Lachin Residents Are In A Panic

LACHIN RESIDENTS ARE IN A PANIC

28 September, 2006

Today Armen Eghyan, Gevorg Mirzoyan and Gagik Petrosyan, members of the
initiating group «Protection of the Occupied Territories», announced
that Hamlet Khachatryan, head of the Kashatagh administration hinders
the resettlement of the territories and must resign from his post.

«It turns out that this high-rank official is used to bribe taking and
hasn’t got the slightest notion of his post. He realises neither its
meaning nor its military significance», claims Armen Eghyan and adds,
«He treats the local residents as criminals caught red-handed. He
demands bribes from all the citizens who turn to him with any request.
And in case any of the citizens dares to complain of Mr. Mirzoyan, he
merely advises them to leave Kashatagh».

Jirayr Sefilyan, commander of special regiment of Shoushi, and a member
of the above-mentioned group, informed the participants of today’s press
conference about the current state of Kashatagh. He claims that the
number of inhabitants has significantly decreased in the past two years
reaching 7.5 thousand.

52 villages of Katashagh are deprived of electricity and water. The
roads are in an awful state. The villages counter certain problems
connected with education, health care and realization of agricultural
goods. Recently, the authorities of Katashagh have fined a 12-year-old
girl for picking up wood to heat their hearth.

Mr.Sefilyan maintains that administrative obstacles and fining bodies
have greatly increased in Kashatagh. As a result of this, residents
began to abandon the territory and the villages became deserted. All is
done on purpose, claim the members of the group.

;ii d=41408

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.a1plus.am/en/?page=issue&amp

ANCA WR: Speier-Poochigian Arm. Genocide Recovery Law Enacted in CA

Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region
104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200
Glendale, California 91206
Phone: 818.500.1918 Fax: 818.246.7353
[email protected]

PRESS RELEASE
Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Contact: Lerna Kayserian
Tel: (818) 500-1918

Speier-Poochigian Armenian Genocide Recovery Law Enacted in California

SACRAMENTO, CA — The Armenian National Committee of America – Western
Region (ANCA-WR) welcomed the signing of "Armenian Genocide Bank and Looted
Assets Recovery Act", SB 1524. The new law, co-authored by Senator Jackie
Kanchelian Speier (D-San Mateo) and Senator Charles ‘Chuck’ Poochigian,
allow victims and heirs recovery – through Californiia Courts – of assets
looted by banks and financial institutions p;operating in the Ottoman
Empire and Turkey during the Armenian Genocide which have been wrongfully
withheld since the Genocide.

The legislation, signed into law this week by Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger, was a key priority for Senator Speier in 2006. The
governor’s signing was made possible, in large part, due to her great
efforts working with the State Senate and Assembly leadership to shepherd
the bill through the legislature along with Senator Poochigian.

"I authored this legislation on behalf of the 900,000 Armenian Americans
living in our state. As a result of the Armenian Genocide, thousands of
Armenian orphans and survivors were robbed of their country, their
families, their ancestral homes, as well as personal property and other
assets, including bank deposits," said Speier. "The time has come to return
these deposits to their rightful owners."

The ANCA-WR sponsored and testified in favor of the bill when it was first
introduced and had closely followed its progression through both houses and
onto the governor’s desk.

"We anticipate the new law will encourage banks doing business in Ottoman
Turkey during the Armenian Genocide to do the right thing and return those
assets," noted ANCA-WR Chairman, Steven Dadaian, who testified in support
of SB 1524 before the legislature when it was considered by the State
Senate Judiciary Committee.

"We hope that recent lawsuits filed on behalf of Armenian American Genocide
heirs will reach a just resolution for the return of those assets and we
applaud all members of our legislature and the Governor for taking this
important precedent setting step to stand up for justice once again," said
Dadaian.

www.anca.org

Amsterdam: Turkish politicians trapped

Turkish politicians trapped
By FRANS BOSMAN and ANNA RIJKSBARON

Het Parool (Dutch national newspaper)
28-09-2006, 11:56

AMSTERDAM – Almost all Amsterdam politicians of Turkish descent refuse to
recognize the genocide that Turkey committed against the Armenians in 1915.

Therefore, half of the councilors that this newspaper approached have no
understanding for CDA (Christian Democratic Appeal) and PvdA’s (Dutch Labor
Party) decision to withdraw members from the national elections’ draftlist,
because they refuse to recognize the genocide.

Most claim to know too little about the issue to give an opinion and ask for
"more research." Others admit that terrible things happened, in which
hundreds of thousands of people perished, but they do not want to call it a
genocide.

