Tsvetana Paskaleva

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Tsvetana Paskaleva

Tsvetana Paskaleva (Bulgarian: Цветана Паскалева; Armenian: Ցվետանա Պասկալևա) is an Armenian journalist of Bulgarian descent[1] and a Bulgarian journalist[2] and documentary film author, a member of International Documentary Association (Los Angeles). She was awarded by the Columbus International Film & Video Festival bronze plaque.

Biography

Paskaleva was born in Bulgaria and graduated from National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts in Sofia.

Paskaleva was admitted to a PhD program for documentary film directing at VGIK, Moscow and during her studies in 1990, she went to the South Ossetian region of Georgia to shoot a film about a brewing ethnic conflict there. Shortly after, she visited Nagorno Karabakh and made a film on the deportations of Armenian residents of Getashen, Martunashen and Shaumyan by Azerbaijani interior forces backed by the regular Soviet Army units. At that moment Paskaleva decided to quit her PhD studies in Moscow and stay in Karabakh with the intention to cover the conflict between Armenians and Azerbaijanis. She was the first foreign journalist to report on the mass deportations against the Armenians[citation needed] by the Azerbaijani special interior forces (OMON) in Goranboy Rayon during the so-called Operation Ring (Rus: Операция Кольцо). Later when a full-scale war between the Armenians and Azerbaijanis erupted, Paskaleva became a freelance reporter for CNN, NBC, French Antene-2, and the Reuter Agency, as well as the Bulgarian, Russian, and German televisions, sending reports from the hotbeds of the front. During the Karabakh war (1991–1994) she made seven documentaries about the war.

In 1993-1994 Paskaleva showed her films to the US Congress, the Parliament of Canada, the UN, Amnesty International, and other organizations; making speeches in defense of Armenian community of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Tsvetana Paskaleva received various prizes at several international film festivals. Although Paskaleva had never born arms and carried only her camera during the war, she received the rank of Karabakh Defense Army Colonel in 1995 and a Medal for Courage from the Armenian Government in 1996. In 2009 she was awarded AGBU’s Garbis Papazian Award and decorated with the Movses Khorenatsi Medal, the highest award of Armenia in the fields of science, education, journalism, culture, arts and healthcare.

After the ceasefire was established in Karabakh, Paskaleva settled in Yerevan and devoted her life to the cause of independence of Karabakh. From 1995 to 2001 she was the author and host of two television shows dedicated to Karabakh. Currently Paskaleva has a program called Tjaragait (Ray) that is concerned with social issues in Armenian society, which airs on the Armenian satellite TV every weekend.

Personal life

Paskaleva received an Armenian passport on 7 April 2014.[3]

Films

  • "Высоты, надежды" (Vysoty, nadezhdy, Heights, hopes, 1991)
  • "Будет ли утро над Карабахом" (Budet li utro nad Karabakhom, Will there be a morning over Karabakh, 1992)
  • "Дорогие мои, живые и мертвые" (Dorogie moi, zhyvye i mertvye, My dear, alive and dead, 1993),
  • "Раны Карабаха" (Rany Karabakha, Wounds of Karabakh, 1994),
  • "Солдаты своей земли" (Soldaty swoey zemli, The soldiers of their land, 1994),
  • "Затишье" (Zatish'e, Calm, 1995),
  • "Вера и дух" (Vera i dukh, Faith and spirit, about the capture of Shushi, 2001)

Awards

References

  1. Bulgarian Holds Conmemoration Meeting of Tsvetana Paskaleva. News.am. February 17, 2012
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  4. Murat Acemoglu, Columbus Int'l. Film Festival Awards Paskaleva's Karabagh Documentaries // The Armenian Reporter, 11-12-1994
  5. A meeting with Paskaleva, AZG Armenian Daily #098, 29 May 2009
  6. Garbis Papazian award 2009

External links