Yervant1 Posted July 23, 2013 Report Share Posted July 23, 2013 MISSISSAUGA WRITER WINS PRESTIGIOUS AWARDMississauga, Ont. CanadaJuly 22 2013Mississauga NewsByJoseph ChinMISSISSAUGA - As a literary reviewer for a national newspaper, KeithGarebian is used to handing out praise. Lately, however, the Lakeviewresident has been on the receiving end; in May he was the winner of a2013 Mississauga Arts Award for his new book, Moon on Wild Grasses,and last week he was awarded the prestigious William Saroyan Medal,named in honour of the great Armenian American dramatist and author.The latter, created by the Ministry of Diaspora in Armenia, is grantedfor contributing to the dissemination of Armenian culture in theDiaspora, prominent achievements in the sphere, and contributions tothe relations within Diaspora Armenian communities.There are approximately 10 million Armenians worldwide, and Garebianis one of a minority of diaspora writers who write only in English. Heattributes the award chiefly to his two books, Pain: Journeys AroundMy Parents (a memoir published in 2000 and long out of print), andChildren of Ararat (a collection of poetry about his Armenian fatherand the Armenian genocide of 1915).But he has also signed numerous petitions advancing Armenian causesnationally and internationally, and written articles and reviewsrelated to Armenian history and culture, though he neither speaksnor writes Armenian.Garebian was one of two writers to receive the Saroyan Medal, theother being Peter Surian of the U.S., who was honoured for his novels.Both men were invited delegates to the 5th Conference of DiasporaWriters Who Compose in Other Languages held in Yerevan, Armenia'scapital, July 12-15.The honour, which came on Garebian's 70th birthday, caught himcompletely by surprise. One moment he was sitting in a roomful ofpeople, then someone was saying: "You'd better get up there ... they'regiving you a medal."In his impromptu acceptance speech, Garebian noted that he wasvisiting a country that his Armenian-born father could not and didnot return to, and that he somehow felt was causing him to be re-bornin a spiritual and cultural sense."It's such a thrill because the medal is given to so few people. Ibelieve I'm only the second Canadian to receive one," he told The News.Even though Garebian's life has been largely shaped by what hisfamily went through during the Armenian genocide ("I have inheritedthe obsession of a survivor"), he himself was born in India and hadnever set foot in the country until this month. Besides not beingable to speak Armenian, he explains his family's old home is now partof Turkey.One of his visits was to the Armenian Genocide Memorial. "Outside,I was fine, but once I went inside and looked around I lost it -and wept. Memories of all my family's suffering came back ... it wasa tsunami."Garebian says the Writers' Union of Armenia has expressed an interestin translating his two Armenian-themed books to coincide with the100th anniversary of the genocide in 2015.http://www.mississauga.com/news-story/3904623-mississauga-writer-wins-prestigious-award/ 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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