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  • 'Genocides Repeat Themselves'

    'GENOCIDES REPEAT THEMSELVES'
    By Mariann Martin, [email protected]

    Jackson Sun
    September 25, 2008
    TN

    Photojournalist seeks to raise awareness of nearly 1.5M Armenian deaths

    Who now remembers the Armenian genocide?

    Those were Adolph Hitler's words in 1942, when his general protested
    that the Nazis would never get away with exterminating the Polish Jews.

    Ara Oshagan hopes that his work of documenting the lives and stories
    of Armenian genocide survivors will help to prove Hitler wrong.

    "Genocides repeat themselves," said Oshagan, 44, on Wednesday. "Knowing
    about and remembering them are very important parts of ending
    genocides, if there can be any hope of prevention."

    Oshagan presented his virtual documentation called " i witness" on
    Wednesday night at St. Luke's Episcopal Church in downtown Jackson. The
    presentation is part of a series called "And Cain Rose Up ... A Study
    of Modern Genocides" presented by the Lambuth-B'nai Israel Center
    for Jewish Studies.

    Since 1995, Oshagan has been photographing survivors of the Armenian
    genocide, in a project called "The Genocide Project" that includes
    oral history given by the survivors.

    The Armenian genocide began in 1915 when the Turkish army and
    government forced around two million Armenians on death marches
    through present day Syria. Almost 1.5 million Armenians died in the
    next 18 months.

    His interest in the project was sparked after an 80th commemoration
    of the genocide in Los Angeles, Oshagan said.

    "I met 80 survivors from the genocide, and I realized their stories
    had to be told," said Oshagan, who is an avid photographer. "The story
    is not as well known as the Holocaust so we started to organize an
    oral history program to tell their stories."

    Oshagan, who is a research scientist, was born in Beirut, Lebanon.

    "There are Armenian diasporic communities all over the world because
    the survivors were spread after the genocide," Oshagan said. "The
    genocide is very much a part of our community and our psyche."

    Oshagan said he grew up hearing stories about the genocide and it
    had always moved him deeply. But the stories never included the
    terrible details he heard when he began interviewing the survivors
    of the genocide.

    "They were just kids at the time," Oshagan said. "But it was horrible
    and shocking; how they could have lived through those things is
    unimaginable."

    Oshagan said his work has many components: it is art and history,
    but it also has a huge political component. He has displayed his work
    in Washington and state capitols to help raise awareness.

    "The Turkish government has not accepted responsibility and
    acknowledged the genocide, so it remains an unfinished part of the
    Armenian people," Oshagan said. "We are trying to confront denial
    and reverse it."

    Since 1922, the Turkish government has consistently denied the
    genocide, saying the Armenians died as part of World War I, Oshagan
    said.

    David Dietrich, an associate professor of psychology at Lambuth
    University, said he played soccer with Oshagan when they were high
    school students in Memphis.

    When Lambuth began planning their genocide series, Dietrich immediately
    thought about his friend.

    "I knew he would bring a sense of passion and knowledge to the
    project," Dietrich said.

    Attendants of the programs on Wednesday night said they came hoping
    to learn something new.

    "I love history and this caught my attention," said Carolyn Lawhorn,
    52, of Jackson. "I am hoping to learn something new to influence my
    own writing."

    Jacob Vandiver, 21, a senior ethics major at Union University, said
    he came because he tries to keep up with current ethical issues.

    "I don't know anything about the Armenian genocide so I am looking
    forward to learning more," Vandiver said.

    Visit jacksonsun.com and share your thoughts.

    - Mariann Martin,
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