Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Turkish Intellectuals Condemn Anti-Armenian Statements in Textbooks

ISTANBUL (Today’s Zaman) — A group of academics, journalists, artists and intellectuals have released a statement condemning in the harshest terms what they define as expressions that include “open hatred and hostility” towards Armenians in Turkish schoolbooks, which were recently exposed by the newspapers Agos and Taraf.


The two newspapers recently published reports on hateful remarks targeting Armenians in the textbooks used in history classes.


A letter accompanying the text of the condemnation, written by historian Taner Akçam, notes that including such expressions as lesson material to teach children is a disgrace.


The signees said textbooks in schools should seek to encourage feelings of peace, solidarity and living together over inciting hatred towards different religious and cultural groups, Akçam said. He further wrote: “Standing with integrity in the face of history is the prerequisite for establishing the future on the foundations of friendship and peace. I do hope that this signature campaign will be taken as a scream from all of us for the publication of textbooks that we would like to see.”


The statement said: “The revolutions history and history textbooks should be collected immediately, with an apology issued to everyone and particularly to Armenian students. This is where the path to Turkish-Armenian peace lies, at this time when we are approaching 2015.” Revolutions history classes teach students the reforms carried out by the first government of Turkey after the end of the Ottoman Empire.


The signatories include some of Turkey’s most respected writers and journalists. The full list of the supporters of the statement is as follows: Adalet Agaoglu, Ahmet Altan, Ahmet Hakan, Ahmet Insel, Ali Bayramoglu, Ali Nesin, Asaf Savas Akat, Aydin Engin, Ayhan Aktar, Ayse Günaysu, Ayse Hür, Baskin Oran, Bekir Agirdir, Betül Tanbay, Bülent Bilmez, Bülent Kenes, Cafer Solgun, Cemal Usak, Cengiz Aktar, Daron Acemoglu, Defne Asal, Dengir Mir Mehmet Firat, Deniz Türkali, Edhem Eldem, Elçin Macar, Emel Kurma, Emine Uçak Erdogan, Eren Keskin, Erol Katircioglu, Fatih Akin, Ferhat Kentel, Fikret Adanir, Fuat Keyman, Gülten Kaya, Hadi Uluengin, Halil Berktay, Halil Ergün, Hasan Cemal, Hidayet Sefkatli Tuksal, Ibrahim Betil, Ihsan Eliaçik, Ihsan Yilmaz, Ismet Berkan, Istar Gözaydin, Kemal Burkay, Kenan Çayir, Kutlug Ataman, Leyla Neyzi, Mehmet Altan, Murat Belge, Murat Morova, Nilüfer Göle, Niyazi Kizilyürek, Oktay Özel, Oral Çalislar, Orhan Pamuk, Oya Baydar, Ömer Laçiner, Ömer Faruk Gergerlioglu, Ömer Madra, Perihan Magden, Roni Margulies, Samim Akgönül, Saruhan Oluç, Savas Genç, Selçuk Gültasli, Selim Deringil, Serra Yilmaz, Sevgi Akarçesme, Seyfettin Gürsel, Sinan Çetin, Soli Özel, Sahin Alpay, Sanar Yurdatapan, Sebnem Isigüzel, Taner Akçam, Tarik Ziya Ekinci, Temel Iskit, Tilbe Saran, Turgay Ogur, Ufuk Uras, Ugur Kömeçoglu, Umut Özkirimli, Ãœmit Kardas, Ãœmit Kivanç, Ãœstün Ergüder, Vedat Türkali, Yasemin Çongar, Yavuz Baydar, Zeynep Direk and Zeynep Tanbay.



Turkish Intellectuals Condemn Anti-Armenian Statements in Textbooks

Armenian Cross-Stone Blessing in Singapore

SINGAPORE — His Holiness Karekin II, the Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, started his pontifical visit to Singapore on September 28


During the visit a Divine Liturgy was held in the St. Gregory the Illuminator church of Singapore, upon completion of which His Holiness offered a Blessing service for the memorial to the victims of the Armenian Genocide, that is placed in the courtyard of the church, as well as the blessing service of two carved cross-stones (khachkars) dedicated to the memory of His Eminence Archbishop Aghan Paleozian of Blessed Memory, former Primate of the Diocese of Australia and New Zealand.


The ceremony was attended by representatives of the local Armenian community, students of the Singapore International School, clergy of sister Christian churches and diplomats.


In the evening, a reception was held in the famous Raffles Hotel, that was originally established by Armenians.


During the event Mr. Armen Sargsian, Ambassador of Armenia to Singapore, delivered remarks. In his speech, the Ambassador emphasized that the pastoral visit of Catholicos of All Armenians to Singapore once again proves the concern of His Holiness in the restoration and conservation of churches, and the special treatment of Holy Etchmiadzin towards the local Armenian community.


The Catholicos of All Armenians offered His blessings to the attendees; congratulating them on the successes of the previous years and urging them to continue the noble mission of Armenian preservation.


On September 29, a concert was held in the St. Gregory the Illuminator Church Hall; with performances by talented local Armenian musicians.



Armenian Cross-Stone Blessing in Singapore

Armenian Esabelle Dingizian Elected Vice-Speaker of the Swedish Riksdag

STOCKHOLM — Esabelle Dingizian, a Swedish-Armenian Green Party politician, has been elected third Vice-Speaker of the Swedish Riksdag, according to Riksdag’s official website.


The Riksdag elected Urban Ahlin (Social Democratic Party) as the new Speaker on 29 September for the electoral period 2014–2018.


Tobias Billström (Moderate Party) was elected as First Deputy Speaker, Björn Söder (Sweden Democrats) as Second Deputy Speaker, and Esabelle Dingizian (Green Party) as Third Deputy Speaker.


Esabelle Dingizian has been a member of the Riksdag since 2006. She has been member of the Committee on Cultural Affairs and deputy member in a number of committees including the Committee on the Labour Market and the Committee on Education. Esabelle Dingizian is member of parliament for the Stockholm County Council constituency.



Armenian Esabelle Dingizian Elected Vice-Speaker of the Swedish Riksdag

Sarkisian Thanks Greek Parliament for Criminalizing Genocide Denial

YEREVAN — President Serzh Sarkisian on Tuesday held negotiations with his visiting Greek counterpart Karolos Papoulias. A number of documents were signed between the two delegations based on the results of the negotiations.


In a statement afterwards President Sarkisian said the two sides had discussed at full length all issues of the bilateral agenda as well as ways of expanding cooperation. “We share the opinion that the interstate relations of Armenia and Greece are always distinguished by their high level, marked by visits of presidents, the development of economic, scientific, cultural, decentralized, inter-parliamentary ties,” said Sarkisian, according to his press service.


“We reaffirmed our desire to further deepen cooperation between our countries on multilateral planes, including within the framework of the Armenia-EU partnership,” Sarkisian added. “I voiced Armenia’s determination to develop our relations with the EU in all possible directions and expressed hope that friendly Greece will support Armenia on this issue.”


The Armenian president particularly praised the “constructive dialogue established between the defense ministries of the two states.” “We, of course, highly evaluated the fact that Armenian servicemen for years have received high-quality education as well as retraining in military establishments of friendly Greece,” Sargsyan emphasized.


At the same time, he said that trade and economic ties in the general context of Armenian-Greek relations need to be stimulated at the state level. During the negotiations, according to President Sargsyan, the two parties reaffirmed their desire to deepen cooperation at multilateral platforms, including within the framework of Armenia-European Union partnership. The sides also discussed regional issues.


“We are thankful to Greece for being one of the first states to have recognized the Armenian Genocide by force of a law, and now for the major step made in the fight against denialism,” Sargsyan said, referring to the law recently adopted by the Greek parliament criminalizing the denial of the Armenian genocide.



Sarkisian Thanks Greek Parliament for Criminalizing Genocide Denial

Armenian Public TV to Broadcast "Moving Stories" and Interview with Nora Armani

Armenian TV Program on Channel 1 will screen an Interview with actress/filmmaker Nora Armani followed by an exclusive screening of her short film “Moving Stories”, premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2012.


Meronq-Kinogordzich (Ours: Filmmakers) – is the name of the program that will air the interview on H1 – Armenian Public Television’s satellite channel.