Except for one, most did not let this newspaper know what they were really
thinking. The one who did let us know said that he would be honored if the
PvdA should request a recognition of the genocide. A few were simply afraid
to voice their views. One took back his comments later.

The Turkish politicians struggle with double loyality. If they recognize the
genocide, they will betray their supporters. If they keep the views of their
homeland, they will get in trouble with their parties.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

NRC: Genocide is genocide

Genocide is genocide

NRC Handelsblad (Dutch national newspaper)
28 september 2006

The CDA (Christian Democratic Appeal) and the PvdA (Dutch Labor Party) were
not aware of what it meant to put Dutch Turkish candidates on their
draftlist who deny the genocide committed against roughly one million
Armenians. The Armenian Genocide of 1915 and the late nineteenth century
seems like an old, forgotten issue, but it is not. The massacre is part of
the traumatic past of the Armenians around the world, inclucing those in the
Netherlands. In Turkey, people have no understanding for this. In Turkey,
people are still persecuted for writing texts or commenting on the Armenian
genocide, among them writers Orhan Pamuk and recently Elif Shafak.
Fortunately, Pamuk and Shafak were not convicted.

If Dutch politicians affiliated with the larger parties would begin to doubt
the genocide, they would in essence support the reactionary powers at play
in Turkey. Dutch Turkish politicians should choose who they want to be loyal
to: to Turkey or to their Dutch parties. They cannot deny the Armenian
Genocide in a Turkish newspaper after they have joined their Dutch parties’
recognition. Moreover, the European Parliament wrongfully scrapped the
Armenian genocide from the list of preconditions for Turkey’s accession to
the EU.

Research is no longer needed for the massacre of the Turkish government
against the dissenting Armenians in 1915 and late nineteenth century, which
was the result, among others, of Armenians’ loyalty to Turkey’s enemies
during World War I. An abundance of documents, as well as research and
family stories by Armenians themselves, clearly show that the massacre
indeed took place and that in those days more than a million people
perished. Barely anyone returned and the houses remained empty. There are
photographs of mass executions of Armenians. People can twist around the
exact numbers of murdered and how it happened, but it is still genocide.

According to the law, everyone has the right to his or her personal opinion,
even if it goes against the facts. In the free debate in liberal society,
the truth will catch up with the lie. The ChristenUnie’s (Christian Union)
bill, which calls for the penalization of genocide denial, therefore, has a
reverse effect. If the Netherlands adopts this law, it will fall in the same
trap as Turkey, which penalizes anyone who offends Turkish identity.
Publicly, we should be able to unmask mistakes, and this even applies to the
murder of six million Jews. By penalizing denial, as is now the case,
deniers are given credibility, when there is enough evidence to prove them
wrong.

Political parties are free to put candidates on their list who deny the
Armenian Genocide. However, it is morally objectional, because by brushing
aside the hard facts, deniers offend a minority. While it might be true that
parties would arguably receive a significant amount of votes from Dutch
Turks, it should not be a reason to put them on the list. The PvdA and the
CDA have therefore done well to withdraw the candidates who deny the
Armenian Genocide.

Eastern Prelacy: Crossroads E-Newsletter – 09/28/2006

PRESS RELEASE
Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
138 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-689-7810
Fax: 212-689-7168
e-mail: [email protected]
Website:
Contact: Iris Papazian

September 28, 2006

NEW OFFICE OF ST. NERSES THE GREAT CHARITABLE ORGANIZATION
IS DEDICATED TO ARCHBISHOP MESROB ASHJIAN
On the evening of September 19, under the auspices of the Prelate
Archbishop Oshagan, the new Yerevan office of the Prelacy’s St. Nerses the
Great Charitable and Social Organization was officially inaugurated and
dedicated. The new building will henceforth be known as "The Archbishop
Mesrob Ashjian Center." The office was named in honor of the late Archbishop
Mesrob, who as Prelate of the Eastern Prelacy, first organized the St.
Nerses organization and its program of social work in Armenia and Artsakh.
Archbishop Oshagan and a number of invited dignitaries attended the
dedication and the reception that followed. To see photos of this event
click

EPISC OPAL CONSECRATION OF BISHOP ANOUSHAVAN
WILL BE CELEBRATED THIS SUNDAY
A large number of the faithful have responded and will be attending the
celebration this Sunday, in honor of the recent Episcopal consecration of
Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian. The community-wide banquet, under the auspices
of Archbishop Oshagan, will take place this Sunday, October 1 at 3 pm at the
Terrace on the Park in Flushing Meadows, New York. In the morning, Bishop
Anoushavan will celebrate the Divine Liturgy at St. Sarkis Church,
Douglaston, New York, a parish he served for more than a decade. Bishop
Anoushavan’s elevation and consecration took place on June 4, in ceremonies
officiated by Catholicos Aram I in the Cathedral of St. Gregory the
Illuminator in Antelias, Lebanon.

