Saturday, May 23, 2015

Turkey Armenians Stage Major Protest March




Camp Armen Land Owner to Donate Orphanage to Armenian Foundation


ISTANBUL — Nor Zartonk movement of Istanbul Armenians organized a major protest demonstration and a march demanding the return of the city’s Camp Armen Armenian orphanage to the Armenian people.


Numerous Istanbul Armenians, as well as activists of Turkish and other nationalities supporting them, assembled on May 22, carrying banners with the inscription “Return Camp Armen to the Armenians” CNN Turk reports .


Protesters marched to Galatasaray High School, where Nor Zartonk member Sayat Tekir issued a statement. He reminded that Camp Armen was established in 1962 and accepted Armenian orphans, including the late Hrant Dink—the founder and chief editor of Agos Armenian bilingual weekly of Istanbul, who was shot dead on January 19, 2007 outside the editorial office— and his wife Rakel.


Tekir said they will be standing guard at Camp Armen until a decision is made to return it to its real owners, the Armenian people.


After the announcement of the activist, the protest action ended peacefully.


Camp Armen Armenian orphanage was seized by the Turkish authorities back in 1987. Subsequently, it was sold to a Turkish businessman who, in turn, decided to demolish the orphanage and build luxury homes in the premises.


Land Owner to Donate Camp Armen to Armenian Protestant Church Foundation


The owner of the land of the Armenian Children’s Camp, which has been at the center of ongoing controversy with activists attempting to prevent a planned demolition of the former orphanage, has announced that he will be donating it to the Gedikpasa Armenian Protestant Church Foundation, Turkish Evrensel newspaper reports.


“I respectfully announce to the public that I will be donating the land to the Gedikpasa Armenian Protestant Church Foundation… with the hopes of contributing to social harmony and unity of our country in line with our Armenian citizens thoughts and wishes,” announced Fatih Ulusoy, who owns the land where the former orphanage is located, in a written statement published Saturday.


Ulusoy noted that Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu’s request that the issue be resolved had been relayed to him through the efforts of Istanbul Mayor Kadir Topbas, ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) Istanbul Chair Selim Temurci and Tuzla District Mayor Sadi Yazici. He added that when he purchased the deed to the land back in 2006 there had been no mention or information regarding there being an orphanage on the land, and also that he was personally upset by some of the speculations that had arisen around the issue.


Friday, May 22, 2015

Azerbaijani Side Blocks OSCE Monitors Access to its Front­Lines




YEREVAN — On May 22, in accordance with the arrangement reached with the authorities of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, the OSCE Mission conducted a planned monitoring of the Line of Contact between the armed forces of Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan in the Hadrut direction near Horadiz settlement.


From the positions of the NKR Defense Army, the monitoring was conducted by Field Assistants of the Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office Yevgeny Sharov (Ukraine) and Khristo Khristov (Bulgaria).


From the opposite side of the Line of Contact, the monitoring was conducted by staff member of the Office Peter Svedberg (Sweden) and Personal Assistant to the Personal Representative of the CiO Simon Tiller (Great Britain).


The monitoring passed in accordance with the agreed schedule. No violation of the cease-fire regime was registered. However, the Azeri side did not lead the OSCE mission to its front-lines.


From the Karabakh side, the monitoring mission was accompanied by representatives of the NKR Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Defense.


Azerbaijan Objects to Riga Summit Joint Declaration




RIGA – Leaders of the European Union and six former Soviet republics concluded a summit in Riga on Friday by issuing a joint declaration on maintaining their “Eastern Partnership”, in spite of sharp differences on key issues among participants that threatened to upstage the event.


Disputes over wording on Russia’s annexation of Crimea and the status of Nagorno-Karabakh region in the summit’s final declaration highlighted divisions among the EU member states and the six countries the bloc has designated as its eastern partners.


European Council President Donald Tusk said at the conclusion of the two-day summit on May 22 that strong emotions surrounding the joint declaration were “very natural” because of the difficult situation in the region.


Disagreement over the wording on Crimea erupted on May 21 when Armenia and Belarus tried to block text that referred to Russia’s annexation of the peninsula from Ukraine in March 2014 as “illegal.” Armenia and Belarus have close ties to Moscow and are members of the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union.


That dispute was later resolved in a way that enabled Armenia and Belarus to avoid using the term “illegal.” Point 4 of the final declaration states that the “EU” — not all of the summit participants — “reaffirms its position against the illegal annexation” of Crimea.


Azerbaijan nearly vetoed Friday’s joint declaration because of the wording of its references to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.


Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, who represented his country at the summit, reportedly stormed out of its concluding session that discussed the text drafted by EU officials. News reports from the Latvian capital said Mammadyarov demanded changes relating to the Karabakh dconflict.


The 13-page declaration calls for the resolution of ethnic and territorial disputes in the former Soviet Union “on the basis of the principles and norms of international law.” It expresses “full support to the mediation efforts by the co-chairs of the Minsk Group on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, including at the level of [U.S., Russian and French] Presidents and their statements since 2009.”


Those statements have said that a Karabakh settlement must be based on the internationally recognized principles of territorial integrity of states, peoples’ self-determination and non-use of force.


“Azerbaijan had some problems with that,” Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) in Riga. “That is why their foreign minister left the conference room. They tried unsuccessfully to bring him back.”


“But in the end, as a result of appropriate negotiations, it was agreed that the declaration will be adopted [without any amendments] and that Azerbaijan will [separately] present its objections regarding the corresponding provision,” Nalbandian said.


“So what does this mean? It means that Armenia and an important part of the international community … agreed on that matter whereas Azerbaijan was again left isolated,” he claimed.


Mammadyarov did not comment on the controversy immediately after the two-day summit, boycotted by President Ilham Aliyev, drew to a close. The chief Azerbaijani diplomat might have objected to the summit declaration’s failure to explicitly uphold Azerbaijan’s sovereignty over Karabakh.


Aliyev’s chief foreign policy aide, Novruz Mammadov, told the Trend news agency later in the day that by signing up to the Riga declaration Baku made a “concession” to the EU. He did not elaborate.


Addressing the Riga forum on Thursday, President Serzh Sarkisian insisted that Baku cannot evoke the principle of territorial integrity in its efforts to gain control over the territory. “Nagorno-Karabakh has nothing to do with Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity because it has never been part of an independent Azerbaijan,” Sarkisian said.


Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide: Edhem Eldem




By Hambersom Aghbashian


Professor Edhem Eldem (born in Geneva in 1960) is a renowned Turkish historian who teaches at the Department of History at Boğaziçi University in Istanbul. He completed his Ph.D. degree in 1989 at Provence University, (Université de Provence, Aix-Marseille I, Institut de Linguistique Générale et dÉtudes Orientales et Slaves), and worked as an associate professor at Boğaziçi University (1989- 91), Tenured associate professor (1991-98) then full professor. He was a visiting professor, Centre d’études du domaine turc, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris (2001-08), then In (2011-2012) he was a fellow at The Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin. His research focus lies on the late Ottoman social and economic history, intellectual biographies and the history of archaeology.(1)


According to (http://www.esiweb.org), In September 2005, Prof. Halil Berktay, joined by fellow intellectuals Murat Belge, Edhem Eldem and Selim Deringil, organised a conference on the fate of the Ottoman Armenians. Justice Minister Cemil Cicek attacked the organizers in the Turkish parliament with the familiar charge of “stabbing the Turkish people in the back. And according to (The California Courier), June 2, 2005, “ Fearing that these scholars were about to disclose a version of history which was not in line with that approved by the Turkish government, the Governor of Istanbul called Ayse Soysal, the rector of Boğaziçi University, and ordered her to cancel the meeting. She declined. She also refused requests later that day from the Chief Public Prosecutor to hand over the texts of the papers to be delivered at the conference.”