Produced and Directed by Rafael Hovhannisyan, of Panarmenian Geographic Association, the TV program presents Armenian compatriots who live outside Armenia, work, create and are involved in the movie industry, be they directors, producers, actors, camera crew, writers, or other. Each program is about one particular filmmaker where he or she tells about their life, childhood, family, how they came to cinematography, about their films, etc. According to the format of this program, after each interview a film where the filmmaker is involved based on professional specialization is broadcast on the same channel.


The program with Nora Armani will broadcast on Channel H1 – Armenian Public Television’s satellite channel, on October 5th at 10:00 am Yerevan time (on October 4th at 22:00 pm PST or midnight EST). It will start with an interview with the actress that was done in 2007 when she returned to Armenia after a 14 year absence, to which is added more recent footage from her interview at the Cannes Film Festival earlier this year in May 2014. The interview will be followed by the airing of Armani’s short film Moving Stories about two women who meet during their respective moves out of and into the same New York apartment. This autobiographically-inspired film is Armani’s debut as film director in her own right. Her co-directorial debut was Last Station with Harutyun Katchatryan.


Nora Armani is an actress/ filmmaker and the founding artistic director of SR Socially Relevant Film Festival New York. She recently worked as an actress on a number of films such as Hungry, directed by Jillie Simon, Good Funk directed by Adam F. Kritzer, and Bourek directed by Vladan Nikolic shot in Greece earlier this year. These films are currently in post-production. Armani also worked on Fatih Akin’s latest film premiered at the Venice Film Festival, The Cut, about the Armenian Genocide, giving her Armenian language voice to three important women characters in the film.


Nora Armani is invited to Armenia to star in a stage production directed by Hakob Ghazanchyan later this year in commemoration of the Armenian Genocide Centenary. Armani’s full bio and filmography, as well as completed films and stage production may be found on www.noraarmani.com.



Armenian Public TV to Broadcast "Moving Stories" and Interview with Nora Armani

Monday, September 29, 2014

Greek President Pays Tribute to the Memory of Armenian Genocide Victims

YEREVAN — President Karolos Papoulias of Greece  has arrived in Armenia today for a two-day state visit at the invitation of Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian.


The Greek President visited Tsitsernakaberd to pay tribute and lay flowers to the memory of the Armenian Genocide victims.


Within the framework of the visit Karolos Papoulias will hold meetings with President Sarkisian, National Assembly Speaker Galust Sahakian and Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamian.


A signing ceremony of documents aimed at strengthening and deepening the Armenian-Greek relations will take place in the RA Presidential Palace followed by the joint press statement of President Sarkisian and President Papoulias on the results of the negotiations.


An Armenian-Greek business conference with participation of the two presidents is scheduled to conduct in Yerevan within the frameworks of  the visit. President Papoulias will also meet with the Greek community of Armenia.


Karolos Papoulias will also visit Garni Historical and Cultural Museum-Reservation in Armenia.



Greek President Pays Tribute to the Memory of Armenian Genocide Victims

Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan Bestowed the Title of “Hero of Artsakh”

STEPANAKERT — On 28 September Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan partook in a festive event dedicated to the 25th anniversary of re-opening of the Artsakh Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church at the Gandzasar monastic complex, during which the President awarded Primate of the Artsakh Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan with the Golden Eagle Order, granting him the highest Honorary Title of the “Hero of Artsakh.”


In his speech the President highlighted the role of the church in the life of the Armenian people and Artsakh, underlining that without the Mother Church it would have been impossible to survive, keep our national identity and traditions and gain victories.


President Sahakyan characterized Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan as an outstanding religious and public figure who was among the figures symbolizing Artsakh, adding that he continued properly the heroic deeds of the great leaders of the historic Gandzasar.



Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan Bestowed the Title of “Hero of Artsakh”

HRW: Azerbaijan’s Repression of Independent Voices has Reached Crisis Levels

NEW YORK — Azerbaijan’s longstanding repression of independent voices has reached crisis levels, even as it nears the end of its six-month chairmanship of the Council of Europe. The situation puts to the test the council’s standing as Europe’s foremost human rights body, the Human Rights Watch said in a statement.


“The Azerbaijani government’s systematic crackdown on human rights defenders and other perceived government critics shows sheer contempt for its commitments to the Council of Europe,” said Giorgi Gogia, senior South Caucasus researcher at Human Rights Watch. “To let the relentless repression go unanswered threatens the very credibility of the institution.”


Azerbaijan assumed the six-month rotating chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe in May 2014, despite years of suppression of criticism and failure to adhere to the commitments it undertook when joining the organization. But instead of cleaning up its record and addressing longstanding concerns, the government stepped up its crackdown, lashing out at human rights defenders, journalists, and social media activists with spurious criminal charges and convictions.


The Human Rights Watch urges the the Council of Europe’s leadership, including its secretary general, the president of its parliamentary assembly, and the human rights commissioner, as well as its member states, to call on the Azerbaijani government to:


Release, immediately and unconditionally, all those wrongfully imprisoned and drop the politically motivated cases against them;

Stop the ongoing campaign of harassment and intimidation against independent organizations and allow them to work unimpeded; and

Undertake, without further delay, long-overdue human rights reforms, including the many outstanding commitments Azerbaijan pledged to fulfill when joining the Council of Europe.

“Azerbaijan’s brutal silencing of its critics while at the helm of the Council of Europe is an assault on the institution and everything it stands for,” Gogia said. “The council’s leadership should condemn Baku’s behavior in the strongest possible terms and make clear that there cannot be business as usual until those imprisoned on politically motivated charges are freed and the crackdown brought to an end.”



HRW: Azerbaijan’s Repression of Independent Voices has Reached Crisis Levels

American Armenian Rose Parade Float Gala October 19th

PASADENA — On Sunday, October 19th, a milestone event marking the first American Armenian Rose Parade Float will take place at the world renowned Rose Bowl – Court of Champions in Pasadena, CA. Under the backdrop of the iconic Rose Bowl sign, this exclusive venue will provide an unforgettable evening for a “Gala Under the Stars.”


Jill Simonian Jill Simonian


Jill Simonian, a television host and founder/blogger of the motivating and entertaining website TheFabMom.com, will be the emcee. Television audiences might recognize Jill as a recent Mom & Family Lifestyle Expert for Hallmark Channel’s Home and Family daytime show (2013-2014) as well as a host and entertainment news reporter on HLN/CNN’s Showbiz Tonight, KTLA-5’s Morning News, ReelzChannel and Travel Channel over the last 10 years. Southern California viewers may also recognize Jill from when she first launched her television career as part of KTLA-5’s Morning News Weather Contest in 2005 (thanks to local American Armenians, Jill won the Viewer’s Choice Award with over 11,000 viewer votes, before the days of social media). She’s been a longtime fan of the Rose Parade, and likes to joke that her two toddler daughters are future Rose Court Princesses. “I cannot tell you how thrilled I am to kick off this most historic moment for American Armenians. To have our most inspiring culture included within the Rose Parade’s indelible tradition, and shared on a worldwide stage, is absolutely incredible for all generations of American Armenians to celebrate, support and continue for years to come.”


With the theme of the 2015 Rose Parade, “Inspiring Stories,” the float will showcase the culture and contributions of the Armenian people to this great nation and the world. Phoenix Decorating Company, responsible for creating many of the annual Rose Parade floats, was contracted for this project. With their permission, Gala attendees will have the opportunity to view the float at the construction site during the cocktail hour. The float, titled “Cradle of Civilization” is a unique and stunning representation of our heritage.


Making the evening even more memorable, Americans of Armenian ancestry who played a part in the history of the Parade and Rose Bowl will be recognized. The event will begin at 5:00 p.m. with Wolfgang Puck providing the catering for the dinner. We encourage everyone to arrive on time to view the float. Donation is $200. For information and reservations please contact Flora (323) 681-8975 or Margaret (626) 798-4480, margaretmgr@gmail.com,



American Armenian Rose Parade Float Gala October 19th

Saturday, September 27, 2014

Arthur Abraham Beats Paul Smith to Retain WBO Title

KIEL, SCHLEWSIG-HOLSTEIN, GERMANY — WBO super middleweight champion Arthur Abraham (41-4, 28 KOs) put in a workmanlike performance in defeating #5 WBO Paul Smith (35-4, 20 KOs) by a 12 round unanimous decision on Saturday night to retain his WBO title at the Kiel, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. The final judges’ scores were 117-111, 117-111 and 118-109.