SENIOR CITIZENS OF ST. ILLUMINATOR’S CATHEDRAL
WILL RESUME MEETING ON OCTOBER 3
The Senior Citizens of St. Illuminator’s Cathedral of New York will
resume their weekly get-togethers this Tuesday, October 3, and every Tuesday
thereafter from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 pm in John Pashalian Hall. Seniors enjoy
an afternoon of fellowship, music, bingo, movies, and lunch. For information
212-689-5880.

NEW SERIES OF BIBLE STUDY AT PRELACY
An eight-session course on the "Letter to the Hebrews" will start this
Monday, October 2, at the Prelacy from 7:15 pm to 8:45 pm, and will continue
on the first and third Mondays of the month. Sponsored by the Armenian
Religious Education Council (AREC), the course will be conducted by Dn.
Shant Kazanjian, director of AREC.
The Letter to the Hebrews is a profound homily, a "word of exhortation"
(Hebrews 13:22). One of the main themes of the Letter is that the old
covenant has been superseded through the sacrificial death of Christ. And
for that reason, studying the Letter to the Hebrews gives a solid biblical
understanding of the "Soorp Badarak" (Holy Sacrifice) that we celebrate on
Sundays.
For registration and information, please call 212-689-7810 or e-mail at
[email protected].

CHILDREN’S CONCERT ON NOVEMBER 18
WILL CELEBRATE THE "COLORS OF FALL"
With the extraordinary success of the Prelacy’s Children’s Concert two
years ago, another concert for children will take place on Saturday
afternoon, November 18, at Florence Gould Hall, at the Alliance Francaise in
New York City, featuring the talented and popular TALINE AND FRIENDS, from
California.
The theme of the concert will be "Fall Colors" (Ashnan Kouyner). Tickets
are $20 each and can be purchased by contacting the Prelacy office,
212-689-7810, Ext. 26.

MIDWEST DATEV PROGRAM NOVEMBER 10-12
The popular summer Datev program goes on the road again with a weekend
program scheduled in the Midwest, November 10 to 12, at the Colombiere
Retreat and Conference Center, Clarkston, Michigan.
The program will include interactive presentations and instructions on
faith-related topics, discussions of religious and current issues, Bible
studies, short worship services, fellowship and recreational activities.
Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian and Deacon Shant Kazanjian will be the
instructors and facilitators.
For information and registration click

"UNITED NATIONS MUST RECAPTURE ITS ESSENTIAL MISSION,"
SAYS CATHOLICOS ARAM I
His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, has
welcomed the removal of the air and sea blockade of Lebanon that had been
imposed by Israel. He praised the efforts of the Secretary General of the
UN, and said that in the past the unilateral decisions of some states were
directed towards discrediting the role of the United Nations as a model for
governance expressed by the general will. "The removal of the blockade
responds to the will of the Lebanese people to rebuild their economy not
only through aid, but primarily through their own entrepreneurship." His
Holiness went on to say that "it also shows the commitment of many sovereign
states to the democratic values that place the will of the people at the
center of any viable strategy for peace. His Holiness described the UN as a
"concrete model of multilateralism" and he stressed the need of
strengthening the UN by making it more active, effective and credible."

V. REV. FR. SHAHE PANOSSIAN BEGINS SERVICE AS DEAN OF SEMINARY
V. Rev. Fr. Shahe Panossian, who was recently appointed to serve as the
Dean of the Cilician See’s Armenian Theological Seminary, has begun his
tenure leadership of the Seminary. Hayr Shahe has previously served as
director of the Birds Nest Orphanage, as well as in the dioceses of Greece,
the United States and Canada. Most recently he was the pastor of Sts.
Vartanantz Church in Ridgefield, New Jersey.

PRESIDENT CHIRAC OF FRANCE WILL VISIT ARMENIA
Jacques Chirac, President of France, will pay an official visit to
Armenia starting tomorrow through Sunday, October 1. President Chirac is the
first leader of a major western power to officially visit Armenia since
independence. Accompanying him will be the international-acclaimed French
Armenian entertainer Charles Aznavour, fresh from a triumphant two-day
concert engagement in New York’s Radio City Music Hall. The visit will
inaugurate France’s "Year of Armenia."