In December 2008, two hundred prominent Turkish intellectuals released an apology for the “great catastrophe of 1915”. This was a clear reference to the Armenian Genocide, a term still too sensitive to use so openly. The signatories also announced a website related to this apology, and called on others to visit the site and sign the apology as well. The brief text of the apology is: “ My conscience does not accept the insensitivity showed to and the denial of the Great Catastrophe that the Ottoman Armenians were subjected to in 1915. I reject this injustice and for my share, I empathize with the feelings and pain of my Armenian brothers and sisters. I apologize to them. Professor Edhem Eldem is one of the Turkish intellectuals who signed the apology. (5)


“Today’s Zaman”, wrote on September 26, 2014, “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. Edhem Eldem is one of the intellectuals who signed the statement.”(2)


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1- http://www.lisa.gerda-henkel-stiftung.de/content.php?nav_id=3971

2- http://www.todayszaman.com/national_group-of-intellectuals-condemn-anti-armenian-statements-in-textbooks_359935.html


“A Journey Beyond Hate: The Armenian Genocide 100 Years Later”




By Dr. Mary A. Papazian


Mary A. Papazian, Ph.D., president of Southern Connecticut State University, addressed The United Nations Association of Connecticut (UNACONN) in Kent, Conn., on April 25, 2015, on the occasion of the Centennial Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.


The United Nations Association of Connecticut (commonly abbreviated as UNACONN or UNA-CT) is the official Connecticut state chapter of the United Nations Association – United States of America. It is a nonprofit membership organization dedicated to building understanding of and support for the ideals and vital work of the United Nations among American people. The association is affiliated with the World Federation of United Nations Associations, which was established in 1946 as a public movement for the UN.


The text of President Papazian’s speech follows:


Some years ago, my husband Dr. Dennis Papazian, a longtime Professor of History at the University of Michigan, Dearborn, wrote an article that he first delivered at a symposium in Vienna, Austria entitled “Genocide, the Curse of the Nation-state.” He reminded his audience that in the Peace of Westphalia of 1648, which ended the vicious religious wars in Europe, it was decided that each state would practice Christianity according to the orientation of its ruler, whether he/she was Protestant or Roman Catholic, as decided at the earlier Peace of Augsburg (1555) which established the principle cuius regio, eius religio, [as the prince, so the religion.]


This concept—that the religion of the ruler be the religion of the state, with no authority above the state to which anyone might appeal—was to award the state ultimate sovereignty or dominion over its inhabitants. Thus, what the state did to its inhabitants was nobody’s business. At Westphalia, sovereignty was deemed to reside in the “sovereign,” or the ruler, the chief authority over all things domestic as well as foreign affairs. The concept of “imperial rule,” central rule over many states (e.g., the Holy Roman Empire, the Ottoman Empire and British Empire later), was downgraded and eventually abandoned after World War I.


As the states of Europe slowly democratized in the 19th century, to one extent or another, in theory at least, the sovereignty belonged to the people. But in reality, this sovereignty was exercised by the government that might or might not respond to the desires of the population. In any case, although Westphalia presumed and demanded conformity to the religious orientation of the ruler, life was not that simple. Most of the states of Europe continued to have minorities of different ethnic and religious origins who in the treaties were guaranteed very limited rights, chiefly the right to practice their religious in private. Nevertheless, since there was no way to guarantee these limited rights, what the sovereign ultimately did with these minorities was nobody’s business. Thus, the principles developed at Westphalia, especially those relating to respecting the boundaries of sovereign states and non-interference in their domestic affairs, became central to the World Order that developed over the following centuries and which remains in effect to this day!


Raphael Lemkin, a Polish-Jewish lawyer, coined the word “genocide” using the Armenian case is an example. It was not just a question of coining a word, however, which had been done many times in history and was usually of little or no consequence. But the word “genocide” reflected a whole new idea of dealing with sovereignty by, at least in theory, limiting the power of the sovereign over human beings. It is just this reality that we hope someday will shape international relations. In other words, the concept of genocide as defined by Lemkin had the potential to create a new World Order in which national minorities are guaranteed their lives by the international community.

Much of the discussion around the Armenian Genocide centers on whether the “G-word” should be used to describe the events of 1915-1923. So why is the word genocide so important, and why did Raphael Lemkin coin the word in the

first place? And why did he enshrine it in a treaty that he spent his life trying to have adopted by the United Nations?


Raphael Lemkin was born in Poland in 1900 and at a very young age was instilled with a sense of justice by well-educated and pious family. He was a serious teenager, growing up just at the time when the Ottoman Empire was slaughtering its Armenian subjects in 1915-1916. By 1921 Lemkin had entered the University and was particularly enamored of international law, which at that time was established by treaties between two states or among a group of states, there being no permanent superior authority.


It was in that very same year, 1921, when a young Armenian by the name of Soghomon (Solomon) Tehlirian assassinated Mehmet Talaat Pasha, who as Minister of the Interior and later Grand Vizier was one of the chief masterminds of the Armenian genocide. After Turkey surrendered in the Mudros Armistice of October 30,1919, Talaat Pasha had been whisked away to safety by the German Navy. Talaat Pasha had been living comfortably in Berlin, with his wife and friends, when Tehlirian tracked him down and assassinated him in broad daylight on one of the main German boulevards.


Tehlirian made no attempt to escape. Rather, he told the gathering crowd over and over again, “He and I are foreigners, and this has nothing to do with Germany.” Tehlirian was arrested, sent to jail, and put on trial. At the trial he testified that he was haunted by his mother’s spirit, his mother who had been beheaded in front of him, and who appeared in his dreams and demanded vengeance. Of course the Germans at that time were well aware of the vast and horrible murders that had been and were continuing to be committed against the Armenians all over Anatolia and northern Syria. Amazingly, Tehlirian was acquitted for not being responsible for his actions. This may have been the first time in history that a murderer was set free because he was not responsible, mentally and morally, for his actions.


Lemkin, who was following these events, asked the question: “Why is the killing of an individual a crime, punishable by law, and the killing of millions by their government was no crime at all?” The Allied Powers had confronted the same problem after the war and accused of the Ottoman Government, the Young Turk dictatorship, of crimes against “humanity and civilization, a new concept.” Thus the annihilation of the Armenians became an “international issue,” not just an Armenian issue. It was under this rubric that war crime trials were held in Malta by the British government, trials that were abandoned at the time Mustafa Kemal Ataturk was in rebellion overthrowing the Sultan’s government.


Interestingly, the Turkish government also held little-known but very important war crime trials, a series of courts-martial, and convicted the Young Turk leadership, including Talaat and others, condemning them to death. So, in a sense, Tehlirian was carrying out the punishment prescribed by the Turkish courts-martial since, since the guilty had fled to other countries. The Turkish leaders were accused of war crimes, since there was no domestic Ottoman law against genocide.


Lemkin decided that what the world needed was an international law against the killing of racial, religious, or ethnic minorities by their own government; namely, to limit the sovereignty of individual states when it came to dealing with large numbers of domestic inhabitants. He spent the rest of his life working for an international agreement against genocide, a word he devised to express this newly understood crime, a crime that had been called by Winston Churchill as “the crime without a name.” Henceforth, the killing of one man would be murder and the killing of a nation would be genocide. That is why it is so important apply the word genocide to the Armenian massacres of 1915-1923, since it brings those events under international law where Lemkin thought it should be. Words do matter.


In this context, how should we understand the challenge of “a journey beyond hate,” the topic of this panel? It would be inhuman if those who had experienced the mass slaughter of Armenians, namely the survivors, most of whom were children from age 6 to 16, and whose lives were mangled almost beyond repair, did not hate those who drove them from their homes, and who they witnessed torturing and killing their mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers, aunts and uncles, grandmothers and grandfathers, cousins and friends. Not to hate under those circumstances would be absolutely unnatural, actually inhuman, neurotic, without feeling. One must hate extreme evil when one is a witness and a victim.


As my husband often says: “They are dead, the victims and the killers, they are all dead. There is no one left to hate. Their fate is in God’s hands.”