Abraham had to dig into the reserve tanks against huge underdog Smith, but he wound up successfully defending his title.


The fight was one-sided for the most part until the 6th and 7th rounds in which Smith fought well and got the better of Abraham with his body punching and his high work rate.


Abraham came back and dominated the 8th and 9th rounds in landing some heavy right hands. In the 10th, Smith showed new energy in nailing Abraham repeatedly with right hands and left hooks to the body. Abraham controlled the 11th and 12th rounds to cruise to victory.



Arthur Abraham Beats Paul Smith to Retain WBO Title

Friday, September 26, 2014

Armenian Stone Age Artefacts Show Human Technological Innovation 325,000 Years Ago

YEREVAN — Stone Age artefacts discovered at a site in Armenia have shown how innovative humans were in terms of technological development 325,000 years ago, according to the International Business Times.


Published in the journal Science, researchers studied thousands of stone artefacts from the Nor Geghi 1 site in Armenia. The area is unique as it has been preserved between two lava flows dating from 200,000 to 400,000 years.


The archaeological material was found in layers of floodplain sediments and ancient soil between the lava flows.


Analysis of the artefacts, by researchers at the University of Connecticut, showed that human technological innovation occurred intermittently throughout the Old World, rather than spreading from a single origin.


Their finding challenges long held theories of how human technology developed – that it spread as human populations moved. Experts thought more advanced technology was invented in Africa and spread to Eurasia replacing older tools in the process.


OldAge-Armenia-1Researchers found two types of technology at the site. Biface technology, such as hand axes, is associated with the Lower Paleolithic era, while the more advanced Levallois technology, a stone tool production method, is thought to have come from the Middle Stone Age in Africa and the Middle Paleolithic in Eurasia.


The tools found suggest simultaneous use of both biface and Levallois technology – a surprising discovery: “The co-existence of the two technologies at Nor Geghi 1 provides the first clear evidence that local populations developed Levallois technology out of existing biface technology,” the authors said in a statement.


Daniel Adler, lead author of the study, said: “The combination of these different technologies in one place suggests to us that, about 325,000 years ago, people at the site were innovative.”


Researchers believe the shift from biface to Levallois technology was gradual and intermittent, and that it occurred independently within different human populations who had shared technological ancestry.


Adler said their findings suggest Stone Age people were flexible and variable in terms of their technology – highlighting the “antiquity of the human capacity for innovation”.



Armenian Stone Age Artefacts Show Human Technological Innovation 325,000 Years Ago

Armenia Will Act as a Third Party in Perincek Case at ECtHR

YEREVAN. – Armenia will be included as a third party in the “Perincek v. Switzerland, App. no. 27510/08” case to be examined at the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR).


Prosecutor General Gevorg Kostanyan, who is also the Armenian government’s representative to the ECtHR, had petitioned to the court on July 20, and with a request that Armenia act as a third party in this case, informed the Prosecutor General’s Office press service.


The ECtHR Grand Chamber on Friday approved Armenia’s participation in the case.


Turkish Workers Party (IP) leader Dogu Perincek gestures in fron Dogu Perincek


The respective court session is scheduled for January 28, 2015. Until then, however, Armenia will submit to the ECtHR Grand Chamber, and in writing, its position on this case. And during the session on January 28, it will have the opportunity to present its position in words.


Turkey likewise is included in this case as a third party.


The Government of Switzerland recently decided to petition that the Dogu Perincek case be referred for a review by the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). On December 17, 2013, the ECtHR ruled in favor of Armenian Genocide-denying Turkish politician Dogu Perincek’s lawsuit that was filed against Switzerland. The said judgment by the ECtHR was made on the grounds of freedom of speech. In 2008, a Swiss court had convicted Perincek for denying the Armenian Genocide. Dogu Perincek is Chairman of the socialist Workers’ Party of Turkey. In addition, he heads the Talat Pasha organization, which actively fights against the Armenian Genocide’s recognition in Europe.



Armenia Will Act as a Third Party in Perincek Case at ECtHR

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide: Yavuz Baydar

By Hambersom Aghbashian


Yavuz Baydar (born 1956, Istanbul -Turkey), is a Turkish journalist, media critic, author of music and cinema. He completed his high school education in Eskiºehir -Turkey, in 1976, and his higher education in Stockholm, (Stockholm University – Faculty of Cybernetics and Informatics) . A journalist since 1979. He has been a radio reporter, news presenter, producer, TV host, foreign correspondent, debater , and in recent years, a news ombudsman for the daily Sabah. Baydar also contributes as a commentator for the BBC World, Swedish Radio-TV, NPR, Russian TV and Al Jazeera. He is a contributing writer for Al-Monitor’s Turkey Pulse. He is a former president of the World Organization of News Ombudsmen and a member of the World Editors Forum, the Committee of Concerned Journalists and the UNESCO National Committee of Communications.(1)(2)


According to “ www.al-monitor.com/pulse/contents/” (Apr. 25, 2013), Yavuz Baydar wrote that Turkey should get ahead of the 2015 centennial commemoration of the Armenian genocide by acknowledging it, which would be a game-changer in Turkish politics. (3).


Yavus Beayder was also one of the Turkish intellectual who signed a Petition Against Denialist Exhibition in Denmark , reminding the Denmark’s authorities that by giving the Turkish government the opportunity to present an “alternative exhibit”, they support their policy of suppression and intimidation. And that their support constitutes an obstacle to democratization efforts in Turkey today. (4)


In his article “Turkey: Is Ankara Ready for April 24, 2015?” Yigal Schleifer wrote on April 24, 2013 “Today’s Zaman columnist Yavuz Baydar , who suggests Turkey has had a kind of glasnost* when it comes to confronting some of the difficult issues of that past, offers his take on this dynamic: Turkey’s glasnost has been instrumental to defeat the taboo of the last century in Turkey. Today, on April 24, people will gather in Adana, Ýzmir, Ankara, Batman, Bodrum, Dersim, Diyarbekir and Ýstanbul. Every year, the number of participants has increased: from 700 in 2010 to 3,000 last year. But the question is whether Turkish glasnost, if successful in sorting out the Kurdish peace process, will also help lead to a proper apology from Ankara in 2015.(5)


Prof. Osheen Keshishian (Publisher – The Armenian Observer) mentioned in his editorial “Changes are coming Slowly”, June 9, 2013, “After almost a century of silence, some Turkish historians, writers and journalists have seen the light and have become much more vocal and have come out to correct Turkish history. Some cautiously and other more abrasively, starting a movement to write unwittingly the facts, the truth of their history, which was altered and disoriented, and to seek justice for the Armenians, the Kurds, and Assyrians. Many Turks are writing in Turkish without mincing words and spread the truth. Maybe their conscience bothered them for decades for not telling the truth. Obviously, times have changed and the internet, exchange of students and writers, twitter bloggers, and other modern devices, have made a dent in their minds and hearts.” Yavuz Baydar is one of those who were mentioned in Prof. Keshishian’s list of Turkish intellectuals.(6)


In his article “All the heroes deserve remembrance” in “The Independent-March 7, 2014”, Robert Fisk wrote ‘Many survivors of the Armenian genocide have told me of courageous Turks who saved the lives of their families’, and talking about a program on Turkish television (February 3, 2001, broadcast under the title “CevizKabugu”, Walnut Shell, a six-hour program of critical inquiry on the Armenian Genocide), he mentioned that “an extraordinary event took place. A Turkish writer and historian lectured his people on the facts – the reality – of the Armenian Holocaust of 1915. A brave man, Dr Akcam. So too,Yavuz Baydar, who in the same day’s Turkish Milliyet newspaper wrote that “he was always convinced of the necessity to show courage and reprove Talat and his company for their misdeeds… These men are our Pol Pots, Berias and Stalins, and the sooner we call these crimes to account, the better our chances of redeeming ourselves from this scourge of being accused of genocide.” (7)


——————————


*Glasnost:  a Soviet policy permitting open discussion of political and social issues and freer dissemination of news and information.