ST. GEORGE THE COMMANDER AND HOLY CROSS OF VARAG
This weekend the Armenian Church commemorates St. George (Kevork) and
the feast of the Holy Cross of Varag.
On Saturday (September 30) we remember St. George the Commander.
Although we do not have extant information about him, St. George remains a
popular hero among all Christian people. He is considered to be the patron
saint of soldiers and boy scouts. As in so many other instances, the
Armenians have given St. George an Armenian national character. The name
George (Kevork) became popular beginning in the 5th century. There are many
large churches named in his honor. Perhaps the one best known to us here at
the Eastern Prelacy is Sourp Kevork of Moughni, the monastery in Armenia
that the late Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian adopted and restored with the help
of his generous friends in the United States and Canada. The monastery was
founded in the 13th century by the brotherhood of Hovhannavank, bringing
with them the relics of St. George, a third century Roman general who defied
the policy of persecuting Christians and urged others to follow his example.
It was at this monastery that Simeon the Elder produced a beautifully
decorated Gospel in 1280 that is known as the Moughni Gospel. Each year on
this day the Gospel is brought from the Matenadaran (Manuscript Museum) in
Yerevan to Moughni for a special service. The entire Moughni complex stands
today in tribute of our ancestors and as a living testimony to the
dedication and patronage of the Archbishop Mesrob.
On Sunday, October 1, the church observes the Holy Cross of Varag, a
feast unique to the Armenian Church. The Hripsimiantz Virgins, after coming
to Armenia, lived near Mount Varag. Hripsime always carried a small wooden
cross believed to be made from a piece of the true cross. One day, in order
to escape persecution, she found refuge on the mountain where she hid the
cross among the rocks before fleeing to Vagharshapat. According to
tradition, in the year 653, a hermit named Todik found the hidden cross. He
followed a brilliant light that illuminated the mountain that guided him
inside the church to the altar where he found a fragment of the cross. The
guiding light shone for twelve days. In memory of this event, Nerses
Catholicos established the Feast of the Cross of Varag. He is also the
author of the beautiful hymn, "By the Sign of Your All Powerful Holy Cross,"
(Nshanav Amenahaght Khatchivt)
Mount Varag is located in the southeastern region of Van in historic
Armenia. There, in honor of the Cross, the monastery of Saint Nishan was
built on the site where Hripsime hid her cross. It was a very popular
destination for pilgrims. In recent years some fortunate people have been
able to make this pilgrimage during visits to the area. It is a moving
experience regardless of the fact (or perhaps because of it) that the once
thriving monastery today is in ruins. A small stone retrieved from the
rubble sits on our desk as a constant reminder of the faith of our
ancestors.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

September 28-4th Annual Golf Outing hosted by Sts. Vartanantz Church,
Ridgefield, New Jersey. Bergen Hills Country Club, River Vale, New Jersey.
For reservations and/or information: 201-943-2950.

October 1-Banquet honoring Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian on the occasion of
his recent elevation, at Terrace on the Park, Flushing Meadows, New York, 3
pm.

October 2-New eight-session Bible study on the "Letter to the Hebrews"
begins at the Prelacy, 7:15 pm to 8:45 pm, first and third Mondays of the
month, sponsored by AREC. Conducted by Dn. Shant Kazanjian. For information:
212-689-7810.

October 8-81st anniversary celebration of St. Stephen Church, New Britain,
Connecticut.

October 19-22-Annual bazaar, Soorp Khatch Church, Bethesda, Maryland.

October 22-Holy Cross Church, Troy, NY, anniversary celebration.

November 3-4-51st Annual Bazaar of St. Stephen’s Church, Watertown,
Massachusetts, with special program for children on Saturday afternoon. For
information 617-924-7562.

November 3-4- Ladies Guild Food Festival, St. Gregory the Illuminator
Church, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

November 3, 4, 5-Sts. Vartanantz Church, Ridgefield, New Jersey, Annual
Bazaar and Food Festival. For information 201-943-2950.

November 5-Annual bazaar, St. Stephen Church, New Britain, Connecticut.

November 5-36th Anniversary Luncheon and program, St. Gregory Armenian
Church of Merrimack Valley, North Andover, Massachusetts.

November 10-12-Mini Datev program for teens, ages 13 to 18. At Colombiere
Retreat Conference Center in Clarkston, Michigan.

November 11-42nd Anniversary of Soorp Khatch Church, Bethesda, Maryland, in
the church hall.

November 11-12-Sts. Vartanantz Church, Providence, annual "Armenian Fest" at
Rhodes-on-the-Pawtuxet, Cranston, Rhode Island.

November 17 & 18-Annual Bazaar, Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church,
Worcester, Massachusetts.

November 18-Children’s Concert, "FALL COLORS", sponsored by the Eastern
Prelacy at Florence Gould Hall, Alliance Francaise, New York City, featuring
TALINE AND FRIENDS. Details will follow.