We also understand, in a very profound sense, that to bring health to society we need to hate the crime and love the criminal. Of course when it comes to torture and murder, this becomes a bit difficult. How many of you could watch a child being crucified, and then hate the crime and love the criminal? How many of you could watch a three-year-old child being used by horsemen as a ball in a game of polo, and then hate the crime and love the criminal? Thank God, we are not faced with that choice today. The victims and the killers are all dead.


We must also understand, that some of the victims themselves, the survivors, carried hatred in their hearts for those who killed and tortured their relatives and friends, although they rarely spoke about these horrific events. It was not until approximately 50 years after the Armenian Genocide that the survivors were willing to tell their stories.


But we, today, are the children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren of the survivors. We did not personally experience being driven out of our homes and sent on death marches. We did not witness torture and murder. It is easier for us to step back and take a larger view. As we said, the victims and the perpetrators are all dead. What is left is us and the progeny of the killers.


Armenians living today, despite the adverse publicity on the part of a few individuals who project their own feelings on others, are ready to reconcile with the Turkish people. Of course, that presumes there is someone with whom to reconcile! Reconciliation must go both ways. It is a two-way street. It has been well noted that denial is the last stage of genocide, for to erase memory, is to complete a genocide.


The act of forgiveness would be much easier if the progeny of the killers recognize the guilt of their predecessors and disowned those horrible events. In such a case, the progeny of the killers and the progeny of those murdered could come together and shed tears partaking in each other’s grief. Those who killed and were killed are all dead, and there are a few survivors alive today.


I am happy to report that that recognition is indeed happening today in many parts of Turkey and here in the United States. The present generation of Turkish intellectuals is more inclined to take a serious look at the past of their country and to accept the realities of the past, thus freeing themselves from the burden of denial and opening themselves to reconciliation and renewal of their own country.


My husband and I for the last 15 years or so have invited Turkish students and scholars into our home so that we could recognize each other as people and not as objects. Of course in the early days most of these Turks were deniers of the Armenian genocide—decent and good people, but not at all knowledgeable. But in more recent times, as they have learned and studied and opened their minds and hearts, they have become acknowledgers.


It is heartwarming to watch the transformation of open-minded Turks from deniers to acknowledgers as they study the wealth of evidence that has been accumulated by international scholars, initially Armenians, and now by numerous objective European and Turkish scholars.


In matter of fact, the most learned all of these Turkish scholars is Dr. Taner Akcam, who has accumulated much archival evidence from those Turkish archives which are open and with whom my husband worked a decade ago to gather the materials on the Turkish war crime trials.


The most recent books by Taner Akcam, published both in Turkish and in English, have convinced people of good faith, with archival evidence, that the Turkish government of that time did intend to commit a genocide against its Armenian Christian minority, as well as Greek and Syriac Christians. The wholesale slaughter of Armenians is what the American ambassador in the Ottoman Empire, Henry Morgenthau, called the “murder of a nation” and “racial extermination.”


Thus, I can happily report that most Armenians today have moved beyond hatred to objective analysis and realistic attempts to bridge the gap between Turks and Armenians, both in Turkey, in America and in Armenia. But this is not a fairytale world, and the goodness that we can imagine or desire is not always realistic. You have to deal with real people and with real situations. Still, progress is being made.


This past summer our family went on a trip to Anatolia, present-day Turkey, to visit sites where Armenians had lived for thousands of years and from which they were driven during the genocide. One of the people whom we met was the former Mayor of the old city of Diyarbakir, Abdullah Demirbas. Diyarbakir, which effectively is the capital of Turkish Kurdistan, was a city inhabited by Armenians from ancient times. Apparently, there are perhaps only a few hundred part-Armenians alive today, all titular Muslims, who are beginning to admit to and study the origins of their families.


Our small group met with Mayor Demirbas who spent almost an hour with us in a cavernous room inside of the vast walls of the city. He told us that he had built the first Armenian Genocide Monument in Turkey, and that he had the identification written in five languages, including Turkish and English, so that all could read and understand.


He said that he wanted to apologize for the horrible crimes committed by the Kurds against the Armenians, and he explained how he was dedicating his life to the rectification of this crime. It was he who led the way towards the major repairs on the local Armenian Church, Sourp Giragos, so that it could be used once more for worship.


Of course those interested in bringing the Armenian genocide to a proper closure welcome the declaration of Pope Francis, the European Parliament, and the German Reichstag, the German president and the German Chancellor, who have recently announced their recognition of the vast Armenian massacres as Genocide, joining other countries such as France. We also welcome remarks by the American Jewish Committee reaffirming the Armenian Genocide and urging the President to put the United States on record as acknowledging the Armenian killings as genocide.


We have been disappointed by President Erdogan of Turkey who has made nasty comments against the Pope and the European Parliament as well as the Armenians. But we applaud the hundreds if not thousands of Turks who commemorate, in Turkey, the Armenian Genocide and who seek reconciliation.


Too often the question to Armenians is why do you demand that people use the term “genocide?” Those who are neither Armenians nor Turks would do well to stress confession and recognition on the part of Turks and Turkey rather than pressuring the Armenians to betray the past. Yes, we have moved beyond hate, but we cannot abandon rationality. One can demand justice without hate. It’s done every day in America’s courts of law. Pressure should be put on the criminal and not the victim. We must not condone genocide by ignoring it.


And so, one hundred years after the Medz Yeghern, the “Great Crime” in Armenian, it is time to move beyond hate. But that can only be accomplished by an honest, truthful reckoning with the past—in Turkey most importantly—but throughout the world, as the reverberations of this “crime against humanity” — the Armenian Genocide — continues to impact us all.


Genocide is repeated over and over again because the perpetrators believe they will not be held accountable. That is the wrong lesson to teach the evil of this world.


Thursday, May 21, 2015

President Serzh Sarkisian Meets with German Chancellor Angela Merkel




RIGA — President of the Republic of Armenia Serzh Sarkisian had a meeting with Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel in Latvia on the sidelines of the summit of the European People’s Party. President Sarkisian is also attending the EU Eastern Partnership summit in Riga.


During the meeting the leaders discussed Armenian-German interstate relations and recent expension of cooperation with nearly sixty cooperation agreements. During the meeting President Sarkisian expressed gratitude to the German government for the continuous support provided to Armenia. Sarkisian and Merkel touched on Armenia-EU relations and their development perspectives. Reference was also made to the Armenian Genocide Centennial, and the commemoration events that took place on that occasion in Armenia and different countries of the world, including Germany. The interlocutors also exchanged ideas on the problems and challenges of the South Caucasus region, including the negotiation process aimed at the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.


UEFA President Michel Platini Visits Armenia




YEREVAN — UEFA President Michel Platini has arrived in Armenia for a one-day visit. The prominent footballer said he decided to stop in Armenia on his way to Bulgaria to meet with President of the Football Federation of Armenia Ruben Hayrapetyan.


“If I wasn’t reelected, I might not have been here. I’m very happy to be here today. On the way to Bulgaria, I decided to visit Armenia as well. I hadn’t seen my friend Ruben for a long time. I decided to come and visit him. We don’t have any specific plan since I see the representatives of the Federation very often at UEFA. It happens that I’m on a friendly visit to Armenia,” Platini stated during a briefing at the Football Academy in Avan District


Talking about the development of football in Armenia, the UEFA President particularly stated: “UEFA has an employee who often visits Armenia to help develop football. It’s great that UEFA helps football federations have beautiful fields, like the one we see today in Armenia, but it would be more preferable to see good players in training on these fields,” he said.


Michel Platini also visited the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin during his unofficial visit.


Armenian Foreign Minister to visit Syria




YEREVAN — Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian will visit Syria upon the instruction of Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamian to learn about the situation on the spot, Diaspora Minister Hranush Hakobian said at the Government sitting today.