1- http://tr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yavuz_Baydar

2- http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/contents/authors/yavuz-baydar.html?b=35#

3- http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/ar/originals/2013/04/armenian-genocide-1915-turkey-

defiant.html#

4- http://www.genocide-museum.am/eng/19.12.12.php

5- http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66872

6- http://www.thearmenianobserver.com/?page_id=21

7- http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/commentators/fisk/robert-fisk-all-the-heroes-deserve-remembrance-695035.html



Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide: Yavuz Baydar

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Armenian President Lectures at Columbia University

NEW YORK — On September 24, within the framework of his working visit to the United States of America President Serzh Sarkisian was hosted in one of the most authoritative educational institutions of the world, Columbia University, where the president gave a lecture.


Serzh Sarkisian presented Armenia’s foreign policy issues, challenges and opportunities, touched upon the history of the Armenian people and their cultural and spiritual heritage, the chosen path of democratic development and the existing challenges. “Armenia has always made its foreign policy based on different arrangements, common interests of powers engaged in the region and not on drawing dividing lines between conflicts. I will give you a few examples. Armenia and Russia are strategic partners, and the Armenian-Russian Mutual Aid Agreement together with Armenia’s membership in the CSTO is one of the pillars of our security. Simultaneously, in cooperation with the NATO Armenia is actively involved in ensuring international peace and stability both within the frameworks of individual action plans and international peace-keeping missions.


We attach great value to continuously promoting friendly partnership with the U.S. by embracing new spheres of cooperation. Today we are already conducting negotiations over facilitation of entrance visa regime. We highly appreciate the U.S. assistance to the Republic of Armenia. 42 U.S. states have recognized the Armenian Genocide, and in recent years a number of states have recognized the independence of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic and the right of the Artsakh people to live free. There is a huge Armenian community in the U.S. which certainly plays an active social and political role and is a special driving force in developing the Armenian-American relations.


As you know, this year Armenia is going to join the Treaty on the establishment of the Eurasian Economic Union which will open up new horizons for further economic development and new opportunities for foreign investments.


Concurrently, Armenia continues its comprehensive cooperation with the European Union both within the Eastern Partnership and bilateral formats. With the help of the European Union and the West our country has implemented key reforms in the spheres of democracy, human rights, the rule of law, free market economy and in many other important spheres. I am sure those reforms will last long. We are fully aware that they do not seek to integrate Armenia into this or that organization; we are the first who need them.


Moreover, nowadays when interstate borders are becoming more and more transparent, and various inter-continental economic zones are being formed, there is no sense in talking about contradiction of different arrangements. There is also no sense in grounding your own foreign policy on those contradictions. We are sure that by joining the Eurasian Economic Union, Armenia will link the business communities operating in this area to those of western countries.


Therefore, we try to develop such mechanisms for cooperation with our partners which conform and not contradict to each other. These are not just words, this is our mentality, our everyday work, our vision, and we have come to that conclusion based on our own experience.


We are persistently pushing forward our bilateral European agenda as well. In recent 4-5 months I have visited a series of European countries and have also hosted numerous heads of countries and other dignitaries in Armenia,” said the Armenian President.


Serzh Sarkisian considered well-educated and devoted youth as the guarantor of Armenia’s development, talked about Armenian educational traditions dating back to the Middle Ages when such eminent Armenian educational centers as the Universities of Gladzor and Tatev played a central role in developing religious, social, political, philosophic and also creative though of the time.


The Armenian President presented the vital steps directed at improving the education system in Armenia and in that context touched upon the activities of Luys Foundation: “The establishment of Luys Foundation which sponsors Armenian youth to study at world’s leading higher educational institutions, including your university and to use their knowledge in strengthening the homeland is our next important initiative. The American-Armenian Aso Tavitian who gives numerous Armenians, including diplomats the opportunity to receive best competitive education in the U.S. is one of the famous sponsors of that initiative. I personally think that education dignifies people, and having a dignified young generation is a huge wealth for a small country such as Armenia,” underscored Serzh Sarkisian.


The president also noted that the Armenian government, in cooperation with the University of Cambridge and London Institute of Education, has recently launched a large-scale educational initiative which is called “National Program for Teaching Excellence.” The aim of the program is to put a larger value on the role of the teacher in our society, to make the specialization of the servant of education attractive, to direct the best human resources towards education and create a competitive community of teachers who recognize their mission.


Serzh Sarkisian spoke about the current geopolitical situation, challenges threatening global stability and especially about the dangerous developments of the recent period, presented Armenia’s position and our country’s growing involvement in peace-keeping missions, as a donor, Armenia’s assistance to minorities displaced as a result of extremists’ barbarities, the steps aimed at providing refugees with apartments and noted that Armenia has received more than ten thousand refugees just from Syria.


“Dear participants, having occupied high state positions for 25 years now and being fully aware of the level of responsibility which every official, especially a head of a state bears, I have come to the conclusion that altogether we have a unique opportunity to pass on safer and more prosperous world to coming generations, and the only right way to do it is to transform existing challenges into opportunities,” underlined President Serzh Sarkisian.


The RA President also answered the questions of the participants pertaining to multifarious topics – Armenia’s foreign policy, including the development of the Armenian-American bilateral relations, the Armenia-European Union cooperation and its prospect, Armenia’s development opportunities after joining the Eurasian Economic Union, the Armenia-Russia relations, as well as to Armenia’s internal policy, its social and economic problems and priorities for economic development, regional challenges, the recent developments in the peace process of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and its prospect.



Armenian President Lectures at Columbia University

Azerbaijan Frees Captive Armenian Civilian

YEREVAN — An Armenian civilian was released from Azerbaijani custody and sent back to Armenia on Thursday one month after crossing into Azerbaijan in unclear circumstances.


Sargis Ananian, a 53-year-old resident of Noyemberian, a town in northern Armenia close to the Azerbaijani border, was repatriated with the help of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). Zara Amatuni, an ICRC spokeswoman in Yerevan, said he re-entered his country from the Gazakh district in western Azerbaijan.


The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry announced Ananian’s arrest on September 1, almost one week after his disappearance. A ministry statement claimed that Ananian deliberately entered Azerbaijan because of poor living conditions at home. Armenian officials and the captive’s relatives disputed that claim, suggesting that he crossed the Armenian-Azerbaijani border by accident.


Ananian, who made no public statements immediately after his repatriation, is the fourth Armenian civilian detained in Azerbaijan so far this year. Two of those captives were branded Armenian “saboteurs” by the authorities in Baku and died shortly afterwards.


Karen Petrosian, a 33-year-old resident of Chinari village, died on August 8, the day after being detained in an Azerbaijani village across the border. The Azerbaijani military claimed that he died of “acute heart failure.” The Armenian government and many in Chinari believe, however, that Petrosian was murdered or beaten to death.


A 77-year-old resident of another Armenian village, Mamikon Khojoyan, died in May three months after being detained on the Azerbaijani side of the frontier in similar circumstances. Doctors in Yerevan said Khojoyan suffered serious injuries during his month-long captivity.



Azerbaijan Frees Captive Armenian Civilian

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Conference on Armenian Art and Culture in the Ottoman Empire before 1915

 


NORTHRIDGE, CA — The Ararat-Eskijian Museum and the Armenian Studies Program (ASP) at the California State University, Northridge (CSUN) have organized a daylong conference on “Armenian Art and Culture in the Ottoman Empire before 1915” dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. The event will take place on Saturday, October 18, 2014 at the Sheen Chapel situated above the Museum at 15105 Mission Hills, CA.


The morning session (9:45 a.m.-12:30 p.m.), to be moderated by ASP director Dr. Vahram Shemmassian, will consist of the following presentations: Dr. Ronald Marchese, “From the Monumental to the Miniature: Armenian Religious Embroideries from the Constantinople Churches”; Aram Kouyoumdjian, Esq., “Arrested Development: Western Armenian Theater in the Nineteenth Century”; Dr. Vatché Mankerian, “Armenian Contributions to the Musical Life of the Ottoman Empire and Beyond”; Van Aroian, “The Abdullah Frères and Armenian Contribution to Photography in the Ottoman Empire.”


The afternoon session (1:30-4:30 p.m.), to be moderated by ASP lecturer Dr. Hasmig Baran, will include the following presentations: Dr. Christina Maranci, “Armenian Architects of the Ottoman Empire”; Dr. Ronald Marchese, “Metal and Other Objects from the Armenian Orthodox Churches of Constantinople: Treasures of Faith and Their Sociological Implications”; Mariam Vardanian, “Armenian Silversmiths and Goldsmiths of the Ottoman Empire”; Dr. Susan Pattie, “The Extraordinary Lives of Ordinary Things: Material Culture among Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.”