November 26-St. Gregory the Illuminator Church, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
First Episcopal Badarak in Philadelphia by Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian.

December 9-Men’s Club Steak Dinner, St. Gregory the Illuminator Church,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

December 24-Sunday School Christmas Pageant, St. Gregory the Illuminator
Church, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Visit our website at

http://www.armenianprelacy.org
http://www.armenianprelacy.org/092806a.htm.
http://www.armenianprelacy.org/MidwestDatev06.pdf
www.armenianprelacy.org

The Left and the Jihad

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The Left and the Jihad

Fred Halliday
8 – 9 – 2006

The left was once the principal enemy of radical Islamism. So how did
old enemies become new friends? Fred Halliday reports.

The approaching fifth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the United
States highlights an issue much in evidence in the world today, but
one that receives too little historically-informed and critical
analysis: the relationship between militant Islamic groups and the
left.

It is evident that the attacks, and others before and since on US and
allied forces around the world, have won the Islamist groups
responsible considerable sympathy far beyond the Muslim world,
including among those vehemently opposed from a variety of ideological
perspectives to the principal manifestations of its power. It is
striking, however, that – beyond such often visceral reactions – there
are signs of a far more developed and politically articulated
accommodation in many parts of the world between Islamism as a
political force and many groups of the left.

The latter show every indication of appearing to see some combination
of al-Qaida, the Muslim Brotherhood, Hizbollah, Hamas, and (not least)
Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as exemplifying a new form of
international anti-imperialism that matches – even completes – their
own historic project. This putative combined movement may be in the
eyes of such leftist groups and intellectual trends hampered by "false
consciousness", but this does not compromise the impulse to
"objectively" support or at least indulge them.

The trend is unmistakable. Thus the Venezuelan leader Hugo Chávez
flies to Tehran to embrace the Iranian president. London’s mayor Ken
Livingstone, and the vocal Respect party member of the British
parliament George Galloway, welcome the visit to the city of the
Egyptian cleric (and Muslim Brotherhood figurehead) Yusuf
al-Qaradawi. Many in the sectarian leftist factions (and beyond) who
marched against the impending Iraq war showed no qualms about their
alignment with radical Muslim organisations, one that has since
spiralled from a tactical cooperation to something far more
elaborated. It is fascinating to see in the publications of leftist
groups and commentators, for example, how history is being rewritten
and the language of political argument adjusted to (as it were)
accommodate this new accommodation.

The most recent manifestation of this trend arrived during the Lebanon
war of July-August 2006. The Basque country militant I witnessed who
waved a yellow Hizbollah flag at the head of a protest march is only
the tip of a much broader phenomenon. The London demonstrators against
the war saw the flourishing of many banners announcing "we are all
Hizbollah now", and the coverage of the movement in the leftwing press
was notable for its uncritical tone.

All of this is – at least to those with historical awareness,
sceptical political intelligence, or merely a long memory –
disturbing. This is because its effect is to reinforce one of the most
pernicious and inaccurate of all political claims, and one made not by
the left but by the imperialist right. It is also one that underlies
the US-declared "war on terror" and the policies that have resulted
from 9/11: namely, that Islamism is a movement aimed against "the
west".

This claim is a classic example of how a half-truth can be more
dangerous than an outright lie. For while it is true that Islamism in
its diverse political and violent guises is indeed opposed to the US,
to remain there omits a deeper, crucial point: that, long before the
Muslim Brotherhood, the jihadis and other Islamic militants were
attacking "imperialism", they were attacking and killing the left –
and acting across Asia and Africa as the accomplices of the west.

A tortured history

The modern relationship of the left to militant Islamism dates to the
immediate aftermath of the Bolshevik revolution. At that time, the
Soviet leadership was promoting an "anti-imperialist" movement in Asia
against the British, French and Dutch colonial empires, and did indeed
see militant Muslims as at least tactical allies. For example, at the
second congress of the Comintern in 1920, the Soviets showed great
interest towards the Islamist group led by Tan Malaka in Indonesia;
following the meeting, many delegates decamped to the Azeri capital of
Baku for a "Congress of the Peoples of the East". This event, held in
an ornate opera house, became famous for its fiery appeals to the
oppressed masses of Asia and included calls by Bolshevik leaders, many
of them either Armenian or Jewish, for a jihad against the British.

A silent-film clip recently discovered by the Iranian historian Touraj
Atabaki shows the speakers excitedly appealing to the audience who
then proceed to leap up and fire their guns into the air, forcing the
speakers on the platform to run for cover. One of those who attended
the Baku conference was the American writer John Reed, author of the
classic account of the Bolshevik revolution Ten Days That Shook the
World. (On his return journey from Azerbaijan he was to die after
catching typhoid from a melon he bought on the way.)

