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Tattoos in Society

Posted on : 08-07-2010 | By : Apo Avedissian | In : Expressiveness

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Hi there, welcome back to Apotize.com, today’s article will be a vlog instead. Tattoos used to be a huge “controversial” topic, sometimes taboo, but recently have become a modern styling way, which I definitely do not agree with. Get your tattoos, be very careful of dirty needles, and take good care of the tattoo spot until it heals. Pick your tattoo after spending weeks analyzing the design and imagining having that on you for the rest of your life. Tattoo removals are very expensive and not accurate, so might as well have a good choice rather than getting one done fast. Don’t rush it. If you don’t like a designer’s design, don’t feel ashamed or scared to ask to change it. The tattoo will be on you for the rest of your life.

Oh, and from personal experience, tattoos are addicting. Believe it or not.

Enjoy =)

Much love,

Apo Avedissian

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The Armenian Genocide

Posted on : 23-04-2010 | By : Apo Avedissian | In : Expressiveness

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Today, in 1915, a campaign to make my people disappear was almost starting. April 24, 1915, Ottoman Empire, about two hundred intellectuals, artists, and thinkers of my people were arrested then beheaded. The rest had been either killed or moved out. Within three years about 1,500,000 of my people were dead. A million and a half human beings. Butchered, heads sliced, pregnant women with open wounds. They moved from Cilicia to Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and many other countries. Allow me to correct my self, exchanged the word “moved” with “walk” in the previous sentence, and add “were forced to” before it. My people had a curse on them of disappearing, why ? Because they are my people.

About a decade ago the first genocide of the 20th century went on. The intention to kill an entire race is genocide, and genocide happened. Ottoman soldiers came in and brutally decided to move everyone out of the Ottoman Empire. Yes, they claimed relocating them.. with swords. These “walks” came to be known as death marches. Besides having to walk all that distance with almost no food on them, they were harassed and constantly receiving death blows. Mothers saw their children die of hunger and thirst. And then these mothers saw their kids being eaten by dogs after minutes from burial. When I say burial, imagine having to leave your dead son on a curb and keep walking. No, not because of heartlessness, but because of the heart they had of survival and taking care of the ones that are still alive. These mothers had to put their babies on the side of their marching ways, not curbs. They had seconds for a last view of their babies. Not only babies, but mostly. Then came a stick by a soldier to treat them like animals. Just for the record, not even animals should be treated that way.

It’s amazing what a government can do without being judged. It’s amazing how a government doing this could be a role model to the other, one of the biggest, genocides. The Holocaust. Adolf Hitler was quoted saying “Who after all remembers the Armenian annihilation” as a reason why he wouldn’t be judged if he went for it. And he did. The irony is he was judged, while my people still wait for justice. President Obama pledged for recognizing the Armenian Genocide. I don’t see it. Does anybody else ? The footage does exist and will be used, but what’s the point when he doesn’t go by his word, unlike many things he hasn’t yet, but that’s a different story for a different time. He’s also not the only president pledging recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

The Armenian Genocide case has locked all Armenians together. You might think that it only was a cause we all fought for, but I got to say, it does keep many Armenians together. Let the genocide be recognized, and watch U.S. Armenians lose the culture within a couple of hundred of years, and lose the language soon after. By U.S. Armenians I don’t mean Armenians who have been here since the 19th century but Armenians who have been born here no matter when. This is a huge issue and it needs to be looked upon. The genocide fight has been keeping us tied together, but once it is recognized we will be proud of it. Our grandchildren’s kids will most likely lose the culture, however.

Things like this need to be viewed from a wide angle point of view, not only close up. We need to see the psychology of it. We need to talk with people who know details that not everyone does. We need to hold hands with each other and carry our culture together. I could’ve said “we’ll lose the culture withing 200 years, oh well” since I won’t be alive then (I might).. but instead I ask you to work with me to keep it. I ask you to save these ideas and work on them. I ask you to teach your kids and brothers and sisters and parents and neighbors about our culture. It is difficult to be in an open minded society and keep the Armenian values around, but they need to be known and implemented. Whether or not they get practiced is another story, but they need to be clear and known to everyone. Only then they will be practiced.

Help me make this a clear point to all the non-Armenians around us. Help me make this clear to anyone who wants to learn. I’ve been writing a documentary for the past three years and I still am working on it. I need your financial help to support me get the documentary on its feet. Yergat. Yergat is in it’s pre-production mode and might be for the next two years. I need you to push with me. I won’t ask ten people to push a huge statue up with all of their energy, but will ask a million of my people to use one finger’s energy all together to put that statue up. All of us working together will ease off the pain from the others. Please check www.yergat.com and support. I only ask for $1 and nothing more from you. $1 from you, $1 from your spouse, $1 from your neighbor, and it all adds up. I only need 6,000 people who are willing to put $1 in. We’ve already covered about 5% of the budget needed amount. So please, help.

Thank you,
Apo Avedissian

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My Next Project

Posted on : 16-04-2010 | By : Apo Avedissian | In : Uncategorized

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Hi there, guess who’s back ? =)
It’s been a while since I wrote a personal update, but now is the time you all love. [Cough].
Okay, so, I’ve been working on a much anticipated project, previously called Unheard Voices, now called Yergat, for the past 3 years. Ideas come and go. A lot had happened but I did not mess around with the project and decided to keep it until my financial and promotional back is covered. I believe that the time is close by and I need to pick up with the project. I’ve seen many Turkish documentaries against the “Armenian claims” being promoted on random websites online, and I think it is time we show them who we are. I think it is time to also remind our selves of who we are.

Fellow non-Armenian readers, you might get lost here, but I need you to stick with me as well. My idea of a documentary is not the usual historical facts, but today’s Armenians’ point of view. The life we live now. The hiphop fan and the punk rockstar’s ideas generated into this documentary. We are no longer eye-witnesses like our grandparents were, but we definitely have a culture we proudly represent. A culture we always incorporate in our daily lives and work. We represent our history through art, whether we intend to or not.

I have a strong vision of where this documentary is going, and I need your help supporting it. Yergat is not sponsored. I do not believe in companies paying me a specific amount of money in order to mention their names or say something in support of them. Yergat will be a free independent documentary based on what the camera sees, not on what I aim the camera at. So if that’s the purpose, you’re more than welcome to.

Please spread the word and start helping me out. If you take out your credit card and donate $1, it could do so much for Yergat. There are about half a million Armenians in California alone, if 5,000 people from the 5,000,000 donated $1 each, I can still have a movie to showcase. I can still make this documentary into a reality. I can still produce something for the non-Armenian to watch and learn. Yergat needs about $6,000 to stand up on its own feet. I updated www.yergat.com and added a widget [the same as you see below this article] and it already received $10. 1/600 is our progress. I believe hand in hand we can all make it. Please contribute. Buying these equipment will not limit me to Yergat only but many documentaries and works to come.

The Armenian Genocide should get recognized. 1,500,000 Armenians perished during that period, and the world should know.

Thank you,
Your support is highly appreciated.
Apo Avedissian

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