A special exhibition from the private collection of Mr. Osep Tokat, author of the book Armenian Master Silversmiths, will be held at the Ararat-Eskijian Museum on the conference day (only).


The conference is cosponsored by the Armenian Jewelers Association, Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural Society, National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR), Nor Serount Cultural Association, Organization of Istanbul Armenians, Tekeyan Cultural Association, and the United Armenian Council of Los Angeles for the Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.


For Further information, please contact Dr. Shemmassian at (818) 677-3456 or vahram.shemmassian@csun.edu; Maggie Mangassarian-Goschin at (818) 357-1606 (after September 19) or maggiegoschin@gmail.com.



Conference on Armenian Art and Culture in the Ottoman Empire before 1915

Armenian President Criticizes Azerbaijan At UN Over Karabakh Dispute

NEW YORK — Addressing the UN General Assembly, Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian has criticized Baku for preventing a resolution of the dispute over Azerbaijan’s breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region.


Tensions have recently flared up again in the region, with fighting between Azerbaijani soldiers and NKR defense units.


In his September 24 speech, Sarkisian also thanked countries from around the world that have recognized the Armenian Genocide.


Sarkisian also urged the international community to protect Armenians in war-torn Syria.


Following is the full text of President Sarkisian’s speech at the UN General Assembly:


Distinguished President of the General Assembly,

Distinguished Secretary General,

Ladies and Gentlemen,


Mr. President,


We conduct this meeting in a symbolically significant period between the centennial of World War I and the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, the two turning points in the history of humanity. The United Nations Organization was established almost seventy years ago at the end of World War II, and its mission was to form new civilizational environment and culture of preventing the repetition of the past tragic pages.


2015 bears particular significance for Armenians all over the world. On April 24 Armenians around the globe will commemorate the most tragic page of the nation’s history – the centennial of the Armenian Genocide. It was an unprecedented crime aimed at eliminating the nation and depriving it of its homeland: a crime that continues to be an unhealed scar for each Armenian. The 1915 Genocide was a crime against civilization and humanity, and its inadequate condemnation paved the way for similar crimes of mass murder in the future.


Addressing the Assembly ahead of that centennial year of the Armenian Genocide from this prominent podium, which I would call the podium of Honor and Responsibility, I declare vociferously:


Thank you Uruguay, France, and Russia!


Thank you Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Sweden!


Thank you Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Greece, Slovakia, and Cyprus!


Thank you Lebanon, Argentina, Venezuela, Chile, Canada, and Vatican!


Thank you for the recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide regardless of the format and language adopted. I thank the U.S.A., European Union, and all those personalities, state bodies, territorial units and organizations in numerous countries, who publicly called things by their proper names. That is indeed extremely important since denial is a phase of the crime of genocide.


For a whole century now Armenians around the globe as well as the entire progressive international community expects Turkey to demonstrate the courage and face its own history by recognizing the Armenian Genocide, thus relieving next generations of this heavy burden of the past. Alas instead, we continue to hear ambiguous and ulterior messages, in which the victim and the slaughterer are equalized, and the history is falsified.


Armenia has never conditioned the normalization of the bilateral relations with Turkey by recognition of the Armenian Genocide. In fact, Armenia was the party that initiated such a process which culminated in the signing of the Zurich Protocols in 2009. However, those Protocols have been shelved for years now awaiting ratification in the Turkish Parliament. Ankara declares publicly that it will ratify those Protocols only if Armenians cede Nagorno- Karabakh, the free Artsakh, to Azerbaijan. In Armenia and Artsakh ordinary people often just retort to such preconditions: “To hell with you ratification.” This vernacular phrase concentrates the age-old struggle of the entire nation, and it unequivocally explains to those who attempt to bargain the others’ homeland that the motherland is sacrosanct, and they had better stay away from us with their bargain. It is in these circumstances that currently the official Yerevan is seriously considering the issue of recalling the Armenian-Turkish Protocols from the parliament.


The tragic events in Syria and Iraq, which we are currently witnessing, demonstrate how the groups whose creed is hatred are targeting religious and national minorities. Two days ago, on Independence Day of the Republic of Armenia, the Church of All Saint Martyrs in Deir-ez-Zor, Syria, dedicated to the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide, where their remains were housed, was mined and blown up by terrorists. Such a barbarity is a criminal Godlessness in no way or shape related to any faith. The catastrophic situation in Syria and the north of Iraq continuously deteriorates, and today hundreds of thousands of peaceful people are directly imperiled. Among them are tens of thousands of Armenians of Aleppo. This is an instance of a peril to consider in the context of our joint commitments to preventing the crimes against humanity. Armenia has voiced on numerous occasions the necessity to defend the Armenian population of Syria and the Yezidi population of north-western Iraq, and we are encouraged by the unified stance of the international community in this regard.


The very essence of our organization is the preservation of world peace and security. In recent years, Armenia has consistently consolidated its peacekeeping capabilities thus preparing ourselves for a more proactive engagement in that field. Armenian peacekeepers will very soon be dispatched to the south of Lebanon within the framework of the UNIFIL mission under the auspices of the United Nations. It became possible due to close collaboration we enjoy with our Italian colleagues. I strongly believe that our servicemen will fulfill their mission with dignity and high professionalism also utilizing the extensive experience they have garnered in the last decade in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Distinguished colleagues,


It has been more than twenty years our neighbor aborts the efforts of the international community directed at the just and peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict by its unconstructive and maximalist stance. The failure of an adequate international characterization of the bellicose declarations and various threats put forth at the highest level in Azerbaijan has resulted in all-out permissiveness. The President of Azerbaijan designates the entire Armenian nation as the “the enemy number one”, and what is considered in the rest of the world to be a crime, is considered to be a glorious deed in Azerbaijan.


Despite the fact that each conflict is unique, fundamental human rights and freedoms, including the right of peoples to free expression of will and self-determination, continue to evolve as a determinant to their resolution. The vote held a few days ago in Scotland, once again proved that nowadays the institute of referendum is more and more widely perceived as a legal model for peaceful settlement of ethnic conflicts. It was no coincidence that the right to govern one’s own fate through referendum is in the core of the proposal put forward by the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group for the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.


Ladies and gentlemen,


While discussing the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement I cannot but address the four UN Security Council resolutions, which were adopted during the war, that every so often are exploited by Azerbaijani authorities in order to justify their obstructive policy.


It is about those four Resolutions that demanded unconditionally as a matter of priority cessation of all military hostilities. Azerbaijan failed to comply. Azerbaijan’s own non-compliance with the fundamental demands of these Resolutions made their full implementation impossible. The Resolutions contained calls upon the parties to cease bombardments and air strikes targeting peaceful civilian populations, to refrain from violating the principles of international humanitarian law but instead Azerbaijan continued its indiscriminate bombardments of civilian populations. Azerbaijan did not spare children, women and old men thus gravely violating all legal and moral norms of international humanitarian law.


Now Azerbaijan cynically refers to these Resolutions – refers selectively, pulling them out of context as a prerequisite for the settlement of the problem. The adequate interpretation of the UN Security Council Resolutions is not possible without correctly understanding the hierarchy of the demands set therein.


The Resolutions inter alia request the restoration of economic, transport and energy links in the region (UN SC Resolution 853) and removal of all obstacles to communications and transportation (UN SC Resolution 874). It is no secret that Azerbaijan and Turkey imposed blockade on Nagorno-Karabakh and the Republic of Armenia from the outset of the conflict. The Azerbaijani President in his statements even takes pride in this fact promising his own public that direction would remain the priority of Azerbaijan’s foreign policy.


The abovementioned UN Security Council Resolutions called upon Azerbaijan to establish direct contacts with Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan refused to establish any direct contact with Nagorno-Karabakh, which was a legally equal party to the Ceasefire Agreement concluded in 1994, as well as to a number of other international agreements. Moreover, Azerbaijan preaches hatred towards people it claims it wants to see as a part of their state.


None of the UN SC Resolutions identifies Armenia as a conflicting party. Our country is only called upon “to continue to exert its influence” over the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians (UN SC Resolutions 853, 884) in order to cease the conflict. Armenia fully complied, and partly owing to its efforts a ceasefire agreement was concluded in 1994. All the UN SC Resolutions have clearly recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as a party to the conflict.


