Bangkok Post

Rare images of Armenian genocide survivors on show in Italy

- LAURE BRUMONT

Rare, moving images of survivors of the 1915 Armenian genocide will be shown in Bologna today as part of the 29th edition of the city’s “Cinema Ritrovato” (Rediscover­ed Cinema) festival.

A significan­t historical source that was discovered completely by chance, buried away and forgotten in the US Library of Congress, the silent film dates from 1923 and includes images of children packed onto boats in Turkey and lines of refugees trudging along roads.

The film is being shown as part of a selection intended to honour Armenian cinema a century after the beginning of the slaughter of Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turkish forces.

Also on show during the festival are Namus ( Honour), a 1925 work by Hamo Beknazaria­n that is considered the first Armenian film.

But the jewel in the festival’s crown is the four minutes of Armenia, Cradle Of Humanity shot in Turkey soon after the end of the killing — a time thought previously to have only been recorded in still images such as those of German photograph­er Armin Wegner. Mariann Lewinsky, one of the festival’s curators, came upon the film by “a miracle” as she clicked through the internet data base of the Internatio­nal Federation of Film Archives (FIAF).

Who shot the film and how it got to the Oregon Historical Society before being deposited in the Congress library is a mystery, says the Swiss researcher as she runs the recently-restored reel.

“I sent a little email to my colleagues in the library and they told me, ‘Yes we have something, but we don’t know what.’

Having obtained the reel, she quickly dated it to 1923, but her first thought was the people shown could be displaced Greeks — a theory that was dropped when she recognised a well-known Istanbul palace in the background of one shot.

Colleagues confirmed that, after the end of World War I, British forces assembled Armenian orphans in the building for evacuation. “It is a miracle,” Lewinsky said.

An estimated 1.5 million Armenians were killed as the Ottoman empire disintegra­ted during World War I, according to a version of events now accepted by much of the world but disputed by Turkey.

Authoritie­s there say only 300,000 to 500,000 Armenians died, and that the term “genocide” is inaccurate and offensive for what they depict as civil strife provoked by the Armenians siding with invading Russian troops. An equal number of Turks died in the fighting, Ankara maintains.

 ??  ?? An employee of film restoratio­n laboratory Cineteca di Bologna works on the restoratio­n of Armenia, Cradle Of Humanity.
An employee of film restoratio­n laboratory Cineteca di Bologna works on the restoratio­n of Armenia, Cradle Of Humanity.

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