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Essay: Late night lessons in fear

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  • Essay: Late night lessons in fear

    ArmeniaNow.com, Armenia

    Essay: Late night lessons in fear

    Opinion by Vahan Ishkhanyan

    Four interrogate one. This is not a Customs service, where a
    suspicious passenger is asked questions; neither is it a police
    department. This the `Late in the Night' program at Armenia TV that
    would more fit to be called `Late Inquisition'. Two journalists, a
    clergyman and the fourth a nationalist I don't know, interrogate a
    Buddhist. A discussion in its form, the program holds no discussion,
    but questioning and charges. Gagik and Nelli are journalists, but
    there appear no intentions to investigate or inform - only to accuse
    and intimidate.

    The nationalist says: `Any sect is an enemy to our state and people.'
    Asked if the program's guest is `his enemy', the nationalist answers
    `Of course.'


    Armenia TV seems to side with KGB methods for its `talk show'

    The guest, Artashes Gazaryan, is a Buddhist, one of only about four or
    five in Armenia. He has created a website (www.buddhism.am) to inform
    others of his religion. Among other information, the site contains
    information about the possibility of inviting a Buddhist teacher to
    lecture.

    The KGB, through the face of Armenia TV, discovered the website and
    tricked Gazaryan to appear. Rather than a discussion of Buddhist
    belief, Gazaryan was asked: `Are you baptized?', `How were you married
    if you are not a Christian?' `What means did you use to get to
    Thailand?' and string of other questions apparently aimed at
    collecting information for building a case against him that would
    inflame other nationalists.

    His inquisitors implied that Gazaryan's parents had failed in their
    religious duty, by raising a son to become something other than
    Armenian Apostolic Christian.

    I watch and am reminded that the KGB used to interrogate dissidents
    about how they got `anti-Soviet' literature, whom they gave the books
    to read, why they read `different' books or held `different' beliefs.

    Fearful of the KGB, people were even afraid of thinking in Stalin
    times, but at least the Soviet state provided its suspects a formal
    defense attorney. The TV version National Security Service puppets of
    `Late in the Night' attacked un-resisted.

    The interrogation ends up with accusatory conclusions in which on
    nationalist lectures that `plurality of beliefs leads to the
    deterioration of the state and is called high treason'.

    Gazaryan humbly answers all the questions telling that he has used his
    own means to get to Thailand, trying to turn the questioning into a
    discussion, to do what he was invited for: `Let's view it from another
    point: what defines one's belief and why does a person find a
    different religion or other postulates?'

    Gagik has none of it, and suggests that religious cults in Armenia buy
    belief with promises of rice and butter.

    The hosts grill the Buddhist about how he could afford to travel to
    Thailand and I watch thinking that those interested in other people's
    income would ask the same questions posed by the network to state
    officials who wear $5,000 suits, travel to Monte Carlo casinos and are
    then appear before these same journalists in flattering interviews
    with soft and irrelevant questions.

    May be the Buddhist is a good occasion to appear as a tough journalist
    and to compensate for the flattery he manifests to the officials like
    the man who revenges for outside humiliation by beating his
    defenseless wife at home.

    Gazaryan tries to squeeze in a point about free speech. `A man meets
    another man. They talk in the kitchen. That frequently happens. How
    will you be regulating the conversation, what the people think and how
    come they think in different ways?'

    Nelli responds with disparage: `That's called European values,
    globalization' - suggesting apparently that globalization and European
    values are the same thing and, as it seems, are at odds with being
    Armenian. One can conclude from her definition that thinking means not
    being Armenian. And if she succeeds in her efforts to keep Armenian
    identity by that means then people willing to think will stop being
    Armenian. And I believe there will be lots of such people.

    Nelli begins defining a criminal punishment for those who think: `How
    are going to announce the lectures [of the invited teacher]? You are
    not a registered organization, are you? If you agitate for it, spread
    information about the lecture then that will be interpreted as an act
    prosecuted by the criminal law.'


    If I didn't see Nelli, I would think she is a woman at least beyond
    60, who has been closed up in a basement for the last 20 years of her
    life unaware of the Soviet Union's demise. Her understanding of what
    is criminally prosecuted comes from the Soviet times, when anti-Soviet
    agitation and propaganda were criminally prosecuted and even tougher
    when an unregistered organization was created for that purposes.

    Meanwhile Father Ghevond confuses everything - ascribing Bhagavad-Gita
    and the institute of gurus to Buddhism. Artashes asks not to confuse
    religions and explains that Buddhism is not a sect, but one of the
    three major religions of the world. But Father Ghevond is not
    interested in the difference of religions, just the number of his
    congregation and says everybody, including Jehovah's Witnesses and
    Artashes, are his lost sheep. (The `sheep', one might argue, are the
    source of income for the Father; he sanctifies homes, baptizes,
    provides burial services, sacrifices, that are all sources of income
    and when `sheep' are lost, incomes drop . . .)

    Artashes calls for religious tolerance.

    But with tolerance plurality flourishes and competition of
    beliefs. And believers who distinguish Bhagavad-Gita from Buddhism
    will have the opportunity to freely demonstrate. As long as there is a
    single control, the priest, the journalists and the nationalist remain
    united. And safe. Sound familiar?

    The nationalist criticizes the authorities of the Apostolic Church for
    not fighting properly against sects and refers to the former
    Catholicos: `I don't think any sectarian would organize any activity
    like that in Vazgen's times [Catholicos of All Armenians Vazgen I in
    1955-1994].' Father Ghevond replies: `They did - under the supervision
    of the KGB.' So, it appears that the supervision of the KGB is
    lacking. Armenia TV fills the gap setting supervision under the name
    of the program.

    And Armenia TV is not the only one in setting KGB-style supervision. I
    recently heard the former minister of culture Hakob Movses stating on
    Shoghakat TV: `Sects are traitors of the nation. They are considered
    traitors also in Germany as well.' He is confident - no German will
    hear him and respond saying `Don't lie and don't try to get fascism
    back we have got rid of at the cost of significant deprivations and
    shame.' While Armenians do not reply and let the lessons of fascism
    the Germans and Europe have passed be repeated here [in Armenia]. And
    so, frequently lies and slander against religious organizations are
    spread on air. And violence never comes late.

    Shoghakat TV belongs to the Apostolic Church and its attempts to
    create monopoly in the religious field by defaming competing
    organizations are understandable. Less clear, though, is why Armenia
    TV, whose shareholders include American Armenian Gerard Cafesjian,
    whose money was earned in a free country, allows itself to be used
    against freedom in Armenia.

    I visited the www.buddhism.am website today. There was a new text
    added there on a red background - the symbol of fear: `The authors of
    this site do not intend to convince people in their truthfulness, the
    more so to create a religious organization', and so on. In a word, a
    feeling of threat, fear. Nelli in her basement, the priest protected
    by the state, and the nationalist and his faulty allegiance have
    reached their aim. And more importantly, the aim of those who put
    questions in their mouths.
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