Azerbaijani authorities have failed to implement the fundamental demands of the Security Council resolutions, including abiding and sticking by humanitarian norms. Incidentally, Azerbaijan has been gravely violating this demand every now and then. Azerbaijan’s cruel and inhumane treatment of the Armenian civilian prisoners of war regularly resulted in their deaths. Although, I think, one shall not be surprised about it because it is the same state that suppresses and exercises the most inhumane treatment of its own people. A clear proof of it was the decision of the UN Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture to suspend its visit to Azerbaijan due to the obstructions it encountered in the conduct of the official Baku.


The Co-Chairmanship of the OSCE Minsk Group is the only specialized structure that has been dealing with the Nagorno-Karabakh issue according to the mandate granted by the international community. While Azerbaijan is very well aware that it could not possibly deceive or misinform the Minsk Group, which is very-well immersed in the essence of the problem, it attempts to transpose the conflict settlement to other platforms trying to depict it as a territorial dispute or exploiting the factor of religious solidarity. That is ironic, since Armenia traditionally enjoys very warm relations with the Islamic states both in the Arab world or, for instance, with our immediate neighbor Iran.


Ladies and gentlemen,


We highly value the indispensable role of the United Nations in the adjustment and implementation of the development goals. I strongly believe that through the new “Post-2015” development agenda we will continue our efforts at seeking solutions and responding to challenges of global nature stemming from the Millennium Development Goals.


In conclusion, I would like to underline that we have passed the substantial part of the road leading to shaping the “Post-2015 Development Agenda” and we will continue our endeavors in this regard by displaying necessary flexibility in order to bring this process to its logical conclusion.


I thank you.



Armenian President Criticizes Azerbaijan At UN Over Karabakh Dispute

Artsakh’s Path of Democracy Could Serve an Example to Azerbaijan: French Senator

STEPANAKERT — Artsakh, which has taken the path of democracy, could serve a good example to Azerbaijan, chairman of the France-Armenia friendship group, member of the French Senate Philippe Kaltenbach said at the NKR National Assembly.


Senator Kaltenbach, who is paying his second visit to Artsakh, has noticed progress in the democratic processes in the course of twelve years.


The Senator considers that the conflict with Azerbaijan should be solved exceptionally in a peaceful way and hopes that the forthcoming meeting of the Armenian and Azerbaijani Presidents in October will be productive.


The French lawmaker considers that the Azerbaijani President has adopted a harsh stance in the negotiations and persuading Aliyev is not an easy task. He says, however, that the idea should not be abandoned, as the peaceful settlement is more important.



Artsakh’s Path of Democracy Could Serve an Example to Azerbaijan: French Senator

Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Announces 2015 Lemkin Scholarship for Foreign Students

YEREVAN — The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute announces 2015 LEMKIN SCHOLARSHIP program for foreign students and PhD candidates. Raphael Lemkin scholarship is intended to enable foreign students, who specialize in genocide studies, especially in the Armenian Genocide, to visit Armenia for a month to conduct research in local scientific institutions and libraries.


The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute will provide researchers possibility to carry out their research in AGMI, including necessary research materials and consultation.


The deadline for application is on 15 December, 2014. The winner will be selected by the Scientific Council of the AGMI on 25 December, 2014.


The beginning of the scholarship program is on 1 January, 2015. Winners are free to select a month within 2015 except January, February and December.


The duration of the scholarship is one month.


Winner of the Scholarship will provide article for International Journal of Armenian Genocide Studies as a result of his/her research within 6 months from the end of visit to Armenia.


The AGMI will cover all travel and accommodation expenses related to the nominee. A separate funding will be provided to cover some per diem and research expanses.


Required documents for submission

– CV or resume

– Research proposal (not less than 2 pages)

– List of published works (if any)

– Two letters of reference

– A filled application form.


The applications must be sent by post to following address RA, Yerevan, Memorial complex of Tsitsernakaberd, Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute or email us to the following e-mail: info@genocide-museum.am


Application Form



Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Announces 2015 Lemkin Scholarship for Foreign Students

The First World War and the Armenian Genocide

The International New York Times has published an article by President Serzh Sarkisian. The full text of the article is below:


This year marks the centennial of the outbreak of the First World War, a human catastrophe unprecedented in scope and savagery claiming some 14 million lives — 5 million civilians and 9 million soldiers, plus millions of wounded, prisoners of war, and displaced people forced to leave their ancestral homelands. One such group, the Armenians, were nearly wiped off the face of the earth.


Next year the Armenian people will commemorate the centennial of the events that marked the culminations of the mass deportation and killing of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire. The year 1915 was the genocidal culmination of an Ottoman policy of ethnic cleansing and massacres of Armenians begun in the late 19th century and it was officially recognized as such at the time. On 24 May, 1915 the governments of Great Britain, France and Russia issued a joint statement announcing that “for about a month the Kurd and Turkish population of Armenia has been massacring Armenians with the connivance and often assistance of Ottoman authorities.” This was the first international document acknowledging these events as “ crimes ofTurkey against humanity and civilization”.


The scale and scope of atrocities committed by the Young Turk government made it an unprecedented historical tragedy, aimed at the total annihilation of a whole nation and claiming one and a half million Armenian lives. It nearly succeeded in its objective. In his 1929 book, “The World Crisis”, Winston Churchill would write that, “history will search in vain for the word Armenia”.


Indeed, the term “genocide” was coined by Polish legal scholar Raphael Lemkin as a term to define the mass killing of Armenians by the Ottoman authorities during the First World War as weel as the mass killing of Jews by the Nazis in the Second World War. In both cases, the genocide took place within the context of a more general war.


According to historian Mark Levene, it was warfare not of state versus state, but warfare of state versus nation. In other words, genocide could be thought of as a type of warfare that a state or regime carries out against a people.


The Armenian Genocide was a sad precursor to the Jewish Holocaust during the Second World War, and subsequent genocidal campaigns in Cambodia, Rwanda, and Darfur – a dark cycle of history repeating itself in part because of the unfinished business of the past. The fact that the Armenian genocide went unpunished offered encouragement to future dictators. Adolf Hitler, for one, concluded that the international community was prepared to tolerate such acts of genocide, especially when they occurred in the “fog of war.” The Armenian massacres were very much on Hitler`s mind when in 1931 –before he came to power – he discussed the need for a resettlement policy for non-German minorities: “We intend to introduce a resettlement policy. Think of the biblical deportations and the massacres of the Middle Ages… and remember the extermination of the Armenians … ” In 1939 Hitler echoed these words in the context of his treatment of the Polish population: “I have placed my death-head formations in readiness – for the present only in the East – with orders to them to send to death mercilessly and without compassion, men, women, and children of Polish derivation and language. Only thus shall we gain the living space [Lebensraum] which we need. Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?”


The Armenian Genocide reminds us of the risks of not learning the lessons of history, the dangers of genocide denial, and the long-term negative consequences of allowing crimes to go unrecognized and unpunished. Recognition of past genocides, such as the Armenian case, is key to understanding and preventing future genocides. Although there is a 1948 United Nations convention aimed at prevention of future genocides, we believe that this or any other document cannot be properly enforced unless previous genocides are exposed, recognized and punished. We consider the Armenian Genocide to be not only a tragedy for our nation, but also a crime against humanity of a global scale which was internationally recognized at the time and, if honestly acknowledged could have helped to prevent future atrocities. Armenia will continue to work actively with the United Nations and other international fora to achieve a universal condemnation of such acts in any part of the world.


The Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide has always been a solemn occasion for diaspora Armenians scattered all over the world, descendants of men and women who lived in their ancestral homeland for millennia before they were uprooted by bloody brute force. In the absence of an independent and free Armenia, the Diaspora and its institutions served as custodians of the Armenian legacy until therebirth of a free Armenian nation.


Then, 23 years ago, the Armenian tricolour was once again raised in Yerevan, symbolizing the rebirth of an independent homeland. The people of Armenia received another chance to live freely in their own country. Armenia’s renewed independence was an opportunity to begin a new era in relations with Turkey. Armenia’s position is reflected in the decades-long principle of establishing relations “without any preconditions.” This was the bottom-line principle for starting the negotiations with Turkey in 2008, and for the protocols signed in 2009. The idea was to avoid any stumbling blocks and to create a positive environment for the development of bilateral relations, understanding and reconciliation between the two societies after the establishment of diplomatic relations and the opening of borders.