“Unfortunately, the situation in Aleppo is endangered,” Hakobian said referring to the dyer situation in Aleppo and the measures the Diaspora organizations take to help the local Armenians, adding that a number of Christian districts have been targeted in the past months.


She said 200 people have arrived in Armenia from Aleppo in the recent period. “The major problem Syrian Armenians face here is housing, as most of them want to settle in capital Yerevan,” Hranush Hakobian said. She added, however, that the issue of rents has been solved with the support of the UN Office and benevolent organizations.


“In collaboration with the Ministry of Economy we are working to intensify the support for the organization of small and medium-sized businesses,” Hakobian said.


Robert Gurdiguian’s Armenian Genocide Film Screened at Cannes Film Festival




CANNES — French-Armenian director Robert Guediguian’s film “Don’t Tell Me the Boy Was Mad” was screened in the Special Screenings section at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival.


The ripple effects of the Armenian genocide on subsequent generations are felt in Guediguian’s drama set during the wave of militant attacks in Europe in the 1980s, according to The Holywood Reporter.


Robert GuédiguianCannes regular Robert Guediguian, the social-realist chronicler of working-class Marseille, reconnects with his paternal roots in Don’t Tell Me the Boy Was Mad, an impassioned but long-winded consideration of the Armenian genocide’s lasting impact on the displaced generations that followed. The film benefits from detailed historical background and an engrossing establishing section that seeds a sense of bitter injustice passed on from survivors to their descendants. But contrived plotting, unidimensional characters and lack of economy weigh down the drama.


The English-language title comes from the lyrics of a 1980 hit by French pop songstress France Gall (in French the title is “Une Histoire de Fou”). But the source material is an autobiographical novel by Spanish journalist Jose Antonio Gurriaran, who was semi-paralyzed in a bomb blast planned by militants from the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) in Madrid in 1981. During his recovery, he researched the Ottoman Empire’s extermination and removal of Armenians from their homeland during World War I, a crime against humanity still officially denied by Turkey. As a result, Gurriaran became an activist for international recognition of the Armenian genocide.


Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Artsakh President Meets with French Senators in Paris




PARIS — On 20 May Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakian visited the French Senate and met a group of Senators.


The President briefed the Senators on the state-building process in Artsakh, its domestic and foreign policy, the Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict settlement process, regional trends and responded to questions.


The President underlined that official Stepanakert attaches importance to the development of bilateral relations with France, a friendly country and one of the cradles of democracy, a country which became a second homeland for hundreds of thousands of Armenians, who escaped their historic land following the Armenian Genocide.


The President rated high the role of France in the Karabakh conflict settlement process and in maintaining peace and stability in the region.


Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Armenia to France Vigen Chitechian was present at the meeting.


Also on 20 May the President Sahakian visited the town of Sarcelles and met there with the town authorities headed by Mayor François Pupponi.


A cooperation agreement between the Sarcelles and Martakert towns was signed during the meeting.

President Sahakian stressed that cooperation with various French towns and cities was of special importance for Artsakh, considering it a significant opportunity for urban development in our republic and deepening the Karabakh-­France relationships.


Shots Fired at Syunik Governer Suren Khachatrian’s Car




GORIS (RFE/RL) — Law-enforcement authorities in Armenia said late on Wednesday that an unknown gunman opened fire on a car carrying Suren Khachatrian, the governor of the southeastern Syunik province notorious for violent conduct.


According to the Investigative Committee, Khachatrian, his driver and assistant came under fire on the road connecting the regional capital Kapan to Goris, the governor’s hometown also located in Syunik. “Nobody was hurt,” the committee said in a statement.


The statement added that Yerevan-based senior officers from the committee and the Armenian police rushed to the scene immediately after the reported shooting. “Necessary investigative measures are being taken to clarify all circumstances of the incident,” it said.


The statement also said that a criminal case has been opened under a Criminal Code clause dealing with murder attempts. No arrests were reported in the following hours.


Khachatrian is one of Armenia’s most controversial government officials because of a long history of violence involving himself and members of his family dominating the political and economic life of Syunik. The alleged shooting attack on his car came amid a lingering uproar sparked by the most recent violent incident linked with the family.


Khachatrian’s equally notorious son Tigran was questioned by the Investigative Committee at the weekend in connection with a May 2 brutal beating near Goris of two men by a larger group of local residents. The severely injured victims claim that the attackers were led by Tigran Khachatrian. The latter denies the allegations.


The May 2 incident rekindled allegations by opposition politicians, civic activists and media commentators that the Syunik governor continues to enjoy impunity because of his staunch loyalty to President Serzh Sarkisian. Accordingly, there have been renewed calls for his ouster.


Khachatrian was already sacked in June 2013 shortly after Tigran and one of his bodyguards shot and killed a Goris-based businessman just outside the Khachatrian family’s plush villa in the small town. The shooters were arrested but set free three months later. Suren Khachatrian was reappointed as Syunik governor a year later.


Post-WWI American Medical Philanthropy Highlighted at Library of Congress Armenian Lecture Series




Dr. Susan B. Harper Presents Research on Dr. Mabel Elliott


WASHINGTON, DC – For the 19th Library of Congress Vardanants Day Armenian Lecture Series, Dr. Susan B. Harper presented a lecture on “American Humanitarianism in the Armenian Crucible, 1915-1923.”


Formerly Senior Officer at The Pew Charitable Trusts and Executive Director of the Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion, and currently a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Dr. Harper reported on her findings about physician missionaries who as part of the overall Near East Relief effort traveled to Armenia and other countries to deliver medical aid in the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide.


Harper focused on the contributions of Dr. Mabel Elliott who tended to the medical needs of refugees in Armenia, Turkey and Greece, and who authored one of the compelling accounts of the era “Beginning Again at Ararat.”


Held on May 7, the lecture coincided with the opening day of events organized by the National Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide Centennial Committee and the Ecumenical Service held at the National Cathedral later that evening.


Dr. Harper previously participated in the conference organized in September, 2000 by the Armenian National Institute and the Library of Congress where she presented a paper on the missionary Mary Louise Graffam who witnessed the Armenian Genocide. Her and other presenters’ papers were published by Cambridge University Press in “America and the Armenian Genocide of 1915,” under the editorship of Dr. Jay Winter.


Introduced by Dr. Levon Avdoyan, Armenian and Georgian Area Specialist at the Library of Congress, Dr. Harper’s illustrated lecture was attended by an audience of over 200 who were joined by Librarian of Congress Dr. James Billington and his wife, and Dr. Vartan Gregorian, President of the Carnegie Corporation of New York and former President of the New York Public Library. In 2012, Dr. Gregorian delivered the opening lecture for the Library of Congress exhibition on the occasion of the 500th anniversary of Armenian printing titled “To Know Wisdom and Instruction: The Armenian Literary Tradition at the Library of Congress.”


Armenian Bar Association to Mark Silver Anniversary of Service to Diaspora and Homeland




BEVERLY HILLS — A star-spangled banner of activities at the Montage Hotel in Beverly Hills on June 12-14, 2015, will draw from deep within the veins of our common heritage to herald the Armenian Bar Association’s 25 years of unifying the colorful and distinct fabric of the Armenian nation.


As is its custom, the Armenian Bar will assemble to rededicate itself to the future of the Armenian people with a forward-looking vision which consolidates the redress of injustices with positive and creative expressions of identity and solidarity.


Armen K. Hovannisian, Chairman of the Armenian Bar Association, affirmed: “On the heels of the enormous momentum generated by the Armenian Genocide centennial commemorations, our wonderful members are amplifying that energy by unveiling a weekend full of fascinating educational programs, special awards presentations, a gala banquet, and even a round of golf to honor our late Chairman Emeritus. This is going to be one of those extraordinary events where those who attend will be extremely happy they did, and those who miss it will wish they had been there.”


