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Columbia Armenian Center Honors Balakian

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  • Columbia Armenian Center Honors Balakian

    COLUMBIA ARMENIAN CENTER HONORS BALAKIAN
    By Florence Avakian

    www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/05/08/columb ia-armenian-center-honors-balakian/
    May 8, 2009

    NEW YORK-"He has lifted memory to an art," said Hamid Dabashi,
    the Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative
    Literature at Columbia University, in his tribute to noted author,
    poet, and teacher Peter Balakian.

    Balakian's Black Dog of Fate recently saw its 10th anniversary
    publication, 12 years after the original publication and 24
    printings. The latest publication includes two new chapters about
    Aleppo and Der Zor. It was during a U.S. State Department book tour
    to Syria that Balakian took a trip to Der Zor and made the chilling
    discovery of the exposed bones of victims of the Armenian Genocide.

    The program, sponsored by Columbia University's Armenian Center,
    was opened by Armenian Center executive board member Aram Arkun,
    who welcomed the more than one hundred in attendance, following a
    mezze reception replete with Armenian delicacies.

    One of the two keynote speakers for the event, Jay Winter- the
    acclaimed Charles J. Stille Professor of History at Yale University,
    a specialist on World War I and its impact on the 20th century,
    and the author of America and the Armenian Genocide of 1915-opened
    his philosophical thesis entitled "Thinking About Silence" by
    relating that Balakian has recognized and acknowledged people
    who have suffered. "Memory is everywhere today, but no one knows
    what it is. Books like our grown children take on a life of their
    own." Balakian, he related, has "inserted a third term between memory
    and dialogue, and that word is silence."

    Explaining that the silence he was focusing on was not the absence
    of sound, but rather the "absence of conventional verbal exchanges,"
    Winter added that silence is a "socially constructed space in which
    subjects and words normally used in everyday life are not spoken."

    In the context of war and violence, he continued, "the primary
    impulses underlying the social construction of silence are first
    'liturgical silences,' the eternal themes of loss, mourning, sacrifice,
    and redemption;

    secondly, they are 'political or strategic silences' with the hope
    that the passage of time can lower the temperature of the disputes
    or even heal the wounds they cause; and thirdly, it is the concept
    of who has the right to speak about the violent past." He supplied
    numerous examples involving these three constructs.

    Silences, the Yale University scholar pointed out, "do not mean
    forgetting. Silences can be deafening," he declared. Balakian's book
    is about the "unsayable," and his letter to his grandmother "is a
    meditation on silence. The portrait of the grandmother is someone
    who could not choose to speak other than through her silence."

    Speaking Through Silence

    Silence is many things, and "all occupy and frame the landscape of
    remembrance," he said in conclusion.

    Quoting the French writer Maurice Blanchot who wrote in 1952,
    "To be silent is still to speak," he said, "to speak of silence as
    a social phenomenon is to speak of the many ways in which we all
    observe silences, and thereby agree to deal with moral ambiguities,
    to live with and through contradictions, by both remembering and
    forgetting the past."

    Walter Kalaydjian, a professor of English at Emory University and a
    literary critic who has examined the poetry of the Armenian Genocide,
    emphasized that "documenting the historical record of genocide is a
    crucial task in the struggle to prevent crimes against humanity. But
    proving the case of the Armenian Genocide does not in itself offer
    sufficient testimony to the catastrophe of its traumatic imprint,
    not just on the survivors, but on the second, third, and even fourth
    generation," he noted, and quoted Terence Des Pres who called these
    succeeding generations "secondary witnesses."

    He referred to the new chapter in Black Dog of Fate where Balakian
    tells of uncovering the exposed bones at Der Zor and smuggling
    some back to the United States. "At Margadeh, Syria, the anonymous
    remains of the dead overflow the sanctioned crypt of Der Zor's Holy
    Martyrs Armenian Church as the silent evidence of genocide's modern
    biopolitic-a corporeal excess denied the communal rites of mourning and
    proper burial belonging to ordinary death," Kalaydjian said poetically.

    U.S. Geopolitics Involved

    This grim evidence of exposed bones was the result of oil exploration
    by the United States, "its oil economy, its ongoing war in Iraq,
    and its strategic policy of maintaining tacit complicity with the
    Turkish state policy on genocide denial," he related. This new chapter
    in Black Dog of Fate "marks a turn away from the somewhat privileged
    status of 'American son' inscribed in the memoir's original subtitle,
    and now toward a collective and decidedly internationalist, social
    identity rooted in the Armenian Diaspora and its campaign for human
    rights beyond genocide."

    Peter Balakian, a professor of humanities and English at Colgate
    University, whose book The Burning Tigris was a New York Times
    bestseller, said that he was grateful that he grew up in a family
    "with silence." A good portion of Black Dog of Fate involved "hunting
    down my grandmother's story," Balakian revealed.

    Surviving the death march with her first husband and two infant
    daughters, his grandmother arrived in Aleppo in 1915, and lived
    there for five years. She later moved to New Jersey, where she had
    two more daughters.

    "Then emerged a series of absences and presences," he said,
    reading sections of the new chapter that describe his search for his
    grandmother's address and life in Aleppo. And from the archives of
    the Armenian Prelacy, he saw photos of his aunts, as well as those
    of the 5,000 emaciated women and children from Sivas.

    During the lengthy question and answer period where many questions
    were posed on the right of return, memory, trauma, and the recognition
    of the genocide, Kalaydjian commented that his students felt angry
    that they may not have known of their own family history. And Winter
    pointed out that Armenians or any other victims of genocide should
    not rely on governments to recognize their tragedies. "We must escape
    from civil rights to the domain of human rights. The response to human
    rights emerges from below, not from a government. It's not President
    Obama's business, but ours," he stated with emphasis.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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