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  • Toumani Take II

    Toumani Take II

    Friday, February 13th, 2015
    http://asbarez.com/131817/toumani-take-ii/

    BY GAREN YEGPARIAN

    Circumstances in the form of community reactions, discussions, and
    commentary obligate me to revisit a topic I did not much want to
    address in the first place since it gives the culprit what she craves
    and needs to achieve her untoward desires/goals, ATTENTION.

    I will start by apologizing to all those who read my December 2014
    piece, "Soul-Searching, or Self Serving" for not being clear enough
    about THE key aspect of my discussion of Meline Toumani's book "There
    Was and There Was Not: A Journey Through Hate and Possibility in
    Turkey, Armenia, and Beyond." My concern is how she and her publisher
    are marketing, positioning, publicizing, and pushing (much like drug
    dealers do) this book. I almost don't care about its contents and
    contentions. Whether what she argues and posits is brilliant or
    bullshit is irrelevant to me since as it is the marketing angle that
    troubles me deeply. This should have been evident from the fact that I
    was concerned about this book long before it saw the light of day,
    based on promotional material about it.

    I had to clarify this since countless people, even those who agree
    with me, have criticized me for commenting about the book and
    advocating that others NOT buy it, without first having read it,
    myself. Anyone reviewing my earlier piece will see that the only
    content of the book I address is what she herself read aloud at the
    Abril Bookstore event held for the book. The rest is about how it's
    being "sold" to the public.

    A related, and odd, aspect of the criticism I have received is the
    "surprise" of people at my recommending NOT getting this without
    reading. Funny, isn't it? I thought that was why we had book reviews
    and signing events for authors and their publications, so we, as the
    reading public, get a chance to sample the writer's wares and decide
    based on that whether to purchase or not. After reading the reviews
    Toumani herself provides links to, and listening to her in person and
    on radio interviews, I concluded buying this book is a bad decision
    and said so. Why should that surprise anyone?

    Let's move away from the defensive nature of the paragraphs above.

    Since December, much discussion has attended this book, its author,
    her motivations, etc. These have occurred on hikes, online, and
    everywhere in between. Two pieces well worth reading are Chris
    Atamian's and James Russell's, Mahdotz Professor of Armenian Studies
    at Harvard University. Peter Musurlian's original piece is also worthy
    of your attention.

    But all this is playing into what I have become convinced is Toumani's
    game of making a name for herself. There's nothing wrong with that...
    unless it is done at someone else's expense. In this case that
    "someone else" is us, the Armenians, worldwide. How she's doing this
    is typically self-serving, depraved, and almost nefarious.

    On the most obvious level, she's playing to those who can't see beyond
    their immediate, comfortable, urban-cloistered existence. These are
    people who go into fits of near-hysteria if they encounter something
    labeled (rightly or wrongly) as hate. There are also the types who
    think, and often advise Armenians and others to, "just get over it"
    since it "all happened so long ago" and somewhere else. Read the book
    reviews and listen to her interviews. You'll see. I provided quotes in
    my first piece.

    But it gets worse. Toumani is cynically playing the part of the
    "misunderstood" and "unappreciated" "martyr" of the Armenian
    community. Her faux avant-garde arguments appeal to otherwise
    forward-thinking and constructively-inclined people, taking advantage
    of their being insufficiently informed about Armenian issues.

    Remember, even if all her complaints were valid, she's making them
    just to sell books and earn acclaim. She is using legitimate
    expressions of concern about her doings to make herself out a martyr
    so she sells books. Without referring to me by name, she mockingly
    referred to my advising people not to get the book, without having
    read it. She is playing the "they're picking on me" game.

