Entertainment: Two decades in, Portland native Andrea Martin has never been busier

Press Herald


Forty-plus years into a successful and critically acclaimed acting career, Martin is enjoying plumb roles on 2 TV comedies.

Film: I Vow To Keep The Promise. I Am Joining The Movement.

Huffington Post
May 18 2017
05/18/2017 11:19 pm ET |

In the summer of 2005, Swedish documentary producer Håkan Berthas and I travelled to Turabdin (worshippers mountain) in southeast Turkey. We were there to shoot a TV-series about Assyriska, a Swedish based football team, and had devoted one of the episodes to the killing of Christians that was carried out by the Turkish Ottomans during World War I. We were staying closeby in Midyat, the city where I was born, when someone quietly informed us that a Kurdish family had occupied an Assyrian/Syriac family’s house and taken control of their vineyard in the village of Aynward. This little village would prove to be rich with a dark history relating to the Christian genocide at the turn of the century.

Once in Aynward, it didn’t take long for the village’s dark turbulent past to boil over to the present day. Things got heated as soon as we had arrived, Guns were pointed directly at us and at a man from the family that was claiming their houses and lands had been occupied. An older woman ran up to us and screamed in our faces “we should have exterminated you while we had the chance, this is our village now!”

When things calmed down, Håkan and I went to the Syriac-Orthodox church in the village where the priest showed us a grave of a martyr who died during the genocide. The village of Aynward sits high on a hill, many Assyrian/Syriacs fled there during the Ottoman led massacres that targeted Midyat and its surrounding villages. This hero had left his family behind, knowing full well the inevitability of his being killed. He took a chance with his life in order to save as many of his innocent people as he could. He was a trained engineer and when he heard that there was not a single bullet left to protect his people against the Muslim troops closing in on Aynward, he took action. The village women were organized and tasked with collecting anything made of iron, he then helped the men organize a small workshop where they could melt the iron and cast bullets to use against the advancing hordes. Back in the graveyard of the village he would not recognize today, the old dusty forgotten stones marking his grave, did not do justice to his story; they belied the bravery and strength this man had shown in the face of hatred and evil against his people. His story stuck with me, it followed me everywhere on that trip, constantly being retold in my mind.

When I returned to Sweden I received a shock. That man that had been referred to as “the hero” in Aynward was related to me. He was my beloved grandmother Meyyo’s father, he was maternal great-grandfather, Sha’e Gundoro-Kino, from the Melkemir tribe. I was stunned and inspired to devote a year researching his remarkable history. A few years earlier I had produced a movie about the Christian genocide at the hands of the Ottomans and had collected a lot of material, including interviews with around fifty genocide survivors.

Ever since I was a child I have dreamed of seeing our history, our trauma, the history of our persecution become a big Hollywood movie. That movie is now here.

Last Wednesday I spoke to Eric Esrailian, the producer of the movie The Promise. He is a medical doctor; why did he enter the film industry? “I have not made a movie, I followed a mission given to me by my mentor, Kirk Krekorian. When he first spoke to me about what at that time was a very secret movie project, I felt very honoured, but also very nervous. I had never produced a movie before, and certainly not one about a genocide that has been silenced. ”While Esrailian passionately spoke about the production of the movie, that many have reached out, telling him how The Promise have changed their lives, how they now understand what their grandparents went through, it suddenly hits me that he has an Armenian sounding last name. I have aunts that are married to Armenians. I interrupted him and asked him if he perhaps has a personal relation to the genocide.

Bam. His family’s faith is being rolled up, in many ways very similar to mine. Places. Occurrences. Massacres.

Our families were just a few miles apart when they were slaughtered. In the movie, The Promise there is a scene with an Armenian choir. Esrailian’s relatives were part of that choir. The movie is entirely financed by billionaire Kirk Krekorian who is mainly known for building the world’s biggest hotel in Las Vegas and for owning the movie company Metro-Goldwyn Mayer in the past. He passed away in 2015 and sadly will not be able to see his beloved project The Promise premiere in cinemas worldwide.

“The movie is of course a reminder about the genocide in 1915, but it is also a work that should remind us about all crimes committed against humanity and our duty to stop them”, says Esrailian.

Esrailian has now gotten big Hollywood names such as Christian Bale, Oscar Isaak, Ryan Gosling, Jennifer Lopez, Cher och George Clooney on board and to post videos on social media with the title ”I vow to keep the promise.”

