning the
    genocide. One of the first Turkish historians to grapple honestly
    with the issue has published a new book on the genocide - from his
    exile in Minnesota. In A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the
    Question of Turkish Responsibility, Taner Akcam argues that
    acknowledging the true nature of what happened in 1915 would require
    accepting that the architects of modern Turkey were war criminals. In
    her New Yorker review, Elizabeth Kolbert calls Akcam's psychological
    explanation `a view of Turkish ethnic pride that gets dangerously
    close to a national stereotype.' Given that most U.S. citizens are
    similarly unwilling to associate the establishment of the United
    States with the attempted eradication of Native Americans - and that
    related complexes flourish in Australia, Israel, and many other
    countries - Akcam has not so much fallen back on an ethnic stereotype
    as he has articulated a more general psychological trait: the
    universal impulse to deny the horrors that lie beneath all
    nation-building.

    Turkish efforts to stifle discussion on the Armenian genocide extend
    far beyond the country's borders. Peter Balakian describes in his
    landmark book Black Dog of Fate how the Turkish Embassy intervened in
    a textbook project convened by the New York State Department of
    Education. Embassy officials told the organizers of the textbook
    project on 20th century genocides that inclusion of a chapter on the
    Armenian genocide would jeopardize U.S.-Turkey relations. `I traveled
    to Albany several times ... and sat in overheated offices imploring
    state bureaucrats, who were horrified by the Turkish assault, to hold
    firm on the chapter,' writes Balakian, a professor of English at
    Colgate University. `The Turkish contingent was threatening to call
    President Reagan. Letters went back and forth. The Education
    Department grew increasingly befuddled. Before it was over, the
    Turkish government had succeeded in forcing changes to the textbook.'


    At a much higher level of politics, as Screamers documents, the
    Turkish government has lobbied the U.S. Congress to prevent the
    passage of a resolution on the Armenian genocide. Although the House
    International Relations Committee passed two resolutions in 2005
    identifying the atrocities as genocide, the Republican-controlled
    leadership blocked passage in the House as a whole. With Nancy Pelosi
    and the Democrats now in charge, however, there is a good chance that
    the resolutions will be brought to the floor and passed.

    The Politics of Screaming
    Unlike many largely forgotten atrocities, the Armenian genocide is
    well documented. The accounts of survivors and contemporary
    observers, the photographic evidence, and even documentation from the
    Ottoman leadership itself make it impossible to dispute the attempt
    to wipe out an entire race of people. Historians are still filling in
    the gaps and piecing together motivations. Books like Black Dog of
    Fate or Atom Egoyan's exquisite film Ararat about the Armenian artist
    Arshile Gorky explore the impact of the genocide on subsequent
    generations.

    However, these historical investigations take place in academe. The
    books and movies are powerful but are ultimately, like most high
    culture, understated and nuanced.

    System of a Down is not interested in nuance or understatement. The
    band members are passionate and angry, and they scream out shocking
    lyrics often full of expletives. When Serj Tankian visits Congress to
    lobby legislators, he seems, without a microphone and an opportunity
    to raise his voice, like a fish out of water. But with Turkey still
    playing the geopolitical card by threatening to stop buying U.S. arms
    and hosting the U.S. military, a little screaming might be in
    order - not just in concert halls but in the halls of power as well.

    Links to songs about genocide:
    System of a Down: PLUCK (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P.L.U.C.K.)

    Blowback: For Whom the Bells Toll
    (http://www.blowback.org/site.html?http://www .blowback.org/songs/songs_forwhomthebellstoll.html )


    REM: The Flowers of Guatemala
    (http://www.lyricsfreak.com/r/rem/the+fl owers+of+guatemala_20115263.html)


    Rage Against the Machine: Sleep Now in the Fire
    (http://www.seeklyrics.com/lyrics/Rage-Agains t-The-Machine/Sleep-Now-In-The-Fire.html)


    Indigo Girls: This Train Revised
    (http://www.sing365.com/music/lyric.nsf/So ngUnid/42003E9E487244B0482568D8000EF51D)


    RX Bandits: In All Rwanda's Glory
    (http://www.lyricscafe.com/r/rxbandits/inall rwandasglory.html)

    Kronos Quartet and Steve Reich: Different Trains
    (http://www.uni-oldenburg.de/musik/video/ga rte_seesko.html)

    Also see Adam Jones, `Ten Great Songs About Genocide'

    http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/3869
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