    A worse example of Toumani's depraved approach is a question and her
    answer about what happened in Abril Bookstore at her book's event. She
    flat-out lies when Leonard Lopate, her host on an interview, near the
    end of their discussion asks her "Weren't you heckled at an Armenian
    bookstore in Los Angeles?" and she confirms that she was. Please see
    Merriam-Webster's definition of "heckle" below. What really happened
    was she interrupted the questions being posed by Levon Marashlian,
    Peter Musurlian, and I-- whom she describes in the interview as "three
    fellows who represent the far extreme nationalistic segment of the
    Armenian Diaspora"! There is video-taped proof of this. Unfortunately,
    that documentation is unavailable to us. I asked the owner of Abril
    Bookstore for the footage. He refused, citing his advance-promise to
    Toumani that it would not be publicized. She has made an unwitting
    accomplice of a fellow Armenian (honorably keeping his word), who
    otherwise provides an excellent service to our community. I can only
    presume that she anticipated her own boorish behavior and didn't want
    the truth to come out.

    Also, doesn't it make you wonder how Lopate knew about her alleged
    heckling? To me, it is evident that she planted that "information"
    with him so that here again, she could play the victim. You can see
    how she is using that "victimization" to curry favor and pity with her
    audiences to get them to buy her book. And, it is all about selling
    her book. Her publisher must be doing a great job, since she has in
    the last two months even been reviewed in The Economist and The New
    York Times and has become a finalist for the 2014 National Book
    Critics Circle Award-- how many Armenian-themed books have managed to
    secure such visibility?

    This kind of exposure and praise, her ability to fund a lengthy
    sojourn in Turkey, and the very premise of her "personal; journey"
    have many people wondering who's backing her and why. To me this
    smacks of conspiracy mongering, but I feel compelled to report what I
    have been confronted with.

    As I often do, I will point out some good news on this front as well.
    A friend apologized to me recently, saying that he'd purchased the
    book already, not knowing about its flaws. This, coupled with most of
    the comments people have posted to online versions of articles
    discussing Toumani and/or her book, shows that, at least in our
    community, the majority "gets it" about what a damaging piece of work
    a decade of Toumani's life has produced. It's even possible that
    Toumani may yet recognize her misguidedness, assuming she can overcome
    her arrogance. I assert this based on her response to a question in an
    interview with Nayat Karaköse of "Agos" (Hrant Dink's publication).

    When asked, "You write about how Diaspora Armenians are full of
    hatred. Most of the reactions are related to this. Did you hesitate
    before openly writing about the hatred?" she replied, in part, "It has
    surprised me how much people focus on that word, and it bothers me.
    The US media were really fixated on this word, too..." and that she has
    recalibrated her response to such queries. This is what some of us
    have been trying to convey to Toumani and her few hangers-on. She is
    playing in the American political arena, where some forces are arrayed
    against the interests of Armenians. The "hatred" fetish I mentioned in
    my first article fits into the narrative that those forces use against
    us, typically to subtly undercut arguments advocating Genocide
    recognition. She has been living in denial of the morass into which
    she has naively waded with her book.

    I will not address Toumani and this book of hers any more because she
    is unworthy. I don't want to publicize her. To further discuss it is
    falling into the trap usually used by Turkey's denialists-- the
    creation and maintenance of endless debate, effectively mental
    masturbation, to postpone addressing the substance of the issue in the
    hopes that over time, more Armenians, like Meline Toumani, will
    succumb to self-hate, self-doubt, and simple fatigue leading to their
    exit from the struggle to restore full justice for the Armenian nation
    and distancing themselves from their Armenian roots.

    I repeat my call to NOT buy this book. And, should your non-Armenian
    friends mention it to you, enlighten them about it. Explaining that it
    is an example of a pathetic human being trying to "make it" at the
    expense of others. It is an example of someone (ab)using her
    community, expecting the community's support (purchasing books and
    speaking kindly of her "work"), and giving nothing back except
    degrading descriptions of that community.

    Definition of heckle:
    - to interrupt (someone, such as a speaker or performer) by shouting
    annoying or rude comments or questions
    - to harass and try to disconcert with questions, challenges, or gibes: badger

    CORRECTION: In my piece last week, I erroneously wrote [email protected] as
    the URL for the cross-country bike ride being organized on the
    Genocide's centennial. The correct address is LA2DC.org. Apologies for
    any confusion and inconvenience this may have caused.

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