On the anniversary of the 1915 massacre of millions of Assyrian/Chaldean/Syriac, Armenian, and Greek people, U.S. President Donald Trump joined his predecessors in failing to recognize the historic suffering as Genocide. The organization I am part of, A Demand For Action’s executive director Steve Oshana shared his analysis on the continuation of the denial policy with the Huffington Post.

“The use of the genocide label mattersfor a range of reasons, including because it helps the ongoing court battles of families trying to win back stolen property and could deter further human rights abuses by Turkey’s increasingly authoritarian government”.

Huffpost describes A Demand For Action (ADFA) like this. ”His organization was at the center of the fight to make Congress and the Obama administration acknowledge the so-called Islamic State’s assault on minority groups, notably Christians and Yazidis, as a genocide.”

In Sweden, where I live, our parliament has recognized the genocide committed by the Turks on the Armenian, Assyrian/Syriac/Chaldean and Greek minorities during World War I. The Social democratic party promised in the latest election that they too would recognize the genocide. But in the party’s congress this year, things had changed. They already had reached government power and now simply did not stand by their promise. There is another genocide happening as we speak, the same minorities are being targeted, history is repeating itself, and yet both the Swedish government and parliament are choosing to turn their heads, and close their eyes to it, and to not recognize the genocide for what it was and what it still is, a blatant slaughter, a murder on a massive scale, a targeting of people based on their ethnicity and their religion, if this was, and still is, not genocide, then what is?

I vow to keep the promise. I am joining the movement. So do all others in A Demand For Action (ADFA), we vow to keep the promise.

*Babilona Khosravi from Sweden and Evette Haddad from Canada also contributed to this report


Film: Oscar awarded movie maker Started shooting a film about Armenian Genocide.

ARMINFO News Agency, Armenia
 Saturday


Oscar awarded movie maker Started shooting a film about Armenian Genocide.

Yerevan May 20

Sona Aznauryan.

Famous Indian Movie Maker Shekhar Kapur started to shoot a film about
Armenian Genocide based on the novel called " Three Apples Fell Down
From the Sky"

The film deals with the systematic extermination of minority Armenians
in Anatolia (modern-day Turkey) by the Ottoman Empire during and after
the Wolrd War I (1915-1923).

Kapur had recently tweeted that he was going to Yerevan, Armenia's
capital, to collect material on the event. The idea, he said, came to
him from a script sent by the man who wrote "Motorcyle Diaries". "It
is a part of world history though a very shameful one," Kapur told
IANS .

"The idea came to me based on a script sent to me by the screenwriter
of 'Motorcycle Diaries' (Puerto Rican Jose Rivera). I fell in love
with the script. It is a challenging project though. It will require
lots of money, lots of passion and organisation. But there are a lot
of passionate people behind this project. So it will hopefully see the
light of day," he said.

However, filming of the movie will not start before another year, says
Kapur, who is yet to begin work on his long-pending movie on water
wars, "Paani".

The Armenian genocide is a particularly touchy topic in the political
state that succeeded the Ottoman Sultanate in 1923, Mustafa Kemal
Ataturk's Republic of Turkey.

Sports: Home favourite Rybak dents Russian supremacy on final day of 2017 European Sambo Championships

Inside the Games
  • Sunday,

Home favourite Yury Rybak prevented Russia from claiming victories in all eight finals in which they were represented on the final day of the 2017 European Sambo Championships here after beating Aslan Kambiev to the men's over 100 kilograms gold medal.

The Belarusian, a 2015 world bronze medallist, established a match-winning eight-point lead over Kambiev, who was the only Russian to suffer defeat in a final today.

Bronze medals in the men’s over 100kg category went the way of Spain’s Spain’s David Fernandez and Georgia’s Beka Berdzenishvili.

Russia were rampant from the outset this evening, winning the opening six finals.

The first four of those were all won inside the distance, starting with Anastasia Valova’s victory over Belarus’ Krystsina Kazanoy in the women’s 56kg gold medal match.

Vladimir Berezovskiy then made short work of Armenia’s Artur Saakyan in the men’s 62kg, before Vladimir Lamanov crushed Armenia’s Grigor Mhitaryan in the combat sambo 52kg and Anastasia Khomiachkova comfortably overcame Serbia’s Ivana Jandric in the women’s 68kg.