RGH photoAmong the many highlights which will suit the pleasure and satisfaction of those who attend is a spectacular banquet slated for Saturday, June 13, 2015, at the Montage Hotel. Beginning with a roof-top reception amidst the soothing string harmonies of world-class instrumentalists, the evening’s main event will feature Professor Richard G. Hovannisian, a world-renowned scholar of Armenian history and Genocide education, who will be bestowed the Association’s highest honor, the Hrant Dink Freedom Award.


Following the conferment of the Hrant Dink Freedom Award, the Armenian Bar will present an award posthumously to the late attorney, Robert Kardashian, in recognition of the importance of those who champion the Constitutional rights to due process and equal protection under the law, even if in unpopular cases. “We are so pleased to be able to welcome the family of Robert Kardashian to accept the honor on his behalf and also to recognize their contribution to international recognition of the Armenian Genocide,” said gala banquet co-masters of ceremonies and Armenian Bar Board members Gerard V. Kassabian and Vanna Kitsinian.


With last month’s filing of a groundbreaking lawsuit in Turkey’s Constitutional Court by His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of The Great House of Cilicia, demanding the return of church property in the city of Sis (Kozan), the Armenian Bar Association has brought together a panel of experts in international law to discuss the timely issue of the quest for restorative justice. Moderated by the Armenian Bar’s Co Vice-Chair, Edvin Minassian, the panel will feature Professor Payam Akhavan (invitation pending), the lead attorney representing the Holy See of Cilicia; Karnig Kerkonian, a graduate of Harvard University and the University of Chicago School of Law who holds a post-doctoral diploma in international law from Cambridge University; Steve Dadaian, Assistant Chief Counsel of the California Department of Transportation who has extensively researched and participated in efforts to obtain reparations through his work with the Armenian National Committee of America and the Armenian Bar Association; and Seepan Parseghian of the Snell & Wilmer law firm who has worked at the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, which was established to prosecute persons responsible for the Rwandan genocide.


For those seeking the latest tips on effective litigation in the federal courts, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Zaven Sinanian has assembled an all-star panel of judges on the subject, including United States District Court Judges Andre Birotte, Jr., Larry Burns and Dickran Tevrizian (ret.), and United States District Court Magistrate Judge Jacqueline Chooljian. During a recent interview, Judge Sinanian stated “We are so fortunate to have a panel of such esteemed judges with the extensive breadth of experience and knowledge as our panelists. This panel will be unrivaled among continuing education panels.”


In addition to the outstanding educational programs and the gala banquet festivities, the Association has scheduled networking and recreational activities for members and guests to create new, and develop existing, relationships. The weekend will kick-off on Friday morning with a golf tournament at Rancho Park Golf Course in West Los Angeles, all of whose proceeds will be dedicated to the Vicken I. Simonian Scholarship Fund which was established last year in honor and memory of the Armenian Bar’s Chairman Emeritus.


Robert_Kardashian_Sr (1)Following the Friday golf tournament, guests of the Annual Meeting will gather in the evening at the chic and stylish Via Alloro in Beverly Hills for a warm welcome reception and an upbeat roundup, making it fun and easy to meet, mingle, and make merry.


“For more than 25 years now, the Armenian Bar Association has had as its fundamental purposes the creation of a dynamic commonwealth of legal professionals and law students, the protection of the rights of the Armenian people around the world, and the establishment of democratic institutions and the rule of law in Armenia. Our organizing committee has been hard at work putting together an outstanding Silver Anniversary meeting, altogether fitting for this momentous occasion,” said Armenian Bar Chairman Armen K. Hovannisian.


For more information about the Armenian Bar Association’s Annual National Meeting Weekend and to make plans to attend, please visit the Association’s website at www.armenianbar.com, write to armenianbar@armenianbar.com, or call (818) 645-2811.


Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Armenia’s Genealogy Qualifies for Eurovision Finals




VIENNA — Tonight in the first show of this year’s Eurovision Song Contest, broadcast live from the Wiener Stadthalle, 16 countries took part in the first Semi-final in order to qualify for the 10 places available in Saturday’s final. Armenia’s Genealogy group performing “Face The Shadow” has qualified to the finals along with: Albania, Russia, Romania, Hungary, Greece, Estonia, Georgia, Serbia, Belgium.


The result was determined by way of a 50/50 split between national expert juries and televoting. The combined scores created the final outcome. In yesterday’s Jury Final, the expert juries already determined their votes for the first Semi-Final by watching the live performances. Televoting took place tonight during the live show.


The Grand Final of the 2015 Eurovision Song Contest will take place on Saturday the 23rd of May.


Aivazovsky Painting to be Auctioned at Christie's




LONDON — The painting of Hovhannes Aivazovsky titled “American Shipping off the Rock of Gibraltar” will be the main lot of the Christie’s “Russian” auction to be held in London. The auction will take place on June 1.


Christie’s Russian Art sale on 1st of June will offer a selection of works by numerous highly sought-after artists including Ilya Mashkov, Niko Pirosmani, Nicholas Roerich and Ivan Aivazovsky. Session II will offer Russian Works of Art from the esteemed workshops of Fabergé, private and Imperial porcelain factories and renowned sculptors. This sale continues Christie’s distinctive focus on offering works from private sources (over 75%), many of which are appearing at auction for the first time in history.


Ivan Aivazovsky’s “American shipping off the Rock of Gibraltar” is one of the finest examples by Russia’s superlative maritime artist to ever appear at auction. Of museum quality, this work was painted in 1873 and sold for the first time at Christie’s in 2007, establishing a new world auction record for the artist at £2.7 million, which was maintained for five years. An artist who enjoyed the patronage of three successive Tsars, in this work Aivazovsky captures the dawn of the steam age, depicting an American ship crossing the waters of the Mediterranean (estimate: £2,000,000-2,500,000,).


Aivazovsky Self-portrait 1874

Aivazovsky Self-portrait 1874


Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky (29 July 1817 – 2 May 1900) was a Russian Empire Romantic painter. He is considered one of the greatest marine artists in history. Baptized as Hovhannes Aivazian, Aivazovsky was born into an Armenian family in the Black Sea port of Feodosia and was mostly based in his native Crimea.


Following his education at the Imperial Academy of Arts, Aivazovsky traveled to Europe and lived briefly in Italy in the early 1840s. He then returned to Russia and was appointed the main painter of the Russian Navy. Aivazovsky had close ties with the military and political elite of the Russian Empire and often attended military maneuvers. He was sponsored by the imperial family and was well-regarded during his lifetime. The winged word “worthy of Aivazovsky’s brush”, popularized by Anton Chekhov, was used in Russia for “describing something ineffably lovely.”


One of the most prominent Russian artists of his time, Aivazovsky was also popular outside Russia. He held numerous solo exhibitions in Europe and the United States. During his almost sixty-year career, he created around 6,000 paintings, making him one of the most prolific artists of his time. The vast majority of his works are seascapes, but he often depicted battle scenes, Armenian themes, and portraiture. Most of Aivazovsky’s works are kept in Russian, Ukrainian and Armenian museums as well as private collections.


Nagorno-Karabakh President Meets with French MPs




PARIS – The President of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR), Bako Sahakian, on Tuesday visited the National Assembly of France and met with a group of its members.


Bilateral relations were discussed during the meeting, and a special attention was paid to developing and expanding interparliamentary ties.


President Sahakian considered cooperation with the French National Assembly indispensible adding that there are promising prospects for its further expansion.


Paris-exhibit


As part of his working visit to France, President Sahakian on Tuesday visited an exhibition dedicated to the 1915 Armenian Genocide.


In his speech at the event, held at the Paris City Hall, the president highlighted the significance of the initiative, considering it an effective way of raising the world’s awareness of the Genocide issue and the importance of recognizing and condemning the universal crime against humanity. The president said he finds cultural events as that a unique kind of message aimed at preventing new crimes of genocide.


Samsun Agape Church in Turkey Attacked




SAMSUN (Agos) — An attack was carried out on the Samsun Agape Church by a man wielding a stick, who reportedly went on to insult church staff. However, the police did not bring charges against the attacker.