For decades afterwards, the Soviet position on Islam was that it was,
if not inherently progressive, then at least capable of socialist
interpretation. On visits in the 1980s to the then two communist
Muslim states – the now equally-forgotten "Democratic Republic of
Afghanistan" and the "People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen" – I was
able to study the way in which secondary school textbooks, taught by
lay teachers not clerics, treated Islam as a form of early socialism.

A verse in the Qur’an stating that "water, grass and fire are common
among the people" was interpreted as an early, nomadic, form of
collective means of production; while Muslim concepts of ijma’
(consensus), zakat (charitable donation), and ‘adala (justice) were
interpreted in line with the dictates of the "non-capitalist"
road. Jihad was obviously a form of anti-imperialist struggle. A
similar alignment of Islamic tradition and modern state socialism
operated in the six Muslim republics of the Soviet Union.

Such forms of affinity were in the latter part of the 20th century
succeeded by a far clearer alignment of Islamist groups: against
communism, socialism, liberalism and all that they stood for, not
least with regard to the rights of women. In essence, Islamism – the
organised political trend, owing its modern origin to the founding of
the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt in 1928, that seeks to solve modern
political problems by reference to Muslim texts – saw socialism in all
its forms as another head of the western secular hydra; it had to be
fought all the more bitterly because it had such a following in the
Arab world, in Iran and in other Muslim countries.

In a similar way to other opponents of the left (notably the European
fascist movements), Islamists learned and borrowed much from their
secular rivals: styles of anti-imperialist rhetoric, systems of social
reform, the organisation of the centralised party (a striking example
of which is Hizbollah in Lebanon, a Shi’a copy in nationalist,
organisational and military form of the Vietnamese Communist
Party). This process has continued in the modern critique of
globalisation and "cultural imperialism".

The ferocious denunciations of "liberalism" by Ayatollah Khomeini and
his followers are a straight crib from the Stalinist handbook. Osama
bin Laden’s messages, albeit clad in Qur’anic and Arabic poetic garb,
contain a straightforward, contemporary, radical political messages:
our lands are occupied by imperialism, our rulers betray our
interests, the west is robbing our resources, we are the victim of
double standards.

The hostility of Islamism to leftwing movements, and the use of
Islamists in the cold war to fight communism and the left, deserve
careful study. A precedent was the Spanish civil war, when Francisco
Franco recruited tens of thousands of Moroccan mercenaries to fight
the Spanish republic, on the grounds that Catholicism and Islam had a
shared enemy in communism. After 1945, this tendency became more
widespread. In Egypt, up to the revolution of 1952, the communist and
Islamist movements were in often violent conflict. In the 1960s, Saudi
Arabia’s desire to oppose Nasser’s Egypt and Soviet influence in the
middle east led it to promote the World Islamic League as an
anti-socialist alliance, funded by Riyadh and backed by
Washington. King Feisal of Saudi Arabia was often quoted as seeing
communism as part of a global Jewish conspiracy and calling on his
followers to oppose it. In Morocco, the leader of the socialist party,
Oman bin Jalloun, was assassinated in 1975 by an Islamist militant.

A canvas of conflict

There are further striking cases of this backing of Islamism against
the left: Turkey, Israel/Palestine, Egypt, and Algeria among them.

In Turkey in the 1970s, an unstable government beset by challenges
from armed leftwing groups encouraged both the forces of the
nationalist right (the "Grey Wolves") and Islamists, and indulged the
assassination of leftwing intellectuals. In Palestine, the Israeli
authorities, concerned to counter the influence of al-Fatah in the
West Bank in the late 1970s, granted permission for educational,
charitable and other organisations (linked in large part to the Muslim
Brotherhood) in ways that helped nurtured the emergence of Hamas in
1987; Israeli thus did not create Hamas, but it did facilitate its
early growth. In Algeria too, factions within the ruling
national-liberation movement (FLN) were in league with the underground
Islamist group, the National Salvation Front; its French initials,
FIS, gave rise to the observation that the FIS are le fils ("the son")
of the FLN.

In Egypt, from the death of Nasser in 1970 onwards, the regimes of
Anwar Sadat and Hosni Mubarak actively encouraged the Islamisation of
society, in part against armed Islamist groups, but also to counter
the influence of the socialist left. This was a project in which many
formerly secular Egyptian intellectuals colluded, in an often
theatrical embrace of Islam, tradition and cultural nationalism.