Bronze medals were won by France’s Laure Fournier and Ukraine’s Nataliya Ilkiv in the women’s 56kg, Georgia’s Zviad Odoshashvili and Estonia’s Vadim Fomin in the men’s 62kg, Lithuania’s Gintapas Katkus in the combat sambo 52kg, and Ukraine’s Kateryna Moskalova and Belarus’ Anzhela Zhylinskaya in the women’s 68kg.

The first Russian to face any sort of challenge was Ali Kurzhev, who had to hold off a late surge from Belarus’ Tsimafei Yemelyanau to secure a 5-4 win in the men’s 82kg final.

Normal service was soon resumed, however, as Pavel Panteleev cruised to a 6-0 victory at the expense of France’s Antoine Lefevre – the only athlete from a Western European nation to reach a final throughout the Championships – to take the combat sambo 68kg crown.

Gold medals were awarded in the final nine categories ©FIAS

Ukraine’s Oleksii Nizhenko and Georgia’s Niko Kutsia were the men’s 82kg bronze medallists, while Bulgaria’s Ivan Krastev and Lithuania’s Aurimas Krukauskas shared the third step of the combat sambo 68kg podium. 

Russia’s seventh gold medal of the day was won by Sultan Aliev after he quickly gained a decisive eight-point advantage over Belarus’ Vladzimir Sutotski in the competition-ending combat sambo 90kg final.

Victory took his country’s overall gold medal tally to 18 from 27 categories and meant that Russia had triumphed in all nine of the combat sambo divisions.

Ukraine’s Petro Davydenko and Armenia’s Edgard Mehrabyan were the combat sambo 90kg bronze medallists.

The only final not to feature a Russian today was that in the women’s over 80kg category, which saw Ukraine’s Anastasiya Sapsai defeat Georgia’s Elene Kebadze 8-2.

France’s Elena Chirac and Russia’s Anna Balashova rounded out the podium.

Of the nine gold medals not won by Russia at the Championships, Belarus won three, Ukraine and Georgia claimed two apiece and Armenia and Bulgaria secured one each.

Next year’s European Sambo Championships are scheduled to take place in Greece’s capital Athens.

Dates for the event have yet to be confirmed.

Medicine: Founder of fetal echocardiography Professor Philippe Jeanty arrives in Armenia for special courses

Armenpress News Agency, Armenia
 Saturday


Founder of fetal echocardiography Professor Philippe Jeanty arrives in
Armenia for special courses



YEREVAN, MAY 18, ARMENPRESS. At the invitation and assistance of First
Lady of Armenia Rita Sargsyan, Professor Philippe Jeanty, director of
USA’s Nashville, TN Inner Vision Women’s Ultrasound hospital, has
arrived to Armenia. Professor Jeanty is a world renowned specialist of
prenatal diagnostics.

Photometric scales designed by him are installed in all ultrasound
devices around the world.

The Professor will hold two-day courses on fetal echocardiography in
Yerevan. The first lecture will begin on May 20.

“The purpose of these lectures is to improve the skills of Armenian
doctors in early diagnostics of fetal heart defects”, Karine Toghunts,
president of the Armenian Association of Ultrasound Diagnostics in
Gynecology and Obstetrics said.

“I don’t have sufficient information as to how it’s done in Armenia,
but my Armenian partners regularly send images to me, based on which I
can say that everything is ok”, Professor Jeanty said.

He stressed that he likes to pass on his knowledge to younger doctors.

Professor Jeanty is the founder of fetal echocardiography, author of
34 textbooks on ultrasound examination in obstetrics and more than 154
publications.

He is the founder of the largest educational website on prenatal
diagnostics – thefetus.net.

ANKARA: What really happened outside Turkey’s US Embassy?

Anadolu Agency (AA)
 Saturday


What really happened outside Turkey's US Embassy?


By Safvan Allahverdi

WASHINGTON

Supporters in the United States of the terrorist organization PKK -- a
group which has killed over 1,200 people in Turkey since July 2015 --
triggered the melee and fight outside Turkey's Washington Embassy
building during President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's visit to the country
on May 16.

I was covering Erdogan's visit, so I was able to witness and observe
what happened outside the embassy building.

During Erdogan's meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump at around
12.30 p.m. local time (1630GMT), PKK supporters, as well as some
protesters carrying Armenian flags, started shouting slogans against
Turkey and Erdogan at Lafayette Square park, just north of the White
House.