According to a SAT7 news report, on Saturday night, a man wielding a stick turned up at the Agape Church, rang the door bell, and then went on to insult church staff, also saying ‘You are making our children violate our religion’. When a staff member realized the individual was carrying a stick, the police was notified.


A police patrol that arrived at the scene did take the stick off the man, however they did not detain him. According to witness accounts, the attacker continued to wander around the church building for a while, and then tried to re-enter the church.


Speaking to SAT7, Samsun Agape Church Pastor Orhan Piçaklar said they had not filed a criminal complaint: “We are used to this kind of thing here, but what saddens me is the fact that the police did not detain the attacker, take him to the station and take a statement, tasks they are obliged to fulfill according to the Law of Misdemeanors. They could have at least taken him away from the Church and left him 500 meters away.”


Monday, May 18, 2015

Armenian Genocide Sculpture in Copenhagen Delayed




COPENHAGEN — A sculpture commemorating the centennial of the Armenian Genocide was supposed to have been unveiled in Copenhagen this coming weekend but resistance to the project has delayed its debut by months, the Local reports.


The busy Copenhagen square Kultorvet was scheduled to see the installation of a nine-metre high sculpture entitled ‘The Draem’ (Danish Remembrance Armenian Empathy Messenger) on May 23, but the fear of vandalism and even violence has delayed the sculpture’s debut until September, Politiken reported on May 18.


The sculpture was supposed to be placed in Kultorvet for ten days to mark 100 years since upwards of 1.5 million Armenians were killed by the Ottoman regime. The announcement of the project last month was met by an official protest from the Turkish Embassy in Copenhagen, which called the sculpture “morally indefensible”.


Fears that the sculpture could lead to violent resistance have led Armenia’s ambassador to Denmark to push its debut back to September. “As you know, ‘The Draem’ has, despite being designed as a marking of peace promotion, unleashed an anger that could possibly give rise to violence,” Ambassador Hrachya Aghajanian wrote to Copenhagen Deputy Mayor Carl Christian Ebbesen, according to Politiken.


Aghajaniyan told the newspaper that from an insurance standpoint, the project is now considered ‘high risk’ and meeting the requirements to properly insure the work have become more complicated than originally anticipated.


Ebbesen said he was disappointed by the delay.


“I am deeply offended as a politician and a member of the Danish People’s Party by the fact that one cannot express their opinions in Denmark. I think we should take that very seriously. We must not bow down,” he told Politiken.


Mexico Hosts Events Commemorating Armenian Genocide Centennial




MEXICO CITY — From May 14 through May 17, a range of large cultural events dedicated to the Armenian Genocide centennial were held in Mexico City, the Armenian Foreign Ministry press office reports.


World famous Nezahualcoyotl concert hall hosted the Armenian National Philharmonic Orchestra (ANPO) on May 14 in Mexico. The first ever appearance of the national orchestra before the Mexican public was the last stop of ANPO’s world Remembrance tour. Under the baton of Maestro Edward Topchian, the orchestra performed Aram Khachaturian’s Spartacus suite, Saint-Saens’ cello concerto and Tchaikovsky’s symphony No. 6.


Ambassador of Armenia to Mexico Grigor Hovhannissian, Ambassadors and members of the diplomatic corps accredited to Mexico, representatives of Mexican civil society and media attended the event.


Mexico-KhachaturianOn May 14, National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) hosted a compelling exhibition dedicated to the centennial of the Armenian Genocide depicting the journey of Armenian survivors of the Genocide, who reached the Mexican shores and founded a new life and a new homeland there.


On May 16 and 17, the Nezahualcoyotl Hall hosted another two concerts performed by the renowned Armenian-American pianist Dora Serviarian and the OFUNAM orchestra of the National Autonomous University – one of the world’s largest and oldest universities. A powerful performance of Aram Khachaturian’s legendary piano concerto was enthusiastically received by the music aficionados.


In the same week, the Embassy of Armenia to Mexico, in cooperation with the National Institute of Fine Arts, the National Music Conservatory and the National Cinematic Center, organized several viewings of Peter Rosen’s award-winning documentary (the Hollywood film festival) “Khachaturian”. During the two showings at the national Conservatory and the Cineteca Nacional music students, musicians and public received firsthand insights into the process behind the creation of the documentary from the co-producers – Aaron and Robert Kuhn as well as Serviarian.


These commemorative events were organized by the UNAM and the Embassy of Armenia to Mexico and were extensively covered by the local media.


Sunday, May 17, 2015

Rima Varzhapetyan Slams Bias Anti-­Armenian Articles Published in Israeli Periodicals




The Head of the Jewish Community of Armenia Rima Varzhapetyan­Feller wrote an open letter to the American Jewish Committee Executive Director David Harris related to the publishing hate speech articles by a number of the “analysts” in the Israeli periodicals against Armenia, the Armenian nation and her as the Leader of Jewish community in Armenia.


Dear Mr. Harris,


I am making this appeal to you in an open letter to draw your attention to the fact that during the recent months articles inciting and propagating hatred towards Armenia and the Armenian people, and to me, as the leader of the Jewish community of Armenia, are published regularly in Israeli newspapers by a number of so called analysts – Arye Gut, Alexander Murinson, Maxime Gauin (e.g. Baku to the future: Azerbaijan, not Armenia, is Israel’s true ally , Anti-Semitism in Armenia.)


Biographies of the aforementioned authors and the content of the articles prove that they try hard to set public opinion and, particularly, the Jews, against the Armenian people, casting shadow on the centuries-old friendship of the two peoples.


Especially worth mentioning is Arye Gut’s latest brainchild – an article built on overtly false facts and attempts of manipulation.


A former citizen of Azerbaijan (he is Jew, not an Azeri), Gut, whose Facebook account provides ample evidence of his attempts to ensure the approval of the Azerbaijani authorities, speculates and manipulates data, positioning himself as allegedly “impartial” analyst.


In this article Gut yet again endeavors to convince the readers of the existence of anti-Semitism in Armenia and Diaspora. It is worth mentioning that Gut, Murinson and Gauin have already written nearly a dozen of articles, trying to provide proof of supposedly numerous cases of anti-Semitism in Armenia. Nevertheless, the examples they cite are either false or distorted. No representative of any political force, political party or NGO in Armenia has ever uttered any anti-Semitic remarks.


Rights of the Jewish community have never been questioned here. The Armenian people always have respected the Jews and admired the rich history of our people. Since time immemorial the Jewish community of Armenia has found favourable environment for free existence and enrichment of their culture on this land of rich culture.


The evidence of the Jewish presence in Armenia is a medieval Jewish settlement and cemetery, both preserved due to Armenian government’s and people’s care for it.


Not only does Arye Gut ignore it all, but also dares to voice poignantly indecent expressions addressed to me and the Jewish community of Armenia which is nothing but an example of anti-Semitism in itself.


As Michael Chlenow, Vice-President of the World Jewish Congress, stressed during the recent Global Forum “Against the Crime of Genocide” held in Yerevan a couple of weeks ago, “Even if the Jewish community of Armenia is small, it is well-organized and proud, and through its activity contributes to both enrichment of the Jewish culture and strengthening of centuries-old friendship of the two peoples.”


Armenia has never denied the Holocaust. This year on the International Holocaust Remembrance Day President Serzh Sarkisian addressed the Jewish community in a statement. During his visit to the USA in May, the President of Armenia also visited the Holocaust Memorial Museum.


Armenia is the only country in the region where school curriculum includes direct reference to the Holocaust; moreover, according to various assessments, from the point of view of the awareness of the Holocaust, the Armenians are amongst the best-informed people in the world.