The trend culminated in the 1990s with a campaign to silence left and
independent liberal voices: the writer Farag Fouda, who had called for
the modernisation of Islam, was assassinated in 1992; Naguib Mahfouz,
the Nobel prize-winning author, was stabbed and nearly killed in 1994
(allegedly for his open and flexible attitude to religion in his Cairo
novels); the writer and philosopher Nasser Abu Zeid, who had dared to
apply to the Qur’an and other classical Islamic texts the techniques
of historical and literary criticism practised elsewhere in the world,
was sent death-threats before being driven into exile in 1995.

There were even worse confrontations between Islamism and those of a
socialist and secular liberal persuasion. The National Islamic Front
in Sudan, a conspiratorial group that explicitly modelled itself on
Leninist forms of organisation, took power in 1989 and proceeded to
arrest, torture and kill members of the communist party, all this at a
time when playing host to Osama bin Laden in Khartoum.

In Yemen, after the partial unification of the military north and
socialist south in May 1990, the regime allowed assassins of the
Islamist movement to kill dozens of socialist party members and army
officers. This process precipitated the civil war of 1994, in which
armed Islamist factions linked by ideology and political ties to bin
Laden (most prominently the Abyan army) fought side-by-side with the
regular army of the north to crush the socialist south. This was an
echo of the war in Dhofar province in the neighbouring Arabian state
of Oman during 1970s, when anti-communist government published
propaganda by the British-officered intelligence corps denouncing the
leftwing rebels for allowing men to have only one wife, and promised
them four if they came over to the government side.

The politics of blood

The historical cycle of enmity reached an even greater pitch in two
other countries where the anti-communist and rightwing orientation of
the Islamists became clear. The first, little noticed in the context
of Islamism, was the crushing of the left in Indonesia in 1965. There
the independent and "anti-imperialist" regime of President Sukarno was
supported by the communist party (PKI), the largest in non-communist
Asia.

After a conflict within the military itself, a rightwing coup backed
by the United States seized power and proceeded to crush the left. In
rural Java especially, the new power was enthusiastically supported by
Islamists, led by the Nahdat ul-Islam grouping. A convergence between
the anti-communism of the military and the Islamists was one of the
factors in the rampant orgy of killing which took the lives of up to a
million people. The impact of this event was enormous, both for
Indonesia itself and the balance of forces in southeast Asia at a time
when the struggle in Vietnam was about to escalate.

The second country, Afghanistan, also had an outcome of great
significance for the cold war as a whole. During the Soviet occupation
of the 1980s, the most fanatical Islamist groups – funded by the CIA,
Pakistan and the Saudis to overthrow the communist government in Kabul
– were killing women teachers, bombing schools and forcing women back
into the home in the areas they controlled.

Such enemies led the first leader of communist Afghanistan, Nur
Mohammad Taraki, to refer to the opposition as ikhwan i shayatin ("the
satanic brotherhood", a play on "Muslim Brotherhood"). Bin Laden
himself, in both his 1980s and post-1996 periods in Afghanistan,
played a particularly active role not just in fighting Afghan
communists, but also in killing Shi’a, who were, in the sectarian
worldview of Saudi fundamentalism, seen as akin to communists. The
consequences of this policy for the Arab and Muslim worlds, and for
the world as a whole, were evident from the early 1990s onwards. It
took the events of the clear morning of 11 September 2001 for them to
penetrate into the global consciousness.

The true and the false

This melancholy history must be supplemented by attention to what is
actually happening in countries, or parts of countries, where
Islamists are influential and gaining ground. The reactionary (the
word is used advisedly) nature of much of their programme on women,
free speech, the rights of gays and other minorities is evident.

There is also a mindset of anti-Jewish prejudice that is riven with
racism and religious obscurantism. Only a few in the west noted what
many in the Islamic world will have at once understood, that one of
the most destructive missiles fired by Hizbollah into Israel bore the
name "Khaibar" – not a benign reference to the pass between
Afghanistan and Pakistan, but the name of a victorious battle fought
against the Jews by the Prophet Mohammad in the 7th century. Here it
is worth recalling the saying of the German socialist leader Bebel,
that anti-semitism is "the socialism of fools". How many on the left
are tolerant if not actively complicit in this foolery today is a
painful question to ask.

The habit of categorising radical Islamist groups and their ideology
as "fascist" is unnecessary as well as careless, since the many
differences with that European model make the comparison redundant. It
does not need slogans to understand that the Islamist programme,
ideology and record are diametrically opposed to the left – that is,
the left that has existed on the principles founded on and descended
from classical socialism, the Enlightenment, the values of the
revolutions of 1798 and 1848, and generations of experience. The
modern embodiments of this left have no need of the "false
consciousness" that drives so many so-called leftists into the arms of
jihadis.