A group of Turkish citizens, who were also there to support Erdogan
and Turkey, started to respond to the group's verbal harassment.

As the altercation started, Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Police and
U.S. Secret Service Agents were also around. Turkish citizens were
moved from the area by the police, but the PKK sympathizers stayed
where they were. The Turkish citizens objected to this.

After hearing the objections, police sent PKK supporters off to a far
corner of the park across from the embassy. They also cordoned off the
area with police tape. The police did the same to the Turkish
citizens, sending them off to an area where there was a direct line of
sight to the White House.

Both groups shouted slogans and afterwards dispersed without incident.

Melee outside the Turkish embassy

It was known that President Erdogan would arrive at the Turkish
Embassy at around 4 p.m. local time. PKK sympathizers gathered at the
park next to the building half an hour earlier.

The supporters of the terrorist group, around 20 people, were carrying
posters of Abdullah Ocalan, the PKK's jailed head, as well as jailed
Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) head Selahattin Demirtas, and flags of
the YPG, the armed Syrian offshoot of the PKK/PYD.

While shouting anti-Erdogan slogans, the group started to swear and
insult Turks, who were just across the road. Turkish citizens
responded with their own slogans.

As minutes went by, the group escalated the intensity of their
swearing and insults against Erdogan and the Turkey supporters.

The protesting group had a permit to gather in front of the White
House, but when they gathered outside the Turkish Embassy, they gave
the police no notice.

We knew that no permit was needed to gather outside the embassy. But
the practice in the U.S. was to inform the police department so that
they could take necessary safety measures. We were worried about their
gathering with no notice, if they were planning to make a scene.

The PKK supporters made a great effort to make Turkish citizens lose
control through their insults and swearing. We saw that the Turkish
group was provoked by PKK sympathizers moving into the middle of the
road with megaphones.

The first fight broke out when supporters of the terrorist group threw
water bottles at Turkish citizens, triggering a 10-15 second fistfight
in the middle of the road.

Only two police officers interceded in the fight, and it was clear the
police were not ready for such a scene. Besides, there were only
around 10 police officers outside the embassy.

Police unresponsive to citizens' injuries

Also stepping into the fight, a Turkish citizen named Alp Kenan Dereci
was severely injured when a PKK supporter hit him in the head with a
megaphone.

His face was covered in blood. An ambulance came over and Dereci was
taken to a hospital.

People who saw Dereci had been hit with a megaphone repeatedly told
the police chief at the scene what happened and who hit him.

They told the police chief that it was not just a punch, but an
attempted injury. The people also said that the attacker should be
arrested or the situation could escalate.

But the police chief said he would not do such a thing, which
triggered a bigger altercation because the attacker, who was not
arrested, continued with his swearing and insults.

As we later learned, the attacker was named Kasim Kurd, and he was
being sought by both federal agents and the D.C. metropolitan police.

Police did not heed the warnings and complaints of Turkish citizens,
but instead forced the Turkish supporters back onto the sidewalk.

PKK supporters meters from Erdogan

The police barricaded Turkish citizens after the first altercation,
but not the PKK supporters.

With no obstacles to block them, the terrorist group backers got very
close to the Turkey supporters and shouted slogans and threw water
bottles.

The PKK supporters, who kept a greater distance during Erdogan's White
House visit, outside the embassy were able to get within 15-20 meters
of him.

Due to the fanaticism of the terrorist group, we were also worried
about our own safety.

When Erdogan arrived at the embassy building, protesters continued
their grave insults, so some Turkish citizens and the head of the
president's security detail stepped in.

After security interceded, the group dispersed.

Meanwhile, the U.S. media, instead of covering the moments that
triggered the situation as a whole, chose to show only the last
moments, and so created the impression that Turkey supporters caused
the altercation and the terror group supporters were the victims.

ANKARA: Bundestag rejects leaving İncirlik, while Turkey stays indifferent

Sabah, Turkey
May 19 2017


Bundestag rejects leaving İncirlik, while Turkey stays indifferent

DAILY SABAH WITH ANADOLU AGENCY
ANKARA
Published May 19, 2017



Germany's conservative-left coalition government Thursday rejected a
motion filed by opposition parties to "immediately" withdraw German
troops from İncirlik Air Base, amid political tensions between Berlin
and Ankara.

