Dear Friends,

Some attachments / pdf files at our site are locked due to a recent Google security update & they need to be unlocked one by one, manually

We regret to inform you that the priority will be given to major content contributors only

In the meantime, please feel free to browse all the rest of the articles & documents here

All The Best
Site Caretakers
Armenians-1915.blogspot.com

29.9.20

3754) William Saroyan’s Words Are Being Distorted As Well

17.09.2020


There are efforts to commemorate this world-renowned and beloved writer within the framework of the genocide narrative. In a poem written to commemorate Saroyan in the centenary of his birth[1], the word “genocide” is squeezed in, and in the preface of his books or in the documentary “Saroyan’s Land”, it is seen that people are trying to commemorate Saroyan together with the genocide narrative. Apart from these, the most striking issue is that people are trying to give the impression that they are quoting Saroyan by adding new phrases and concepts to his original words.

. . . The words of Saroyan that start with “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people”, in the last two paragraphs of the story “The Armenian and the Armenian” (1936) are frequently quoted on April 24, when the victims of the “Armenian Genocide” are commemorated. These words are frequently featured on various posters and websites containing Saroyan's quotes and picture. Aziz Gökdemir says that he saw this quote has been written on the wall under Saroyan's portrait in an Armenian Night in the US, and that many people who have not read the story and do not even know the author know this paragraph very well.[2]

However, when we read the book, and as some Armenian writers have pointed out as well,[3] we see that these quotes in posters contain lines that Saroyan never actually wrote. It is seen that the phrases in the frequently quoted words, “For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia” and “see if they will not pray again” are absent in the story written by Saroyan. The statements “See if the race will not live again when two of them meet in a beer parlor, twenty years after, and laugh, and speak in their tongue. Go ahead, see if you can do anything about it. See if you can stop them from mocking the big ideas of the world” in the original text were removed from these posters and quotations. Moreover, it is seen that the phrase “prayers are no longer uttered” in the story has been changed to “prayers are no more answered” in these posters and quotations.

The addition of phrases such as “they will create a new Armenia” and “they will pray again” should be seen as an effort of the diaspora organizations to unite Armenians around the genocide narrative and religious sentiments. Even the Saroyan Society used the altered quote once, and William Saroyan, having passed away in 1981, could not object. However, Zaven Khanjian, one of the people involved in the preparation of these posters, tried to give the impression that Saroyan's ideas were not distorted by saying “Whereas it was indisputably wrong to tweak Saroyan’s original text, it was done only with the intention of making it even more powerful.”[4]

At this point, in order to shed light on the spirit of Saroyan's true ideas, we would like to draw attention to some of his less quoted words from the story of “Antranik of Armenia”:

“I was an Armenian. God damn the bastards who were making the trouble. That is the way it is when you are an Armenian, and it is wrong. It is absurd, but I did not know. I did not know the Turk is a simple, amiable, helpless man who does what he is forced to do. I did not know that hating him was the same as hating the Armenian since they were the same. My grandmother didn’t know either, and still does not know. I know now, but I don't know what good it is going to do me…”

“In 1915 General Antranik was part of the cause of the trouble in the world, but it wasn’t his fault. There was no other way out for him and he was doing only what he had to do. The Turks were killing Armenians and General Antranik and his soldiers were killing Turks. He was killing fine, simple, amiable Turks, but he wasn’t destroying any real criminal because every real criminal was far from the scene of fighting. An eye for an eye, but always the wrong eye.”

“General Antranik had the same job in Armenia and Turkey that Lawrence of Arabia had in Arabia: to harass the Turkish Army and keep it from being a menace to the armies of Italy and France and England. General Antranik was a simple man who believed the governments of England and France and Italy when these governments told him his people would be given their freedom for making trouble for the Turkish Army.”

These quotes reveal that the mentality of William Saroyan was different from that of today's diaspora Armenian organizations. Some of the Armenian organizations in question show hostility towards Turks and carry out the construction of a militant Armenian identity. However, it is seen that Saroyan, who stood out with his opposition to war, evaluated Turkish-Armenian relations from a broader perspective.

*Photo: Fresnobee.com

[1] Bedros Afeyan, Bill Rode Sunlights Stream, The Literary Groong, Armenian News Network / Groong 2, February 2020, http://groong.org/tlg/tlg-20200902.html

[2] Aziz Gökdemir, “Sunuş”, in Yetmiş Bin Süryani, author William Saroyan, Aras Yayıncılık, 2004, İstanbul.

[3] Marc A. Mamigonian, The Misquotation of William Saroyan, Creative Armenia, June 13, 2017, https://www.creativearmenia.org/the-misquotation-of-william-saroyan , CK Garabed, Mincing Words, Armenian Weekly, August 8, 2009, https://armenianweekly.com/2009/08/08/ck-garabed-mincing-words/

[4] Marc A. Mamigonian, The Misquotation of William Saroyan

Source

© 2009-2020 Center for Eurasian Studies (AVİM) All Rights Reserved

.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Please Update/Correct Any Of The
3700+ Posts by Leaving Your Comments Here


- - - YOUR OPINION Matters To Us - - -

We Promise To Publish Them Even If We May Not Share The Same View

Mind You,
You Would Not Be Allowed Such Freedom In Most Of The Other Sites At All.

You understand that the site content express the author's views, not necessarily those of the site. You also agree that you will not post any material which is false, hateful, threatening, invasive of a person’s privacy, or in violation of any law.

- Please READ the POST FIRST then enter YOUR comment in English by referring to the SPECIFIC POINTS in the post and DO preview your comment for proper grammar /spelling.
-Need to correct the one you have already sent?
please enter a -New Comment- We'll keep the latest version
- Spammers: Your comment will appear here only in your dreams

More . . :
http://armenians-1915.blogspot.com/2007/05/Submit-Your-Article.html

All the best