Fred Halliday is professor of international relations at the LSE, and
visiting professor at the Barcelona Institute of International Studies
(IBEI). His books include Islam and the Myth of Confrontation (IB
Tauris, 2003) and 100 Myths About the Middle East (Saqi, 2005).

Copyright © Fred Halliday, Published by openDemocracy Ltd.

http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/left_ji

ANKARA: We Are Not Hostages But Citizens Of This Country

WE ARE NOT HOSTAGES BUT CITIZENS OF THIS COUNTRY

Turkish Daily News
Turkish Press Yesterday
Sept 27 2006

Milliyet yesterday reported that a group of Turkish citizens of Greek
and Armenian origin condemned the Justice and Development Party (AKP)
government for withdrawing a law proposal on returning the property of
non-Muslim associations and the main opposition Republican People’s
Party (CHP) for demanding that the principle of "reciprocity" be
applied for Turkish minorities in other countries.

A group of approximately 100 Turkish citizens of Armenian and
Greek ethnicity issued a statement reading, "We equally condemn the
government, which openly admits that it has taken up our rights as
citizens only as a requirement of the European Union accession process,
and the opposition, which holds the view that this society’s diversity
should be leveled by assimilating minorities. We would like to tell
them [the opposition] that this mentality, which demands "reciprocity,"
is a confession that they see us as hostages; the system they envision
is not that of a democratic republic. We invite both the government
and the opposition to absorb the values of a democratic republic and
to act accordingly."

Year Of Armenia In France Proves Highest Level Of Relations Between

YEAR OF ARMENIA IN FRANCE PROVES HIGHEST LEVEL OF RELATIONS BETWEEN TWO COUNTRIES

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Sept 27 2006

YEREVAN, September 27. /ARKA/. The Year of Armenia in France is
an action proving the highest level of relations between the two
countries, Armenian President Adviser Vigen Sargsyan told journalists
on Tuesday in Yerevan.

Armenian Ambassador to France Edward Nalbandyan said seminars,
meetings and conferences would be held as part of the Year of Armenia
in France program.

In his words, a conference focused on cooperation between the two
countries’ cities will be held in October in Paris. Armenian delegation
headed by Prime Minister Andarnik Margaryan will attend the event.

Nalbandyan also said that a reception dedicated to 15th anniversary
of Armenia’s independence is expected in the French capital.

The Armenian Ambassador said an economic cooperation conference is
to be held in November. Armenian and French businessmen will attend it.

He said Armenia will take part in an event in the world greatest
international agricultural Paris Salon in February.

Another conference planned to be opened in March will be focused on
information technologies. Opening ceremony of the Year of Armenia in
France is scheduled for September 30 in Yerevan. The Year of Armenia
in France started on September 21 and will end on July 2007.

BAKU: Co-Chairs Met With Azerbaijani And Armenian Foreign Ministers

CO-CHAIRS MET WITH AZERBAIJANI AND ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTERS

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Sept 27 2006

Co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, who are mediating in the settlement
of the Nagorno Garabagh conflict, are expected to visit the region
soon, APA reports.

They discussed their visit to the region in private meetings with
Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers Elmar Mammadyarov and Vardan
Oskanyan yesterday. The discussions also focused on removing current
obstacles for further settlement of the Nagorno Garabagh conflict.

The meeting with Armenian foreign minister covered current phase
of the negotiating process and discussion of raising of the GUAM
"frozen conflicts" at UN General Assembly.

The co-chairs are expected to meet with OSCE authorities in Helsinki
this week. They will report on the present situation of the settlement
of the conflict.

ANKARA: State Minister Sahin: No Plans To Give Away The Hagia Sophia

STATE MINISTER SAHIN: NO PLANS TO GIVE AWAY THE HAGIA SOPHIA

Hurriyet, Turkey
Sept 27 2006

State Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin yesterday in Ankara responded to
opposition claims that the Hagia Sophia was "being given away" by
showing MPs in his parliamentary group a photocopy of the historical
building’s title deed. Said Sahin to a group of MPs, "Look, I am
holding a copy of the deed. The Hagia Sophia was the pious trust
of Fatih Sultan Mehmet. And the deed for that pious trust is under
the General Directorate of Foundations, which is connected to my
ministry. So, don’t worry. We own the Hagia Sophia, and we are not
thinking of giving it to anyone."

Speaking on the subject of a declaration published in newspapers and
written by 184 ethnically Greek and Armenian citizens of Turkey, Sahin
said "Can there really be any difference, as far as our constitution
is concerned, between Muslim and non-Muslim citizens of the Turkish
Republic? Why are people giving in to suspicions like this?"