Deutsche Welle: Commemorating Armenia's lost voices
April 24 is commemorated by Armenians as Genocide Remembrance Day. A hundred years ago on this day, hundreds of Armenian intellectuals, musicians, poets, community leaders and members of the clergy were arrested in Constantinople (now Istanbul), Deutsche Welle reports.
The international literature festival berlin (ilb) and the Lepsiushaus Potsdam launched a call for a worldwide reading of literary texts by Armenian authors, as well as excerpts of Varujan Vosganian's "The Book of Whispers," which describes the horrors of the deportations and the extermination methods used by the Ottoman forces.
The initiators of the worldwide reading remind that these events were well documented by several international sources. As stated in their appeal, "As early as August 1915, 'The New York Times' reported on a methodically planned program of ethnic cleansing and extermination which was unprecedented in history up to that time. The German Reich's government, which was allied to the Ottoman Empire, reached the same conclusions without undertaking anything against what was happening."
More than 300 authors from all over the world are supporting this initiative, among them the laureates for the Nobel Prize for Literature Mario Vargas Llosa, Herta Müller, Elfriede Jelinek, Orhan Pamuk and John M. Coetzee.
On Tuesday April 21, over a hundred literary events will be held in more than 30 countries. No Turkish event has been announced. The complete list of participants can be found on the initiative's website www.worldwide-reading.com.