The joint motion filed by the Socialist Left Party and the
environmentalist Green Party was rejected by Chancellor Angela
Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) and their coalition partner the
Social Democratic Party (SPD) after a heated debate in parliament.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said on Wednesday that
Ankara would not beg if Berlin decided to leave Incirlik. "It is up to
them, we will not beg them," Çavuşoğlu said, accusing the German
government of trying to patronize Turkey on the issue. "We are telling
Germany that they cannot treat Turkey as they wish, Turkey will not
accept hypocrisy," he added.

Senior Christian Democrat lawmaker Roderich Kiesewetter criticized
Turkey for refusing demands by German lawmakers to visit İncirlik Air
Base but warned against making a hasty decision.

"A unilateral and immediate withdrawal of German troops is neither in
the interest of Europe, nor in the interest of Germany," he told
lawmakers ahead of the vote on Thursday night. Kiesewetter urged
lawmakers to wait for the outcome of discussions at next week's NATO
summit as well as ongoing talks with Jordan for the potential
relocation of German troops there.

At the suggestion of Christian Democrats and the Social Democratic
Party, the majority of lawmakers voted in favor of submitting the
motion to the Foreign Affairs Committee for further deliberation.

The rejection of the motion filed by the Left Party and the Green
Party is interpreted as gaining time ahead of the bilateral meeting
between President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and German Chancellor Merkel in
Brussels at the NATO summit.

Merkel is expected to request that German lawmakers be granted the
permanent right to visit the air base whenever they want and Erdoğan's
reaction to Merkel's request will reportedly be decisive in the future
of German troops stationed at İncirlik.

The İncirlik crisis started on Monday after it was revealed that a
parliamentary delegation was not allowed to visit the air base for
several reasons. After news reports about the ban surfaced, the German
government threatened to pull out from İncirlik. Berlin has been
hinting at the possibility of moving personnel to Amman, Jordan.

Germany has repeatedly underlined the importance of such visits,
saying the German army was not under the control of the government but
rather parliament.

The two countries went through the same crisis almost a year ago. A
German parliamentary defense commission delegation was not allowed to
pay a visit to the İncirlik Air Base after the Bundestag adopted a
resolution regarding the Armenian events of 1915. Federal Parliament
approved a controversial motion labeling the 1915 events as
"genocide."

The crisis was solved months later after Von der Leyen was allowed to
visit the air base with a German delegation.

Since 2015, around 260 German troops, six high-tech Tornado
surveillance jets and a tanker aircraft have been stationed at
İncirlik Air Base, providing support for anti-Daesh operations.



 

Marguerite Barankitse: To deny Armenian Genocide is a big mistake

news.am, Armenia
Marguerite Barankitse: To deny Armenian Genocide is a big mistake
              
13:43, 20.05.2017
                  

YEREVAN. – The first winner of the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity Marguerite Barankitse from Burundi on Saturday visited the Tsitsernakaberd memorial complex to honor memory of the Armenian Genocide victims.

She was accompanied by the director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Hayk Demoyan and the head of the Aurora initiative Arman Jilavyan. Marguerite Barankitse laid flowers at the eternal flame in memory of the innocent victims of the first genocide of the 20th century. She planted a tree in the alley and visited the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute, where a special hall dedicated to Aurora Mardiganian was opened.

Asked by the Armenian News – NEWS.am what she wants to say to all those who still deny the fact of the Armenian Genocide, she said to deny the Genocide is a very big mistake. According to her, it is very important to have compassion: if Armenians have suffered from genocide, and many say that it was not, this is a very, very big mistake. The Armenian Genocide must compel humanity to realize: this should not happen again.

There is an impression, she continued, already bursting into tears from the photos she saw and the stories she heard, that people could not understand that these crimes were committed.

Marguerite Barankitse said she wants to congratulate the Armenian people, who to some extent managed to reconcile themselves with their own history, daring to turn this cruel page of history over. She especially noted the dignity of Armenian women. 

“And this inspires hope for my country – Burundi, which is now struggling between the past, the present and the future, and the international community in no way reacts to this,” she concluded.

At the end of the visit, she left a note in the guest book saying she is grateful to the proud Armenian people for their courage.

Marguerite Barankitse from REMA Hospital in Burundi saved thousands of lives and cared for orphans and refugees during the Civil War. The award to the winner was handed over by Hollywood actor George Clooney.

Armenia should prioritize children over orphanages

Human Rights Watch


Embezzlement Allegations Highlight Unsuitability of Institutions for Children