In his article Gut once again tries to use to his advantage the fact of cooperation between some representatives of the Armenian Diaspora and the Nazis during WWII. It is a historical fact that the Armenian legion did not take part in the combat operations and was stationed in the rear – mainly in France, Holland and Poland. The Nazi leadership never trusted the Armenian legion. On December 12, 1942 Hitler said that “…In spite of all declarations from Rosenberg and the military, I don’t trust the Armenians”. The members of the Armenian Legion never missed a chance to revolt against the Nazis and join the resistance groups. The Armenian POWs played important role in the liberation of South France, while another group of Armenian POWs revolted in Holland.


Most probably, Arye Gut is also aware that the Azerbaijani legion in the German Armed Forces was four times larger than the Armenian one. The Azerbaijani legion participated in a range of massacres of the Polish and the Jews (particularly, 40.000 people were annihilated during Volyn massacre). The former President of the Democratic Republic of Azerbaijan (1918-1920) Mamed Rasulzade, who nowadays is glorified in Azerbaijan, spared no effort to recruit the Azerbaijani prisoners of war to the ranks of the Nazi army.


As for the Armenians, they fought against the Nazis in the frontlines of the Red Army, as well as in Diaspora. More than half a million Armenians fought in WWII, and only half of them returned home. Armenian soldiers fought in all the bloody battles, liberating from the Nazi yoke numerous peoples, including Jews.


As if following a the long-standing tradition, Gut’s article ‘circulates’ the theses of Azerbaijani-Turkish anti-Armenian propaganda, i.e. the blatant denial of the Armenian Genocide and the repetition of the official Baku’s assessment of events in Khojaly in 1992. What is more, all this is by no means done in a professional manner. In reality, Mr. Gut would rather quote the then President of Azerbaijan Mutalibov on the events in Khojaly, who inadvertently exposed the masterminds and those who even today use these clichés for propaganda purposes.


I was raised in a Jewish family. From the very first days of war my father joined up and reached Berlin. He was given numerous military awards and decorations. Together with her parents and my elder brother, my mother was evacuated three times. My husband’s ancestors, Armenians, suffered the Genocide in the Ottoman Empire and a considerable part of the family was annihilated.


My family spares no effort to strengthen the friendly ties between Armenia and Israel. We wish peace and prosperity to the two countries, and, of course, all the people on Earth. Unfortunately, shameless liars and provocateurs like Mr. Gut accuse me of “complicity in Nazism, Fascism and anti-Semitism”.


They must have forgotten that people should think twice before they utter such remarks – one could be detained for that.


It is inconceivable that leading newspapers and journals publish rubbish, without thinking of their own reputation.


Dear Mr. Harris, your organization has always emphasized the importance of strengthening of tolerance between peoples and fight against hate speech.


Authors of articles, pointed out by me, try to manipulate the Jewish media and the Jewish community in their dirty and unacceptable propaganda stunts.


I am grateful to you and proud that for years I have been invited to participate in the American Jewish Committee Annual Forums, which always pay a great deal of attention to strengthening of tolerance and fight against inter-ethnic hatred.


I am full of hope that you will share my concern and together we will be able to exert joint efforts to resist such provocative behavior.


Sincerely,

Rimma Varzhapetyan-Feller,

President of the Jewish Community of Armenia


AMAA Addresses Turkish Leaders Requesting Intervention at Camp Armen near Istanbul




PARAMUS, NJ — In response to the recent news of the partial demolition of CAMP ARMEN in the Tuzla District near Istanbul, the Armenian Missionary Association of America (AMAA) has written to the President, Prime Minister and the United States Ambassador of the Republic of Turkey asking for their intervention and support.


During the partial demolition of the Camp in early May, a group of Armenians from Turkey, including some of the former students of the Youth Home of Istanbul, who grew up in Camp Armen, rushed to the site and are keeping guard day and night, thus halting further demolition of the Camp. Among those who went to the Camp was Rakel Dink, the widow of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink.


In the letters, Zaven Khanjian, Executive Director/CEO of the AMAA, asked that the Turkish leaders strongly consider an intervention and an immediate resolution to avoid further demolition of this historically significant and beloved Camp and to secure the return of the property to its rightful owners, the Armenian Evangelical Church of Gedik Pasa in Istanbul.


“We are imploring the help of the Turkish leaders in this matter,” said Mr. Khanjian. “Camp Armen was home to over 1,500 Armenian orphans who were gathered from the depths of Anatolia and was where Hrant and Rakel Dink met, grew up and were married. The Camp was a labor of love for the orphans and it became their ‘Atlantis’ civilization. It is an important part of a very meaningful chapter in our Armenian history, and one which we do not want to lose. We pray that God will grant us all a peaceful resolution of this legal struggle.”


The AMAA calls upon other Armenian churches and organizations to raise their voices and send similar letters and requests to the leaders of the Turkish government.


Former Miami Dolphins Kicker Garo Yepremian Dies at 70




MIAMI – Garo Yepremian, the former NFL kicker who helped the Miami Dolphins win consecutive NFL championships died of cancer on Friday at the age of 70.


Yepremian’s wife, Maritza, said he died at a hospital in Media, Pa. His illness was diagnosed in May 2014, she said.


Yepremian was born in Larnaca, Cyprus to Armenian parents. Yepremian and his brother Krikor, who attended Indiana University on a soccer scholarship, emigrated to the United States. Garo, who had earlier played professional soccer in London, was not eligible to play NCAA soccer. After watching some of a football game on television, he decided to pursue an NFL career. With Krikor acting as his agent, he earned a contract with the Detroit Lions becoming first “soccer-style” kicker in NFL.


garo-yepremian-3Yepremian played from 1966 to 1981, kicking for the Detroit Lions, the Miami Dolphins, the New Orleans Saints and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. In 1966, he kicked six field goals for the Lions in a game against the Minnesota Vikings, he won two Super Bowls with the Dolphins.


Yepremian’s most remembered moment came during Super Bowl VII in 1972. With Miami leading, 14-0, the Washington Redskins blocked a field goal attempt by Yepremian, who then picked up the ball and tried to throw it, but fumbled. Washington’s Mike Bass caught the ball and ran it 49 yards for a touchdown. The Dolphins went on to win, 14-7, at the L.A. Memorial Coliseum, but the play continued to haunt Yepremian for the rest of his life.


“Every airport you go to, people point to you and say, ‘Here’s the guy who screwed up in the Super Bowl,'” Yepremian said in a 2007 interview. “After a while it bothers you. If it was anybody else he would go crazy, but fortunately I’m a happy-go-lucky guy.”


Private funeral arrangements are pending. A viewing is planned Wednesday in Wynnewood, Pa.


Friday, May 15, 2015

Turkish Government Planning to Nationalize Tuzla Camp before Returning it to Armenian Community




ISTANBUL — The Turkish government is discussing ways to save the Armenian orphanage in Tuzla from demolition, said the head of the Foundations Department, adding nationalization is the best option, Daily Sabah reports.


The government is planning to nationalize the Armenian orphanage located in the Tuzla region of Istanbul to save it from demolition. The Kamp Armen orphanage will be nationalized before being handed over to the Armenian community. This way, the current owner of the property will not suffer from the transaction.


Foundations Department President Adnan Ertem, speaking to Sabah daily, said some were trying to cloud the issue and attack the government, arguing that everyone needs to understand that the government was doing everything it could.


The Armenian community is demanding for the return of the camp deed to the Church Foundation rather than expropriation and the allocation of the camp to the foundation, calling on the government to display its political will and return the camp to its rightful owner. But according to Ertem this was impossible without nationalization. The property has changed ownership several times, and the present owner needs to be fairly compensated before anything happens, “The only solution is for the state to nationalize and take over the property. After which we can discuss handing it over to the community.” Ertem said.


The state seized the orphanage in 1987 before selling it. It changed hands several times over the years and the last owner, having decided to demolish the structure, faced serious demonstrations and protests. Dozens of demonstrators are currently holding a sit-in to prevent the structure’s destruction.


In addition to the discussions over nationalization and the handing over of the deed to the Armenian foundation, the Tuzla Municipality is also expected to revoke the site’s demolition license.


Ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) Istanbul parliamentary candidate Markar Esayan is also involved in the discussions. Esayan said he knew Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu was involved in the matter, adding it is now impossible to demolish the structure. He accused the current owner of deceiving the municipality by arguing that the structure was close to collapsing, which is how he was able to obtain the demolition license. He said the Armenian foundation was also to blame for not filing the necessary legal claims for the building in time.


12 Dersim Armenians Baptized to Complete Return to their Identity




ISTANBUL (Agos daily) — Following a six-month course of church doctrine and basic knowledge of Christian belief, 12 more Dersim Armenians took their first step back to Christianity with a collective baptism ceremony. Two married couples also held religious engagement ceremonies following the baptism ceremony held on 9 May 2015, Saturday at the Yesilköy Surp Istepanos Church.


The efforts of forcibly Islamised Armenians to ‘return to their identity’ has accelerated in recent years. Such individuals display a desire to live and express their identity openly, which they are forced to conceal in their neighbourhood, at school and at their workplace, and to bring an end to the division of identities sometimes even experienced within the same family.


Dersim Armenians have thus organized collective baptism ceremonies at Armenian churches to officially rturn to their religion. Following a six-month course of church doctrine and basic knowledge of Christian belief, 12 more Dersim Armenians took their first step back to Christianity with a collective baptism ceremony. Two married couples also held religious engagement ceremonies following the baptism ceremony held on 9 May 2015, Saturday at the Yesilköy Surp Istepanos Church.


A new life

Led by Father Dirtad Uzunyan, the baptism ceremony was presided over by Archbishop Aram Atesyan. Nazar Binatli, Pakrat Estukyan, Bogos Çolak, Kamer Karatayli ve Hagop Altinkaya were the godfathers of the Dersimians who returned to Christianity and took the names Karin, Derev, Naira, Lia, Arev, Arsaluys, Kristin, Hovnan, Rupen, Hovannes Minas, Lusin Mane and Minas. The couples Bogos-Sirpuhi Çolak and Hovannes-Lusin Çolak consolidated their marriage ties by repeating their vows in the presence of the Church. Yervant Dink and Kamer Karatayli acted as groomsmen for the couple.


We spoke to some of the Dersim Armenians who were baptized on Saturday at the Surp Istepanos Church, and asked them about their feelings.


Arev: ‘We are returning to our roots’

‘I am now experiencing the freedom of being able to defend myself against those who insult us. Today, I am the happiest person in the world. For years, Armenians suffered the greatest insults at my workplace, and I could not speak back, fearing I would lose my job. From now on, I will wear my cross around my neck. We dreamed of this day since our childhood. We are returning to our roots.’


Hovannes Minas: ‘We began as three, we ended up as twelve’

‘This is a very happy day for me. I have been both baptized, and we held our religious marriage ceremony. It is an inexpressible happiness. We never forgot our religion. We can live freely now. I had made a promise to my mother and father to bury them in an Armenian cemetery, I was able to keep that promise as well. We were three of us when we decided to become baptized, and we achieved our purpose as 12. We are very happy.’


Hovnan: ‘I will wear the Patriarchate’s cross around my neck’

‘I am very excited. We all received a course to become Christians. It was a beautiful experience to meet Archbishop Aram Atesyan. The cross presented to us as a gift by the Patriarchate is very meaningful for me, I will wear it around my neck for the rest of my life. In the past, I could not defend myself on this issue, now I can. I feel much freer now, I can express my identity to everyone.’


Kristin: ‘I can now freely say I am a Christian’

‘I feel amazing. I have been waiting for this day for a long time. I no longer have to conceal my identity. I can now freely say I am a Christian. I felt, from time to time, both in the Armenian community and my circle of friends, that I was being excluded because I had not been baptized, but this emancipation will serve as a remedy.’


New Metallurgical Plant to Recycle Industrial Waste




YEREVAN (RFE/RL) — The Armenian government has given the green light to the construction of a new metallurgical plant which officials say will create more than 1,000 jobs and recycle industrial waste from other mining enterprises generating much of Armenia’s export revenue.


The privately owned facility is to extract ore from several “tailings” dumps in southeastern Syunik province that mainly belong to the Zangezur Copper and Molybdenum Combine (ZCMC), the country’s largest mining company.


The ZCMC’s principal shareholder, the German metals group Cronimet, signed last October a corresponding memorandum of understanding with the government and two other, little-known firms: VSEI Ventures Group and Alyotig. The latter is apparently based in Armenia, while VSEI might be connected with VS Energy International, a Dutch-registered holding company controlled by Russian and Ukrainian investors.


A government statement released on May 7 said Alyotig will be primarily in charge of the project envisaging the construction of a tailings-processing plant in Syunik that will cost $240 million. Some 1,000 permanent and 500 temporary jobs are to be created during the first phase of the project’s implementation, which will run through 2019.


“The project is quite good and we hope that [its first phase] will be fully implemented in the next two or three years,” Energy and Natural Resources Minister Yervand Zakharian told reporters on Wednesday. He said work on the recycling facility will start in the coming months.


Zakharian shed no light on the owners of the new mining operation or the source of their promised investments.


Government permission given to the project took the form of a special draft law that was approved by Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamian’s cabinet on May 7. It is not yet clear when the government plans to push the bill through the parliament.


Zakharian and other officials have argued that the new plant will not only create jobs and boost output in the Armenian mining industry but also stem the decades-long growth of tailings dumps and ponds in Syunik. Hazardous leaks through their protective dams and pipes leading to them have not been uncommon.


According to government estimates, the ZCMC’s tailings storage facilities alone have over 300 million tons of mining waste containing non-ferrous metals.


Mining and metallurgy is a key manufacturing sector of Armenia’s economy, employing more than 10,000 people and accounting for nearly half of Armenian exports, which totaled just over $1.5 billion in 2014.


The mining industry received a major boost in December with the inauguration of an ore-processing plant in the Teghut forest in the northern Lori province. The factory reportedly employing 1,300 people was built as part of a $380 million project to mine copper and molybdenum, which has been fiercely resisted by Armenian environment protection groups. Open-pit mining at Teghut will lead to the destruction of 357 hectares of rich forest.


Earlier in December, the government gave its final approval to a British company seeking to develop untapped gold reserves in the southeastern Vayots Dzor province. The company, Lydian International, plans to invest over $300 million in the Amulsar operation.


Video: We are Our Mountains by Genealogy




Genealogy group, Armenia’s representative at Eurovision Song Contest 2015, has presented a special song as a gift for their fans and all the Armenians around the world.


The song titled “Menq enq mer Sarery” (We are Our Mountains) is about Armenian spirit, nation and unity of Armenians.


Armenian ‘Rapid Reaction’ Troops Join Drills In Central Asia




YEREVAN — An Armenian army unit was flown to Tajikistan on Thursday to take part in exercises that will be held there by a rapid reaction force of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).


The CSTO secretariat in Moscow announced that the exercises will take place near Tajikistan’s border with Afghanistan and involve 2,500 soldiers from all six CSTO member states making up the alliance’s Collective Operational Reaction Forces (CORF). In a statement, it said they will be backed by 200 tanks and armored vehicles as well as 20 warplanes and helicopters.


The participating troops reportedly include about 500 paratroopers from Russia.


The CSTO statement did not specify whether the drills are directly connected with security threats to Tajikistan emanating from Afghanistan. It said only that they follow a “sudden examination” of the CORF’s combat readiness.


The Armenian Defense Ministry reported that as part of that examination an Armenian contingent of the rapid reaction force was put on high alert on Wednesday. An Armenian military transport plane flew it to the Central Asian republic the following day.


A ministry statement did not disclose the number of Armenian soldiers that will join the drills.


The CORF was set up by Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan at Moscow’s initiative in 2009. The Russian side pledged at the time to supply the NATO-style force with modern weapons.