Unfortunately, Turkey has backtracked from that agreement and refused to establish diplomatic relations, keeps its border with Armenia closed, maintains an illegal economic blockade, and denies the historic truth of past crimes and injustices. Historical truth aside, as long as the last section of the Iron Curtain — the Turkish-Armenian border — remains closed, it will impede the healthy development and regional integration in the Caucasus region, and will inject a constant element of instability in a strategically sensitive part of the world.


The future of Armenian-Turkish bilateral relations must be based on the historic rapprochement between the two nations. Acceptance of the historic truth can heal the deep-running discord between the Armenian and Turkish peoples. We believe that recognition of the Armenian Genocide can in no way be viewed as a humiliation, threat or attack on the Turkish people. Many Turkish intellectuals, writers and academics have begun to go down the difficult road of introspection and study, openly, courageously and with integrity. In this context, it is essential that the international community should support their action, and encourage Turkish political leaders to demonstrate the same attachment to justice and historic truth as some of their most respected private citizens have already done — to close, with honesty and humanity, one of the dark, unfinished chapters in human history.



The First World War and the Armenian Genocide

U.S. Condemns Armenian Genocide Memorial Church Destruction in Syria

WASHINGTON, DC — The United States on Wednesday confirmed and strongly condemned the destruction by Islamic State (ISIL) militants of an Armenian church in Syria that was built in memory of victims of the 1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey.


“The U.S. Embassy in Yerevan joins the government and people of Armenia in strongly condemning the destruction of the Armenian Church in Deir ez-Zor, Syria,” read an embassy statement. “This senseless act of destruction demonstrates yet again the utter disregard the terrorist organization ISIL has for the rich religious and cultural heritage of the Middle East.”


“As Secretary [of State John] Kerry has stated, ISIL has systematically committed abuses of human rights and international law and presents a global terrorist threat. Faced with this threat, the United States urges the international community to strengthen our united effort to degrade and destroy ISIL,” said the statement.


The Saint Martyrs’ Church was reportedly blown up on Sunday, the day before the U.S. and some of its Arab allies expanded their strikes on ISIL targets into eastern and northern Syria. Deir ez-Zor has been among ISIL-controlled parts of the country targeted by the U.S.-led coalition.


Armenia effectively backed the air strikes when it condemned the Armenian church bombing on Monday. Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian urged the international community to “root out that plague threatening the civilized world.” A top aide to President Serzh Sarkisian held Turkey responsible for the attack, seemingly alluding to alleged Turkish support for the ISIL, which is strongly denied by Ankara.


Several members of the U.S. Congress also condemned the destruction of the church. One of them, Adam Schiff, said, “The reported destruction by ISIL of the Armenian Genocide Memorial Church in Der Zor, Syria is yet another example of the sickening barbarity that has terrorized millions across Iraq and Syria. The fact that the church was dedicated to those lost in the genocide is both especially poignant, and a chilling foreshadowing of how ISIL would treat Syria’s Christians if it were to further expand their territorial gains. We need to support the international coalition that is currently engaging in strikes to help the people of Syria and Iraq rid themselves of this cancer.”


Congressman Frank Pallone has also condemned the destruction of the Armenian Genocide Memorial Church in Deir ez-Zor, Syria:


“I am deeply saddened and outraged by the destruction of the Armenian Genocide Memorial Church in Deir ez-Zor. This church stood to commemorate and honor the hundreds of thousands of Armenians who died on the march to Deir ez-Zor. At the order of the Ottoman Turks, Armenian refugees were sent to die in Deir ez-Zor as part of the 20th century’s first genocide. The destruction of the church memorializing this terrible point in history must be met with a strong international response.”


“The United States government and other international partners in the region must work to protect religious minorities and to ensure that Armenian Christians are not targeted for such appalling acts. As the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide approaches, we must remember that it is our duty to stand against the targeting of Armenians all around the world and to prevent any further targeted violence.”



U.S. Condemns Armenian Genocide Memorial Church Destruction in Syria

Monday, September 22, 2014

Armenian Independence Day Festival Draws Thousands

GLENDALE, CA – In celebration of the 23rd anniversary of the independence of the Republic of Armenia, the Nor Serount Cultural Association’s annual Armenian Independence Day Festival on September 21 drew hundreds of attendees to Glendale’s Verdugo Park.


Onlookers cheered for the vibrant Nor Serount dance ensembles of young children and musical guest performers delighted dancers of all ages with traditional folk dance music and patriotic songs. The joyful mood originated by the Master of Ceremonies Mrs. Ani Marselian who not only entertained the crowd but also highlighted the significance of Independence. Educational and cultural booths adorned the park featuring authentic Armenian cuisine, souvenirs, hand-woven rugs, tapestries, books and media.


Among dignitaries present for the joyous occasion were His Eminence Archbishop Vatche Hovsepian of the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America who stated the importance of the independence of Armenia from Soviet rule in the 1990’s, and praised the Nor Serount Cultural Association for providing such a great event to the Armenian American community where all age groups come together to have fun, preserve their culture and maintain their bond to their ancestral homeland.


The Armenian Council of America began the program by introducing Councilmember Laura Friedman and Ara Najarian, followed by State Board of Equalization Member Betty Yee, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson and LA Community College Board Trustee Scott Svonkin. Others in attendance included, Glendale City Councilmember Paula Devine, LA City Councilmember Mitch O’Farrell, West Hollywood Councilmember Jeffrey Prang, Glendale Unified School District Board Member Dr. Armina Gharpetian, former Assemblymember Anthoni Portantino and representatives from the office of Congressman Adam Schiff, Assemblyman Mike Gatto and County Supervisor Michael Antonovich.


All of the elected officials praised the Armenian-American community for their efforts in continuing to persevere as nation of survivors and fighters for justice, as they presented beautiful proclamations commemorating the grand event.


“For the past 16 years we have been bringing this festival to the Armeinan-American community, drawing large groups of people from all over Southern California, said Armenian Independence Day Festival organizer Mr. Mehran Khatchadorian. “Our festival brings together young and old generations of Armenians as well as non-Armenians. Our goal is to not only promote the Armenian culture and identity for future generations of Armenians, but to also educate our non-Armenian neighbors and friends. We look forward to continuing this great endeavor for many decades to come.”







Armenian Independence Day Festival Draws Thousands

Achieving True Victory in War

STEPANAKERT — In Chapar, a northern village in Artsakh, Armenia Fund has constructed a new school with modern amenities to serve the local population. During the time Armenia Fund has realized many projects in and around the area, 15 families have moved back and resettled in the village.


Fourteen year old boys usually have less serious things on their mind.


The ceasefire negotiations were underway and an independent Artsakh was in sight. On the verge of a monumental defeat, Azerbaijan, suffering from embarrassingly disproportionate military losses, chose to continue its hostilities. One of the targets for Azerbaijan’s special forces was the civilian population of Chapar village in northern Artsakh’s Martakert region. As recorded by Human Rights Watch, six Armenian civilians, including one 14-year old boy, were killed.


One of Artsakh’s oldest communities, picturesque Chapar is in northern Artsakh, close to the militarized border and the Azerbaijani-occupied Armenian region of Shahumian. Armenia Fund chose the village of 300 residents for the location a new school as a part of its Rural Development Program. The building of the new school was co-sponsored by the government of the Artsakh Republic.


chapar5The school is built with the future in mind, bearing accommodations that will allow students to have a holistic educational experience. Among the different facilities are included biology and chemistry labs, a computer lab, and a library. A unique feature at the school that speaks to its precarious geography – and with a nod to its history – is a classroom specially built for military studies.


Spanning over 10,000 square feet, the school’s campus also houses a grass sports field, as well as an outdoor playground. For Chapar’s cold winters, a boiler room was installed so that the children and faculty could benefit from central heating and not have to limit class time for lack of it.


Despite now having a brand new building outfitted with the most modern educational equipment, Chapar School’s most valued possession is distinctly antiquated: a hundred year old bell. Having survived through some of the most tumultuous times in Armenian history, the bell will hang proudly from the new building where it will continue to see off the school’s graduates in the spring and welcome new students in the fall.


