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This Happened

This Happened - April 24: Armenian Genocide Begins

The Armenian genocide began on this day in 1915, when the Ottoman government arrested and deported hundreds of Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople (now Istanbul).

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What led to the start of the Armenian genocide?

The Ottoman government had long been hostile towards the Armenian population, who were primarily Christian in a Muslim-dominated empire. The outbreak of World War I provided an opportunity for the government to carry out its plan to remove the Armenian population from Ottoman territory.

What happened to the Armenians who were arrested and deported?

The Armenians who were arrested and deported were taken to detention centers and concentration camps, where many were tortured, starved, and killed. This was the beginning of a systematic campaign of violence and mass killings that would continue until 1923. Estimates of the number of Armenians who were killed in the genocide vary widely, but most sources put the number at between 1 and 1.5 million.

Has the Armenian genocide been recognized as such in modern times?

The Armenian genocide has been recognized as such by many countries and international organizations, including the United Nations. However, the government of Turkey continues to deny that genocide took place, which remains a contentious issue between Turkey and Armenia and much of the international community.

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Society

Maestro Messi: Soccer As A True Art Form

The Argentine Lionel Messi is the personification of soccer sublime . He has come to move fans in ways that art lovers are moved by a painting.

Lionel Messi between two Philadelphia Union players while on the pitch for Inter Miami

Lionel Messi between two Chester PA players while on the pitch for Inter Miami in action during the semi-final League Cup match at Subaru Park, Pennsylvania, U.S. August 15, 2023.

Luis Vinker

-Essay-

BUENOS AIRES — Lionel Messi, that giant of soccer, is entering the twilight of his career by joining an American team, Inter Miami. He has received all the praise and glory anyone could in the world of sports, not to mention an ocean of publicity, online and offline, and all the money you could hope to earn. A while back, Marius Serra, a journalist with Barcelona paper La Vanguardia, counted 564 press articles on Messi in Spanish alone.

One is reminded of the "perfect beauty" evoked in one of Shakespeare's plays, mentioned in the novelist Stendhal's (1829) travel diary, Promenades dans Rome. Indeed, beside Messi's status as an icon for soccer fans from Buenos Aires to Bangladesh, is there an artistic dimension to this personage? His followers speak of him in superlative terms that suggest inspiration bordering on dizziness. That is how Stendhal felt viewing works of art in Florence.

One of his biggest fans is the Englishman Roy Hudson, a former footballer now based in Fort Lauderdale close to Miami. Recently he compared the exhilaration of watching Messi live to watching a Shakespeare play with the writer himself or watching Rembrandt paint. Millions of people living in Florida could now watch the greatest soccer player of all time, he said. In 2016, when Messi was in Barcelona, he compared him to the magician Houdini.

He has been a subject for at least two contemporary artists, Damien Hirst and Takashi Murakami. Hirst's triptych, Beautiful Messi Spin Painting for One in Eleven, sold for €448,000 for charity a decade ago. Though still young, he already boasts several biographies. One writer, Jordi Puntí, the author of Todo Messi, sees in him the concepts of lightness, speed, precision, visibility and multiplicity, which the Italian author Italo Calvino foresaw decades ago as shaping art and literature this century.

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