This is not Chapar’s first experience with Armenia Fund. In 2012, a water pipeline almost 2.5 miles long was installed and has since provided the village with regular access to drinkable water.


chapar4Chapar is also one of the locations along the new Vardenis-Martakert Highway which is being constructed by Armenia Fund with donations from Armenians throughout the world. These developments, together with the new school and a general improvement in the village’s conditions have encouraged 15 families that had left to return and continue their lives there.


In fact, in addition to the traditional trades of the villages, which include beekeeping, animal husbandry, and agriculture, many of the village’s residents have been hired to work on the Armenia Fund infrastructure projects in and around their homes.


We can’t know what the 14-year old boy who was killed by Azerbaijani soldiers would have been if he was able to grow up. But, by continuing to build the communities that were destroyed by the War for Independence and which continue to live on the razor’s edge, we can ensure that his innocent life, and that of many others like him, was not lost in vain. The real victory in war is giving the fourteen year olds of today and tomorrow that which the ones from yesterday did not have.



Achieving True Victory in War

Daniel Varoujan Hejinian's "Peace of Art" at the National Gallery of Armenia

Launch of the 5th Armenia-Diaspora Conference was marked by the opening of Armenian American painter Daniel Varoujan Hejinian’s personal exhibition called “Peace of Art”


YEREVAN — On September 18, Armenian American painter Daniel Varoujan Hejinian opened his personal exhibition called “Peace of Art” (www.PeaceofArt.org) at the National Gallery of Armenia. The exhibition is part of the 5th Armenia-Diaspora Conference organized by the RA Ministry of Diaspora and is dedicated to the 23rd anniversary of Armenian Independence and to the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide.


Among the participants of the event were RA Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan, RA Minister of Diaspora Hranush Hakobyan, leaders and representatives of Diaspora Armenian organizations, as well as Armenia’s public and political figures and artists.


Daniel Varoujan Hejinian was born to a family of Armenians who survived the Armenian Genocide of 1915 and took shelter in Syria. Since childhood, he had heard stories of the brutal massacres and had seen it through his parents’ eyes. The longing for the homeland and the desire to develop his innate talent brought young Varoujan to the Homeland.


danielvaroujanIn 1996, Hejinian raised signs commemorating the Armenia Genocide in the State of Massachusetts for the first time in the history of the Armenian Diaspora, and he has been doing so every year since 1996. He has presented the Armenian Genocide to the international community as an irrefutable historical fact and has urged to recognize and condemn the Armenian Genocide and demand reparations.


Greeting the painter and all art lovers, RA Minister of Diaspora Hranush Hakobyan mentioned: “By naming their son after great writer Daniel Varoujan, the painter’s parents raised a talented artist by the name of Daniel Varoujan Hejinian, and whereas writer Daniel Varoujan portrayed the sorrow and desires of the Armenian people in his writings, painter Daniel Varoujan Hejinian did that with his brushstrokes.”


The RA Minister of Diaspora drew the participants’ attention to Hejinian’s bronze cross-stone called “Hands of a Mother”, which is dedicated to the memory of the 1.5 million martyrs of the Armenian Genocide. The cross-stone has been placed in front of the municipality of Lowell for everyone to see and has been named the “Mother Cross-Stone” since the stone symbolizes the body, that is, the “Homeland”, and the bronze symbolizes the spirit, that is, the “Diaspora”.


The minister stressed the fact that the love for the Homeland, women, nature and children prevails in all of the artist’s paintings.


Art critic Shahen Khachatryan talked about Hejinian’s paintings and praised the artist’s unique style and high mastery.


Sheriff of Middlesex County of the State of Massachusetts Peter Koutoujian gave his welcoming remarks and expressed gratitude to the RA Ministry of Diaspora for the invitation to participate in the opening of his fellow Armenian American’s personal exhibition in the Homeland. The Armenian sheriff proudly spoke about his compatriot Daniel Varoujan Hejinian’s highly artistic paintings, which are devoted to the Armenian Genocide and show the world the crime perpetrated by the Turks in the early 20th century.


In the end, painter Daniel Varoujan Hejinian expressed gratitude to the RA Ministry of Diaspora and particularly to Minister Hranush Hakobyan for turning his dream of holding a personal exhibition in the Homeland into a reality.


Hejinian also expressed gratitude to his wife and daughter for encouraging him to organize a personal exhibition and invited the participants of the event to the exhibition hall to view the paintings showcased at the exhibition.


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Daniel Varoujan Hejinian's "Peace of Art" at the National Gallery of Armenia

Fighters from the Islamic State (ISIS) reportedly desecrated and blew up the Armenian Genocide memorial complex in the eastern Syrian city of Deir ez-Zor, near the site where vast numbers of Armenian refugees were forced to march to their deaths in the early 20th century.


The Church, located in al-Rashidyeh neighborhood, was built in 1989-1990, and consecrated a year later.


The Armenian Genocide Memorial Church contains the remains of victims of the Armenian Genocide collected from the Syrian desert and has served as a pilgrimage site for Armenians worldwide, and every year, on April 24, special commemoration ceremonies attended by thousands of people would be held at the site.


Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian has strongly condemned the destruction of the church.


In a statement released today he called on the international community to combat the Islamic State, which, he described as “a threat to the civilized mankind.”


‘This hideous crime against a shrine once again demonstrates the brutal nature of the so-called Islamic State terrorist group. The international community should immediately stop and uproot this plague threatening the civilized world, cut off the routes of its supplies, funding, support and sponsorship,” he said.


Since its emergence as a real force in the Middle East ISIS has committed vandalism and sacrileges in many shrines and holy sites both in Syria and in Iraq. In recent weeks the United States and its allies have stated about their commitment to confront ISIS that has been called a threat to the region and the entire world.



President Obama Praises Strong Ties with Armenia

WASHINGTON, DC — U.S. President Barack Obama has described U.S.-Armenian relations as “strong” and pledged to deepen them in the future.


“The American people join me in sending best wishes as you commemorate the 23rd anniversary of Armenia’s independence on September 21.


Armenia and the United States have a strong history rooted in partnership and friendship. The people-to-people, cultural and economic ties that bind our countries are impressive and inspiring. We recognize and honor Armenia’s rich cultural heritage and the many contributions Americans of Armenian descent have made to the United States over the years. The U.S.-Armenia relationship remains strong, and we look forward to continuing and deepening our cooperation for many years to come.” Obama said in a weekend letter to President Serzh Sarkisian that congratulated him on Armenia’s Independence Day.


“The deep bonds between the United States and Armenia are strong,” U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said for his part. “We will continue to strengthen our partnership with Armenia in various dimensions including security cooperation, economic and democratic development, and expanding people-to-people exchanges.”



President Obama Praises Strong Ties with Armenia

John Kerry: The US Stands With Armenia as a Partner and Friend

WASHINGTON, DC — The US Department of State has issued Secretary John Kerry’s address congratulating the Armenian people on independence day.


The statement is below:


“On behalf of President Obama and the people of the United States, I am delighted to send best wishes to the people of Armenia as you celebrate your independence day this September 21.


“The deep bonds between the United States and Armenia are strong. We will continue to strengthen our partnership with Armenia in various dimensions including security cooperation, economic and democratic development, and expanding people-to-people exchanges. This is also a special occasion to honor the achievements of Armenians and Armenian-Americans who have contributed to the development of both countries.


“As you celebrate 23 years of independence, know that the United States stands with Armenia as a partner and friend. I congratulate all Armenians on this important holiday and wish you great success in the year to come.”



John Kerry: The US Stands With Armenia as a Partner and Friend

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Pope Francis Accepts Invitation to Visit Armenia in 2015

VATICAN CITY — At a meeting at the Holy See Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian and His Holiness Pope Francis hailed the high-level relations between Armenia and Vatican, emphasizing that those relations built on a solid basis stem from the same Christian value system and ideology.


The interlocutors attached importance to the high-level reciprocal visits over the past years, which testify to the willingness to keep the bilateral relations in the focus.


Serzh Sarkisian and Pope Francis exchanged views on the close cooperation between the Holy See and the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin.


During the meeting President Sarkisian extended an official invitation to Pope Francis to visit Armenia in 2015, which the Pontiff readily accepted, expressing his sincere desire to visit the country, according to the President’s office.



Pope Francis Accepts Invitation to Visit Armenia in 2015